American Reacts to Why Canadians Don't Live in Central Canada

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2024
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    As an American I don't know too much about Canadian geography. Today I am very interesting to learn about why most Canadians don't seems to live in a huge region of central Canada. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

Комментарии • 569

  • @sirlarek
    @sirlarek 6 месяцев назад +44

    Check out the group of seven....who were famous artists that painted this region. They are internationally acclaimed

    • @M4XXST3IN-vp5vk
      @M4XXST3IN-vp5vk 6 месяцев назад +2

      The group did a really good job in Timmins

  • @janellegodin2934
    @janellegodin2934 6 месяцев назад +49

    One major obvious part that was missed is the Canadian shield is granite and lakes. You can't build cities on lakes and it's extremely expensive to blast granite to make roads and level the ground for cities. Power lines are above ground and plumbing becomes difficult since it's very difficulty to put sewers in underground but they'll freeze above. Septic systems don't work well with high population densities.
    There are many small towns in the shield (usually mining or forestry) but there are also a high amount of secondary homes. This is a very popular cottage country. The amount of people in the area is significantly higher in July than January.

    • @dcrot9109
      @dcrot9109 Месяц назад

      @janellegodin2934: :::; most BS, ever heard not the arctic circle here... statement is ridiculous unless thinking of the arctic ...sault ste marie canada and sault ste marie USA are just across a river from each other do you think the arctic starts on the canadian side .. Distance between Sault Ste. Marie, Canada and the Arctic Circle is 2231 km = 1387 miles.

  • @ashrush6830
    @ashrush6830 6 месяцев назад +33

    I love in northern Ontario. I use to live in the GTA and honestly I could not be happier that I moved up here, very very small population, no huge cities, cheaper houses and cleaner air! Honestly it's the BEST!

    • @Cooking_Patty55
      @Cooking_Patty55 5 месяцев назад +2

      How is the cost of living there?

    • @kelseynicoleful
      @kelseynicoleful 8 дней назад

      🤫😉

    • @glennmorin7431
      @glennmorin7431 День назад

      I was born there & lives 30 + yrs in the city of Thunder Bay. It is a very closed city when it comes to employment. If you know friends or family, you have a "leg up" on the competition. Yes houses are cheaper than TO, but most cities are cheaper than TO (The Big Smoke). The city is in the middle of Nowhere. 8 hrs from Winnipeg; 8 hrs from Sault Ste Marie; 7hrs from Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn.; 18 hrs from Toronto.( In the middle of nowhere.). If you like Camping; Fishing; Hunting; & your a part of the Freedom Convoy; u will fit in well with the locals. No Immigrants allowed.

  • @anaceofhearts
    @anaceofhearts 6 месяцев назад +29

    Northern ON (and Canadian landscapes more generally) has absolutely inspired artists! I'd love to see you do a video on the Group of Seven (and Emily Carr for West Coast rep lol)

  • @nancymccartan1045
    @nancymccartan1045 6 месяцев назад +34

    We retired to Sault Ste Marie in Northern Ontario. It's beautiful and yes, our Amazon packages get here next day! We love it here, the people are very diversified. Our older kids were raised in Sudbury, the "Toronto of the North" and we loved it there too. We were born and lived in Southern Ontaro and much prefer it in the north. Lots to do and great community.

    • @paulinebeal5808
      @paulinebeal5808 6 месяцев назад +1

      I feel like Thunder Bay is the Toronto of the North lol

    • @LoveCats9220
      @LoveCats9220 6 месяцев назад

      Lucky you getting your Amazon packages the next day! We live in rural S. ON and it’s usually a week or so

    • @paulinebeal5808
      @paulinebeal5808 6 месяцев назад

      @@LoveCats9220 same for me in the north too

  • @darylcano3367
    @darylcano3367 6 месяцев назад +11

    PLEASE don't tell anyone how fabulous NW Ontario is.We don't want it to get more populated! It's an incredibly beautiful area, particularly just west of Thunder Bay. Full of lakes and trees, (including the massive Lake Superior). 5 minutes from my house I can catch any kind of fish you can imagine. I have a garden and grow vegetables, I think they are talking about commercial farming....because most everyone I know has a garden plot..... Up until very recently I lived on 131 acres in an unorganized township, and paid 29 grand for it in 1998. As far as I am concerned, I'd like to get rid of a few thousand people, haha. It's a fabulous place to live if you like the outdoors, wildlife, fishing, hunting and exploring.

  • @TheTwilightKing-zt7dl
    @TheTwilightKing-zt7dl 6 месяцев назад +10

    Tyler Bucket: why don’t Canadians live in this area of Canada?
    Canadians: the Wendigos

    • @ashrush6830
      @ashrush6830 День назад

      @@TheTwilightKing-zt7dl lol, I love on the edge of a dense forest and to keep my kids out of it I tell them stories of the wendigo. I don't know if I am traumatizing them or I am keeping the legends going, OR both.

  • @isabelleblanchet3694
    @isabelleblanchet3694 6 месяцев назад +17

    My grand-mother was a Finish-Canadian from Sudbury. I visited there with my family 2-3 times when I was a child, before my Finish great-grand-mother died.
    You can find the largest 5 cent coin there, named the "Big Nickel".

    • @michaeljaques77
      @michaeljaques77 6 месяцев назад +2

      The subtext is that Sudbury is home to a giant nickel smelting industry.

  • @lorimontcalm9086
    @lorimontcalm9086 6 месяцев назад +25

    The Hudson Bay played an important part in the development of Canada due to the fur trade.
    We were taught about the Canadian Shield at school. Seeing it in person up close is pretty impressive.
    At one point in recent history the rail line to the north was wiped out in a flood in the bog. It took months for the various departments to get it together to get it fixed.
    They often get groceries flown in which makes them VERY expensive.

    • @wolphin732
      @wolphin732 6 месяцев назад

      It took months because the rail company didn't want to pay for repairing it... and they had neglected maintenance for years. It took the goverment paying for it for the greedy execs to do anything about it.

    • @lesliemccormick6527
      @lesliemccormick6527 6 месяцев назад

      Why not? Because we don't want to.😊

  • @Bonnie0904
    @Bonnie0904 6 месяцев назад +13

    I live in Thunder Bay on the North Shore of Lake superior. I wouldn’t live anywhere else. I love the open spaces, the fresh air, the easy proximity to lakes and forests. Tourists who come here enjoy rock and ice climbing, fishing, water sports, camping, hunting, hiking, skiing, snowshoeing, and much more. We also have a symphony and a state of the art auditorium. The arts community is small but vital. There’s always something to do no matter what your interests are. I grow both flowers and vegetables in my yard. The only setback being a short growing season, which is pretty common across Canada. Whenever I holiday in a big city I miss the sky and the quiet and I’m always happy to return home.

    • @milesjohnson4526
      @milesjohnson4526 6 месяцев назад +3

      Thunder Bay is amazing, and you forgot to mention the massive Amethyst deposits.

    • @Bonnie0904
      @Bonnie0904 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@milesjohnson4526 I could go on and on. Also hockey and curling is huge here.

  • @korivex742
    @korivex742 6 месяцев назад +45

    I live in Northern Ontario, it is beautiful and peaceful... I have no problems growing vegetable gardens the soil is rich in minerals.... maybe it isn't good for large scale agriculture because of the longer winters.... because the soil itself is good.... just look at all the trees, water and nature here.

    • @sid7088
      @sid7088 6 месяцев назад +7

      Coniferous forests cause the soil to be too acidic for large scale agriculture. This can be treated with the addition of lime to neutralize the pH.

    • @tomgarnett1967
      @tomgarnett1967 6 месяцев назад +3

      I lived in Northern Ontario most of my life. I like it.❤

    • @marfmang511
      @marfmang511 6 месяцев назад +2

      Perfect place to live of the grid if you are a hunter and grow some vegetables

    • @korivex742
      @korivex742 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@marfmang511 absolutely!

  • @miketomasini346
    @miketomasini346 6 месяцев назад +29

    I have been a Forest Fire Fighter 33 years I’ve been every corner of Northern Ontario,Good fishing lots of black flies mosquitoes I enjoyed the experience meeting many people in my time doing it.

    • @DarinK
      @DarinK 6 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for your service!

    • @xxMelaniexx
      @xxMelaniexx 6 месяцев назад +5

      You can never underestimate black flies

    • @RedRose-il8xj
      @RedRose-il8xj 6 месяцев назад +1

      @miketomasini346 From your experience, should we worry about an increase in forest fires due to drought conditions in Northern Ontario. I live in the Golden Horseshoe and last summer, air quality was poor sometimes due to forest fires in Quebec. Thank you

    • @timmclerk9838
      @timmclerk9838 6 месяцев назад

      @@RedRose-il8xj I am interested in @miketomasini's answer too (I suspect he might be happy about all the money he made last summer :-). I would like to offer my own perspective.
      I was a support worker on a fire base in Red Lake Ontario in the early 1990's and then a silviculture worker for four summers out of Armstrong ON. I have lived in several other northern locales. I found the coverage of last summer's forest fires myopic.
      It is worth considering that southern Ontario and Quebec were deforested first and that deforestation has expanded northerly over time. Forest fires are a natural part of the life cycle of a forest and indeed are key to the regeneration of many species including blueberries and jack pine. The fact that there was enough fuel (ie regenerated forests) in places like the Ottawa Valley and central Quebec (seen from the south as "northern" should likely be taken as a good sign- it means that forest lands have recovered from early logging sufficiently that they can demonstrate their natural life cycle.
      I will add that I was confused by all the panic down here (I now live in the South) about the smoke. Of course people with respiratory problems need to be careful but if people in the North cancel life every time there is smoke, they simply wouldn't have a life. Smoke in the summer is like snow in the winter- you need to figure out how to live with it.
      Forgive me if this sounds judgy but I often think that people in the more populated parts of Canada often panic unnecessarily because they are so disconnected/ protected from nature. The perception down here is skewed. Forests engaging in their natural behaviour is cause for celebration.

    • @RedRose-il8xj
      @RedRose-il8xj 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@timmclerk9838 Thank you for your input. I live in the Golden Horseshoe region and I really noticed the strong scent of smoke originating from forest fires last summer. I was surprised that it lasted for so many days. Perhaps air quality also worsened when coupled with pollutants from industrial areas. Not sure how weather patterns played a role. For those of us who suffer with chronic lung disease / asthma, it's a real concern. Thank you for taking the time to share your perspective! Much appreciated

  • @Rinconmaniac
    @Rinconmaniac 6 месяцев назад +56

    Actually Northern Ontario is one of the best kept secrets in north america. The mining sector pays extremely well and the cost of housing is low. Most people's houses are paid for and they usually have a nice sized property with a detached garage/ mancave. They have skidoos, side by sides, boats, travel trailers, etc.., Northern life is the best!! Especially if you are an outdoors man/woman. Great hunting, fishing, trapping.

    • @wallyw3409
      @wallyw3409 6 месяцев назад +6

      Sure if u dont mine humming bird size blood suckers, THE black flies. Finaly the winters might be the roughest Canada has outside of the artic.

    • @MCscarfacematt
      @MCscarfacematt 6 месяцев назад +2

      sounds like newfoundland

    • @sorrywrongplanet8873
      @sorrywrongplanet8873 6 месяцев назад +3

      When I was up there for a few years, drinking seemed to be the most popular hobby, and everything other hobby was something to do while drinking, even while operating various kinds motorized vehicles like skidoos and boats.

    • @TheCrayonMaster
      @TheCrayonMaster 6 месяцев назад +7

      Housing prices have sky rocketed in northern Ontario in the last couple of years because people from Southern Ontario are moving up here.

    • @lamborghiniperlini1710
      @lamborghiniperlini1710 6 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds like Northern Alberta with less oil

  • @bww9450
    @bww9450 6 месяцев назад +6

    Around here in Sault Ste. Marie the weather hasn't been so bad of late. I remenber when I was a kid it snowed from the start of November right thru December everyday. After that it just got cold, like for a few weeks it got down to below -40c for one winter around here. It is a good tourist spot as well. The famous Group of Seven painted alot of landscapes around here. Don't forget the Algoma train ride that runs from June til October. Then you got the Algoma Steel Mill that gets the iron ore from the good state of Minnaesota. Its ok to live here and have a family. The landscape is great in just 10 mins you are in the bush. With the wild bears the come into city once in while and sometime moose as well.

  • @AdamMerdy123
    @AdamMerdy123 6 месяцев назад +26

    Hey Tyler! Just putting this out there - I live in Sudbury and have my whole life! It (and Northern Ontario as a whole) is a beautiful place with hundreds of lakes in the city limits and a thriving northern arts and culture scene. We have several post-secondary institutions (my alma mater, Laurentian University, Cambrian College, and College Boreal), and the people are really nice overall. My mom lived in southern Ontario for a long time, so I've visited it alot and don't get me wrong - I also really love the south for its own reasons - but my heart will always belong to the North. :)

    • @mikefoehr235
      @mikefoehr235 6 месяцев назад +2

      I grew up in Hanmer. Wife from Sudbury

    • @janlefave3048
      @janlefave3048 6 месяцев назад +3

      Me too ... from the Sault! ❤

    • @cherylmosher6026
      @cherylmosher6026 6 месяцев назад

      Quite a few communities in that area. Same presenter said same thing about BC. He said BC was mostly empty.

    • @ann-mariewickham3108
      @ann-mariewickham3108 6 месяцев назад

      I live in Hanmer..lol all my life

    • @mikefoehr235
      @mikefoehr235 6 месяцев назад

      @@ann-mariewickham3108 I grew up near St Joseph St and St Isidore St.

  • @steele-shot
    @steele-shot 6 месяцев назад +6

    I live in Sudbury and I love it up here. To be fair some of it can be rough....black flies for sure but I saw 283 moose this year so if you are outdoorsy this is heaven

  • @dpcnreactions7062
    @dpcnreactions7062 6 месяцев назад +13

    I've taken the train through that region and it is a long ride. When people found out that I was taking the train from my home province of Nova Scotia to Vancouver, they told me that when the train hits the Prairies, it will be very long and boring. I did not find that as the train seem to take forever to get through Ontario. When we the Prairies, they went by fast and before I knew it, I was in Jasper, seeing the mountains for the first time. There are many place in Northern Ontario where the train will stop to let off or let on hunters as it is one of the few ways to get to their camps, unless their is a lake where they can flay a float plane in. There are many Native reservations along the way as well. Many of the natives will stand beside the tracks and when the train stops, they sell water and food to the passengers.

    • @dougbrowning82
      @dougbrowning82 6 месяцев назад +1

      That train ride is around two days from Toronto to Winnipeg, and another day from Winnipeg to Edmonton, then another day to Vancouver. The portion through the prairies is relatively low grade, with wide curves. The main impediment on that portion is the heavy freight traffic. The Ontario and BC portions, however, are long drags.

    • @fredericbyers5524
      @fredericbyers5524 6 месяцев назад

      😊😊

    • @cdes1776
      @cdes1776 6 месяцев назад +1

      I've been dreaming of taking this very trip! Bet there is a lot of waving of hands. Glad you got to see it from sea to sea! 🇨🇦

  • @steve_frenchcougar1747
    @steve_frenchcougar1747 6 месяцев назад +6

    majority of Québec population is located along the st-Laurent valley

  • @tonyfulford3175
    @tonyfulford3175 6 месяцев назад +7

    The northern most road (Hwy 11) that serves Kapuskasing, Smooth Rock Falls, Cochrane, (and don't forget Hearst) is about as high north as you can go by car. It was a 12 hour drive from southern Ontario (non-stop). You have to take the train to Moosonee. Most of this area served the pulp and paper industry in the past, and towns are slowly fading away. The only hope will be mining in the future. You are into the "Belt" area that only coniferous tree grow and there are no deciduous trees. I was up in the area about 40 years ago for my friends wedding. Minus 50 in the winter is nothing, the shocks on your car can literally freeze, and a block heater is a necessity. Great if your a trapper, hunter or fisherman. Black files will eat you alive in summer and mosquitoes are just as bad. Lots of fresh air though.

  • @howardhales6325
    @howardhales6325 6 месяцев назад +7

    Thunder Bay (as Port Arthur and Fort William) predates Toronto. So much for his theory about populations growing where the earliest settlements were.

  • @sandrajewitt6050
    @sandrajewitt6050 6 месяцев назад +24

    Just for reference, Ontario is 1.55 times the size of Texas.

    • @gustru2078
      @gustru2078 6 месяцев назад +3

      Québec is 2.33 times larger than Texas and has a bigger area that is mostly uninhabited than Ontarion ever did and ever will : Nord-Du-Québec, population ~ 46 000 for a total landmass of 839 000 km² vs. a population of over 780 000 for a total landmass of 806 708 km² in northern Ontario. 17 times less people than "Canada's empty belt" 😂

    • @tristanridley1601
      @tristanridley1601 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@gustru2078But it's not as obviously distinct as Northern Ontario. There's also a few places where the population jumps dramatically as you cross from Ontario to Quebec. So it seems like Northern Ontario is more empty.

    • @gustru2078
      @gustru2078 6 месяцев назад

      @@tristanridley1601 By "dramatically", you mean Abitibi-Témiscamingue? That's further south but still, its population is only 146k. It's less than 200k with both regions combined.

    • @Yooper2024
      @Yooper2024 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@gustru2078But it's French.

    • @gustru2078
      @gustru2078 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Yooper2024 Lol, that's irrelevant. Btw, it is First Nations territory

  • @cheryl4549
    @cheryl4549 6 месяцев назад +6

    It does not mean that you cannot grow food. My brother grew all his food and canned it. So individual gardens, perhaps its just not viable for large food production gardens? My dad was a hunter and fishing guide in the north.

    • @wolphin732
      @wolphin732 6 месяцев назад

      it's not fertile enough to handle commercial farms is what it meant. Subsistence farming can be done in many more places than sustained commercial farming.

  • @tristanridley1601
    @tristanridley1601 6 месяцев назад +4

    There are three parts of Canada that are mostly empty. The tiny rockies, the obvious arctic, and the shield. Northern Ontario (and northern Michigan) are where the shield dips farthest into what would otherwise be decent land.
    The big thing to remember is how HUGE this is. It takes us 12 hours to drive across this gap. Northern Ontario is bigger than Texas or Scandinavia or Ukraine. It's more than half the size of Alaska.
    And Northern Quebec is more of the same, just without the clear boundaries of the lakes.

  • @cheryla7480
    @cheryla7480 6 месяцев назад +8

    Neil Young’s song “ Helpless “ is about Northern Ontario.

    • @AmandaZuke
      @AmandaZuke 6 месяцев назад +1

      “Long May You Run” mentions it, too.

    • @reggitwend7405
      @reggitwend7405 Месяц назад

      Don't forget Stompin' Tom "Sudbury Saturday Nights" =) I grew up in Elliot Lake and then moved to Sudbury with my family when the mines in EL were shut down, when I was 16. I've since moved moved to Michigan (got married to an American, 18 years in now) but my Home and heart is still in Northern Ontario. Its a long drive, but I need to do it at least once a year, its mostly for Thanksgiving when I can see the most family members as the ones who've moved away come Home as well.

  • @bobair2
    @bobair2 6 месяцев назад +61

    Three reasons, Blackflies ,Mosquitoes and Cold weather.

    • @terrancebrown87
      @terrancebrown87 6 месяцев назад +8

      That’s where black flies the size of your hand come from right?

    • @margaretno211
      @margaretno211 6 месяцев назад +3

      I wish they were the size of my hand! They would be defeatable! The little blighters are
      small and live in hordes!😅​@terrancebrown87

    • @Salicat99
      @Salicat99 6 месяцев назад +4

      Deerflies that fly away after you smack them with your shoe!

    • @tristanridley1601
      @tristanridley1601 6 месяцев назад +3

      Not true, really. It's the shield. Rock, no soil. Barely any farms. Hard to start a city on that, historically.

    • @chrishince8947
      @chrishince8947 6 месяцев назад +2

      Ticks, ticks and more ticks! Lol

  • @devmcg3237
    @devmcg3237 6 месяцев назад +3

    Im from Pickle Lake, Ontario. Farthest north year-round town you can drive to in the province, with a population of 300 people. Your video was good, i enjoyed it. Its beautiful up here. The fishing is great, very few people like you mentioned 1000 times haha. Its abandoned gold mines around here. The industry is a lot of prospecting and aviation. Lots of fly-in reservations further north that need basic goods. The Trans Canada Highway along the north coast of Lake Superior is beautiful, worth a trip.

  • @ricksawyer2942
    @ricksawyer2942 6 месяцев назад +7

    I am in northern Ontario. we have a norad base here, and smart Americans come up here for fishing and hunting

    • @miketomasini346
      @miketomasini346 6 месяцев назад +3

      I faught many forest fires up north

    • @devchepil7305
      @devchepil7305 6 месяцев назад +1

      Shhh! Hey we don’t need them all knowing!

  • @janicehicks5159
    @janicehicks5159 6 месяцев назад +2

    I used to live in the city of North Bay (not mentioned in the video)several hours north of Toronto. The air is so fresh, my garden was good, we didn't lack anything for shopping. Winters were cold, but sunny and bright. Lots of tourism in summer. My family was military so we got posted out, sad to leave but have many wonderful memories of the friendly neighbours and beautiful scenery.

  • @jry354
    @jry354 6 месяцев назад +7

    You should take a look at the artist Group of Seven Northern Ontario's greatest painters

  • @deadlyice2042
    @deadlyice2042 6 месяцев назад +3

    northern canada is known for a lot of camp grounds and where people are building there cabins for the peace and quiet

  • @KeithDCanada
    @KeithDCanada 6 месяцев назад +11

    Videos like the one you watched piss me off a bit actually...
    When the dude in the video names the settlements to the 'west' of the Canadian Shield, he names Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver.... and completely skips over the entire province of Saskatchewan. As if we don't exist.
    That's how it goes though.... I mean we only have about 40% of Canada's farmland, supply over 80% of Canada's durum wheat crop, and are a globally recognized food producer, and world's largest exporter of peas, lentils, durum wheat, mustard seed, canola, flaxseed and oats. Also a massive supplier of oil and natural gas. rich uranium deposits and even diamonds!
    But yeah, typical, no one recognizes the farmers, the miners.... I mean they only keep the country fed, and supplied with oil and minerals. Why bother including them in a list of cities in western Canada. It's not like were an entire province of near a million people, with our own Capital City or anything.... we don't see representation when it comes to elections or federal recognition either. We are used to it.

    • @patriciamacpherson2009
      @patriciamacpherson2009 6 месяцев назад

      Quite a chip on your shoulder bud! Are you sure you don’t belong to Alberta?

    • @terryomalley1974
      @terryomalley1974 6 месяцев назад +2

      I can understand your frustration, but I think the guy was focused more on major population centres of a half million or more, and Saskatchewan doesn't have any that large.

    • @kopitarrules
      @kopitarrules 6 месяцев назад +1

      Oh we recognize you, it's just more fun to make jokes about it being such a flatland that you can watch your dog run away for four days 😂. (On the serious side as an Albertan I feel your pain bud, the federal government has been doing the same to us for as long as anyone can remember. They consider the entire western half of Canada a joke not worth thinking about. Remember once the prime minister of our country, when asked what he would say to western Canadians who disappeared with his controversial,and let's face it patently illegal at the time, national energy program legislation flippyus all the bird on national television. It's a disgrace.

    • @wolphin732
      @wolphin732 6 месяцев назад +2

      Last year, I visited 1 province outside Alberta... Saskatchewan. I totally understand how people overlook it, but there is some very beautiful areas out there.

    • @BoredDan7
      @BoredDan7 6 месяцев назад +1

      You have to remember, three of those four cities have a metro are population larger than the entire population of Saskatchewan. Even Winnipeg's metro is larger then Saskatoon's and Regina's combined. They also didn't mention Victoria which would be the next largest metro in the west, beating out Saskatoon by a moderate amount.

  • @wolphin732
    @wolphin732 6 месяцев назад +2

    Canadian Shield is an ancient worn down mountain range, so there is only the bases of the mountains left, but it's hard rock. It's also extremely old: 2.6-3.6 billion years old.

  • @Terrorific_tray
    @Terrorific_tray 6 месяцев назад +11

    I live in South Porcupine which is north eastern ON. A problem is that the government is over saturating the south with the large companies and factories and housing, where Northern ON gets little funding. Mining is huge here because of the Canadian shield. People don't know what they are missing by not coming north! Glad I get to enjoy the beauty of our country.

    • @Terrorific_tray
      @Terrorific_tray 6 месяцев назад +1

      Have to add that in my lifetime, I do not remember a Feb that was warmer then -20c. Right now it is -2c. WooHoo! No jacket required!!!

    • @irondogqueen
      @irondogqueen 6 месяцев назад +1

      I grew up in Iroquois Falls and went to college at the Porcupine Northern campus. I do NOT miss the winters there, lol (I've lived in the GTA for 25 years now). I still remember playing on the stone ruins behind the drive-in A&W when I was a kid and going to The Fish Bowl restaurant near the Timmins Square. You always knew you were close to Timmins when you saw the buffalo at the mine.

    • @pikachu5188
      @pikachu5188 6 месяцев назад +2

      @Terrorific_tray,
      🐈I found you on the map.
      You are near Timmins.
      Exactly half way between
      Baie James and the
      Great Huron or Superior Lakes.
      🐾 _Montréal 🇨🇦_

    • @Terrorific_tray
      @Terrorific_tray 6 месяцев назад

      @irondogqueen The fish Bowl is still there. And the Buffalo have been gone for years. Totally different living then in the GTA. I've lived in the Niagara region and still prefer living here. Just so much cleaner. But I do miss being so close to the large cities and all they have to offer.

    • @cdes1776
      @cdes1776 6 месяцев назад +1

      Ah! I have a friend that lived in Porcupine many many years, now in Haileybury. I've looked into visiting but public transportation doesn't service the journey well from southern Ontario.

  • @ArcaneWolf9
    @ArcaneWolf9 6 месяцев назад +1

    Grew up in this area and have to say, the Shield is distinct and the landscape is gorgeous. The video shows a lot of mining devastation or pristine forest (but not much in between), but find examples of where the forests meet the exposed stone and lakes. The solitary feel of trees growing atop stone mountains and rich, fertile areas around untouched lakes. As some others have suggested, the "Group of Seven" did some great work portraying the area in their art. Also, as to why so much of the population stuck so close to the Southern border...where the U.S. had wagon trains and much later the railroads to bring people into the open interior, Canada had a giant waterway to facilitate trade all along the Great Lakes, from traders loading hundreds of pounds of fur pelts onto canoes, to shipping centers loading grain, ore and other resources onto ships bound for the metropolitan areas or transfer for overseas destinations. Camps, forts and towns grew in convenient locations, right on the lakes. But leave the lakes and you run into the Shield, and good luck getting your wagon across that 200 years ago.

  • @katybug1966
    @katybug1966 6 месяцев назад +4

    I grew up in Sault Ste. Marie ON. It's a beautiful place! I'd love to see you do a video on the Sault and the Agawa Canyon. It's a great place for outdoorsy people and there are also a lot of artists living in and around the area. (Algoma District)

  • @DWLeggette
    @DWLeggette 6 месяцев назад +4

    I've never been there, but I'm under the impression that a lot of the tourism in northern Ontario is sport fishing.

    • @marygoodman8111
      @marygoodman8111 6 месяцев назад +1

      Fishing and hunting are major part of tourism, but also canoeing or just enjoying the beauty of nature.

  • @LindaM2005
    @LindaM2005 6 месяцев назад +4

    We lived in Northern Ontario for 12 years. We had about 5 acres of bush property on a lake 100 km NW of New Liskeard. Lots of people had seasonal cottages in the area, where they would come up in the summer. With all the lakes and forest, it was popular for fishing and hunting. Agriculture is not non-existent. There were lots of farmers growing corn and canola, as well as forage crops for the animal farms. We moved to SW Ontario because it became more work than we wanted to do to maintain the property as we were getting older. We were also tired of feet of snow from December through May. It was a different kind of lifestyle, and I'm glad we experienced it.

  • @rhondahoughton790Canada
    @rhondahoughton790Canada 6 месяцев назад +1

    I have travelled through Northern Ontario in both the summer and the autumn. While the summer is beautiful, the autumn is stunning!❤

  • @BlairMuellerArt
    @BlairMuellerArt 6 месяцев назад +2

    Fun fact... there are more lakes in Canada than the rest of the world combined! And we hold 20% of the GLOBAL reserves of freshwater.

  • @pixelrancher
    @pixelrancher 6 месяцев назад +4

    Water and granite.
    Ontario alone has 250,000 lakes containing about one-fifth of the world's fresh water.
    Mix that with the granite of the Canadian Shield, it's almost impossible to build roads.
    Canada was populated along the waterways. Firstly, down the St. Lawrence River to the Great Lakes - which also contained the best farm land, then further westward once roads and rails were built. It was easier to build and farm in Southern Canada, from the East Coast to the West Coast.

    • @newtron1
      @newtron1 6 месяцев назад

      Correct but not 20% of the world's fresh water. The 20% pertains to the entire country.

    • @chrisgraham2904
      @chrisgraham2904 6 месяцев назад +3

      There are serious transportation issues for Northern Ontario. The few roads and rail lines that do exist support the small towns established for mining or logging. Tourism in the north is mostly summer based for hunting and fishing, with lodges sporadically located on lakes and rivers. Many are accessible only by aircraft and many of the few roads are inaccessible during winter.

  • @YoshMaster
    @YoshMaster 6 месяцев назад +30

    The shield is also the reason we almost never get earthquakes in Quebec (and I would guess Ontario as well) and when we do they NEVER are of any dangerous strength because the shockwaves gets dissipated into the entire rocky shield. In fact Quebec is pretty much one of the best place on earth for protection against natural disasters! Earthquakes, tornadoes and hurricanes are pretty much inexistant. Of course if you live really near to shore you can get flooding in spring if the snow melts really fast but that’s about it..

    • @brenthenderson3983
      @brenthenderson3983 6 месяцев назад +2

      And don't forget those ice storms....

    • @TomHuston43
      @TomHuston43 6 месяцев назад

      Yup, if you can handle the daily assaults on the English language in Quebec, there is no better place to live in Canada.

    • @YoshMaster
      @YoshMaster 6 месяцев назад

      @@brenthenderson3983 those are pretty rare (at least problematic ones) and don’t really do much damage except to some trees and making roads slippery. But sure I guess it’s a possible “disaster” like with the huge one in 1998

    • @Particulator
      @Particulator 6 месяцев назад +2

      Although we rarely have noticeable earthquakes in Québec, all refit and new institutional construction (hospitals and schools) have most of their mechanical equipment tied in place, paraseismic ready.

    • @basseon
      @basseon 6 месяцев назад +2

      That's not accurate at all. Quebec is the 2nd province in the country most susceptible to massive earthquakes after BC. There's been many major earthquakes in the past, 5 of which ranked higher than 6 on the Richter scale. There's a 15% probability to have another one in the next 50 years. If it were to happen in a densely-populated area it would be devastating. Not only lots of people would die, but Quebec's economy would take a massive blow. Only 4% of home insurance policy holder have an earthquake protection as people either believe they're cover or at low risk. The Charlevoix region is known for it's seismic activity, Kamouraska, along the Ottawa River, etc... The faults are along the Canadian Shield, so along the St-Lawrence River. Just google it, read the Insurance Bureau website and the seismic maps.

  • @bradykeeler5602
    @bradykeeler5602 6 месяцев назад +2

    I live in Northern Ontario, Thunder Bay to be exact. I wouldnt live anywhere else. The outdoors is our playground. World class fishing and hunting in my backyard. The winters arent that bad, the summers are perfect 20-35c not to hot but hot enough. I love it.

  • @user-wi7zn9ko1d
    @user-wi7zn9ko1d 6 месяцев назад +2

    I live in Northern Ontario in a small town and I get my Amazon packages the next day. I live on the Vermilion river and love the natural surroundings and enjoy kayaking right from my front door. Also the poor soil means the most amazing wild blueberries every summer.

  • @glennmorin7431
    @glennmorin7431 2 дня назад

    I'm originally from Thunder Bay, Ontario (Northwestern Ontario) and Yes this area is very spars/devoid of population. Raw industries like Pulp and Paper Mills; Lumber saw Mills; and Mining are some of the few industries. For example Sudbury (Nickle mining), mining and Nickle/Copper Smelting; Timmins (mining), Gold Mining; Thunder Bay, Pulp & Paper Making, Lumber Mills and Great Lakes Shipping (ie. Grain, Coal, Paper Products, Lumber, etc.). Unfortunately a lot of these heavy industries have fallen on hard times. 20yrs ago, Thunder Bay had 4 Pulp and Paper Mills. it now has 1. It had 7 Lumber Mills, it now has 1 remaining. Where it once had 12 Terminal Grain Elevators, it now has 6 elevators. It still ships out Coal and Potash but not at the rate it once did. It is one of the only Northern Ontario Cities which has some manufacturing. The Alstom Commuter Rail Car Plant is alive and well. This plant was the home to WW2 Fighter Plane Manufacturing ( Hawker Sidley Can-Car Plant); the Hawker Hurricane-used by the British and Canadian Airforce during WW2. This plant has produced "Brill' Transit Buses; Can-Car Transport Trailer Vans; Can-Car "Tree Farmer' line of forestry Skidders ( machines for hauling Logs out of the "Bush"; Can-Car Street Cars for Toronto Transit; Bi-Level Passenger Cars for GO Transit and other North American Cummuter Rail Operations. In the near Future, hopefully Thunder Bay may see the construction of a Lithium Refinery producing Lithium for the EV market. There are 4 potential Lithium Mines in the region and other "Critical Metal" mines .

  • @joeforgues7390
    @joeforgues7390 6 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who lives in Thunder bay and works all over Northern Ontario all the way up to Hudson's bay. I can confirm, it is harsh. the winters are even more so, and at times the only way to transport goods is over ice roads. It does take a certain type to love it here... and yes. my backyard is more or less endless. bountiful wildlife, and resources. living here and other places in Canada similar to it, we survive and live by helping each other.We are Proud of our communities and heritage ( yes, i own more then one running chainsaw and lumber mill. yes, I wear a lot of plaid, its both comfortable and great fashion. no, I don't want to live somewhere else.)

    • @joeforgues7390
      @joeforgues7390 6 месяцев назад

      also. myself and many of your viewers would welcome you to visit, and you will find out why Tourism is a big draw to people from all over the World.

  • @breannacarels6479
    @breannacarels6479 6 месяцев назад +2

    We live in eastern MB about 45 mins from the ON border in the transitional area between the Prairies and the Whiteshell. Spent every summer of childhood at our family cabin on Lake of the Woods. It’s a magical area.
    I would imagine lots of the tourism is around hunting and fishing. Beautiful cabin country.

  • @suzannebadger8135
    @suzannebadger8135 6 месяцев назад +2

    I live in Sudbury Ontario. This has been the mildest winter ever so far. Plus we pronounce it Sudbuurrrry😂😂 cause the winter can get pretty cold

  • @Keetchigan
    @Keetchigan 6 месяцев назад +1

    As someone who’s born raised and continues to live in northern Ontario, a couple things. 1. Indigenous people still live here. 2. The pace of life is a bit slower and not so busy city esque. 3. Tourism - Hunting, fly-in-fishing, wilderness exploration /camping etc, and “Group of Seven” painters/ scenery are all promoting tourism. 4. Amazon packages come within the week (no next-day shipping).

  • @DanoFSmith-yc9tg
    @DanoFSmith-yc9tg 5 месяцев назад +1

    It's some of the most rough mountainous terrain found in North America, there's basically only a two lane highway for a 2 full day drive, all through mountains. It would be so expensive to build a modern highway through it to allow typical access via car.
    I just did that exact drive this summer 5 times while moving from Southern ontario, to Saskatchewan. It's beautiful, but it takes forever, and the road is rough in some spots, it will literally kill your car if you're carrying any weight, like most tourists do. It can be so dangerous, with how rural, and alone you could be if you break down.

  • @darthkronical3390
    @darthkronical3390 6 месяцев назад +2

    14:30 Forget your Amazon packages... there are parts of Canada where just milk is over $20, because of how hard it is to get it out there.

    • @freespyrit
      @freespyrit 6 месяцев назад

      l'm in Sudbury. Milk costs about 5.80 for 4 litres.

  • @RosscoAW
    @RosscoAW 6 месяцев назад +1

    TL;DR: Ice age. Canada was covered in glaciers, which pulverized and crushed the center of Canada, especially as the glaciation began melting (creating the Great Lakes and Hudson's Bay as a direct consequence of massive melt offs). The resulting, modern landscape of central Ontario is subsequently very, very rocky, as there hasn't been much time (since the end of the last glacial maximum/height of our current ice age) for new soil to be developed on top of the scraped-bare rockface. Enough soil to develop to primordial forests, but it's really just rock beneath those trees. The shield landscape is, for all intents and purposes, very, very young geography that hasn't had the benefit of millions of years of ecological accumulation with which to erode the shield's rock-face and develop soils and organic microbiomes.
    The shield landscape is a very young, almost primordial ecosphere, relative to other landscapes that haven't been scoured and wiped clean by glaciers. It has very, very little soil at all, that's the main issue. It's not fit for much besides growing very austere, robust evergreens whose entire ecological niche is colonizing once-barren landscapes (and eventually transitioning into other ecological types as the forests grow, die, and in turn contribute to soil mass generation).
    Basically it all just comes down to dirt, and it's quality (which is more or less directly correlated to it's quantity). Edmonton, conversely, is cold for a large part of the year, but when it's not cold it has *very, very viable farmland,* enabling a high local population before relying on extensive foreign agricultural imports (which are essential in Canada, but also very expensive, given the vast distances that food imports must travel to reach locals).

  • @cdnrednek1027
    @cdnrednek1027 6 месяцев назад +1

    It is northern wilderness, it's usually a 2 to 3 hr drive between towns. Basically after Sault Saint Marie it's 6 hrs to the next city of Thunder Bay, and then 8 hrs to Winnipeg, either a few small towns in between. Cell phone service is sporadic at best.

    • @freespyrit
      @freespyrit 6 месяцев назад

      But there are many smaller towns in between about 100 km apart.

  • @thecatherinegriffin2610
    @thecatherinegriffin2610 6 месяцев назад +1

    I work in far northern Ontario near Hudson Bay. It is all remote fly in First Nations communities ( Indian reservations) incredible hunting and fishing with thousands of lakes and endless wilderness.

  • @Saintly2
    @Saintly2 6 месяцев назад +2

    Growing up in BC’s Lower Mainland in the 70s… we weren’t ever taught this… I am today years old learning about this. 😊

  • @taytay1313
    @taytay1313 6 месяцев назад +2

    I’m Canadian and I didn’t even know about the Canadian Shield or the fact very few people live further north in Ontario. I’m in my 40s and it’s not something I learned in school…so this was educational for me as well ❤❤❤

  • @kytoon222
    @kytoon222 6 месяцев назад +2

    Visiting in the autumn is breath taking.

  • @RottenAnimal
    @RottenAnimal 6 месяцев назад +9

    I've gone to fishing lodges about 150 miles north of Lake Superior 8 times. It's beautiful and wild but, the nearest grocery store or gas station is about 160 miles away. Since it's very remote, things are very expensive. I really love this area and keep getting drawn back to it. My girlfriend and I will spend some time there this coming summer. I live in Toronto but, when I'm in northern Ontario, I feel more part of God's creation. It's real, not like the big city.

    • @pikachu5188
      @pikachu5188 6 месяцев назад

      I met Mother Nature up there.
      🐾_Montréal 🇨🇦_

  • @johnam1234
    @johnam1234 6 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed your video and learning more about the world around me.

  • @erinrezner
    @erinrezner 6 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up in that circle. It’s underrated. It’s quiet & beautiful.

  • @cdes1776
    @cdes1776 6 месяцев назад +2

    As a 'golden horseshoe' resident I've not heard the term "Canada's empty belt", and I would I categorize Manitoba as central not west.
    In case you wonder, Toronto/GTA's population is 6,372,000 million.

  • @conniekunz203
    @conniekunz203 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love your take on Canada 'eh'...you even taught me a few things I didn't know about my country! ❤

  • @finnishculturalchannel
    @finnishculturalchannel 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sounded and looked a lot like home to me. Northern Ontario has strong ties to the Finnish community. The Thunder Bay District represents the highest proportion of people with Finnish ethnic origin in all of Canada (11 %): "Monocle Films Finns of Thunder Bay". Also, Toronto City Hall was designed by a Finnish architect Viljo Revell. Same neck of the woods on the US side: "Michigan's Upper Peninsula An Authentic Finnish Sauna". There was Finnish immigrant communities elsewhere in Canada too, in similar conditions: "CBC News: The National Dreams of Sointula". Finns got along and mixed with the Indigenous peoples of North America, mainly the Ojibwe, which resulted to the group of people called Findians: "indians | FINNISH AMERICAN INDIANS". The problems the Finnish immigrants ran into: "Italian Hall Disaster 1913 | Footprints of Stampede Disaster" and "How the Finns became White (in America)". There's certain irony in one of the oldest log cabins in the US having been built by the Finns and the Gateway Arch having been designed by a Finnish-American architect Eero Saarinen: "Why is the Oldest Finnish Log Cabin in New Jersey?" and "Detroit Designs the World | Eero Saarinen". Goes together with a Finnish war hero becoming also an American war hero, and having a character based on him being played by John Wayne, a tried-and-true cowboy, with an allegiance to and an affinity for Western culture in all its forms: "Törni - Sotilaan tarina (A Soldier's Story) English Subtitles. And where else would the US offer to evacuate the Finnish population to, if not to Alaska: "Mandelin Finns in North America". If that would have actually happened: "Runki Pettersson Operation Alaska". Also in Sweden and Norway there's a group of immigrant Finns and their descent known as the Forest Finns: "Karl Skartveit Fremmed blod". Matt Damon might not be that pleased to have discovered about his Finnish ancestry, but it somehow does explains why he went to March and got left behind there to grow his potatoes: "Finland is looking for Matt Damon. Has anyone seen him?" and "The Martian | Official Trailer [HD] | 20th Century FOX".

  • @drewdollemont8966
    @drewdollemont8966 6 месяцев назад

    Amazing video Tyler! I was born and raised up in Sudbury, home to most of the toughest hockey players from Ontario! so this made my day! Keep them coming!

  • @DaveGIS123
    @DaveGIS123 6 месяцев назад +2

    A lot of the Canadian Shield is moose pasture. When the Canadian Pacific Railway was built, the Canadian Shield was practically the toughest stretch of land for the navvies to build on. The parts above water were hard rock, mostly granite. The parts below water were... under water.
    ========================
    Thinking of the Canadian Pacific Railway, you might be interested in "The National Dream", an 8-Part CBC TV series released in 1974 and narrated by Pierre Berton. It's a fascinating story and available on RUclips.

    • @brendamiller5785
      @brendamiller5785 6 месяцев назад +1

      I forgot about National Dream! I loved that show.

  • @nickd4310
    @nickd4310 6 месяцев назад

    I took the train from Winnipeg to Toronto. It left Friday night and arrived Sunday morning. All day Saturday all I saw was rocks, trees and lakes, and the occasional settlement for railway maintenance workers.

  • @glen3679
    @glen3679 6 месяцев назад +3

    I think if you check out the northern parts o most provinces you will find them empty also it's not just Ontario

  • @daniellysohirka4258
    @daniellysohirka4258 6 месяцев назад +1

    I live in Flin Flon, Manitoba and even get Amazon packages within like a week. I'm 8 hours north of Winnipeg. We have The Greenstone Belt over in northern Manitoba here, which contains copper, zinc, gold and there have been over 100 shafts in the century in this are for mining. We got sewer boxes in Flin Flin uptown because the bedrock is so prominent, lot's of geology students come here to do there university on site training as well, because the bedrock is so exposed. It's good for training purposes, I used to be a diamond driller, that's why I know this information about the geologists.

  • @princeofpcos9804
    @princeofpcos9804 6 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in the pic circle. Many of the first towns were established near already existing native settlements and alongside the railroad being built. Subsequent towns popped up due to forestry and minerals. Growing up had its hardships due to weather and isolation and things like gas expenditure and grocery shopping can be very high but you also get cheap hunting and fishing, easy berry picking in the summer, cheap golf on ok 9 hole golf courses, cheap ski passes on small hills with towropes, etc. I remember annual passes being like $75 for teens for unlimited use. If you like the outdoors, you'll be fine. If you are looking for nightlife and a good wine selection at every restaurant, not for you.

  • @Pam-56
    @Pam-56 6 месяцев назад +2

    Northern Ontario is so unique. People that have moved there would never leave. The cost of living is crazy high because of no farms for fresh produce. Honestly, the majority of the population there is indigenous. There is a huge national park there called Algonquin Park that many people travel to who enjoy camping in the summer.

    • @darylcano3367
      @darylcano3367 6 месяцев назад

      That's Northeastern Ontario....there's another one in NW Ontario near Atikokan that's even betterIt's called Quetico. You might not see anyone for days!

  • @chrisgraham2904
    @chrisgraham2904 6 месяцев назад +7

    The peak of the last ice age was 21,000 years ago and continued to cover the Canadian Shield 14,500 years ago. One can only imagine the ice sheet, which was up to 2.5 miles thick, that advanced from the Arctic, southward into the northern U.SA. to places like Ohio. This unimaginably heavy natural bulldozer pushed across the landscape picking up everything in its' path and plowing the topsoil from the landscape, scraping everything away to expose the granite bedrock. The fertile soils that once covered the Canadian Shield were deposited in places like the fertile Ohio valley, when the glaziers finally stopped advancing south and then began a 6,000 year slow retreat northward as they melted. As the ice sheet melted and retreated, only the contents that were trapped within the ice sheet were re-deposited into the southern Ontario and Quebec regions and northern Ontario had very little topsoil re-deposited. Now, it's a little late to ask the State of Ohio to give back the topsoil of the Canadian Shield. lol.

  • @caribounug9909
    @caribounug9909 2 месяца назад

    Born, raised and will probably always live in Thunder Bay. Last summer we held a largeish military patrolling competition outside of Nipigon Ontario. One of the competing teams was from Scotland. A team member of theirs was a very experienced soldier, and had done Cambrian patrol (arguably the hardest military exercise in the world) 12 times. He was adamant in saying that this was by far the most difficult terrain he had ever encountered. Of the nearly 200 soldiers involved we as the medics treated 78 environmental casualties. Some of the Scots there had previously done the jungle warfare course in Brazil and they described northern Ontario as a "cold jungle". Growing up here I never thought of it that way but since hearing that I definitely agree with it. Cold, wet, hostile wildlife and it will generally tear you apart.

  • @dcrot9109
    @dcrot9109 Месяц назад

    (Northern ontario 802,379 km² ), some northern ontario cities are Greater Sudbury, Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, Timmins, Kenora, Elliot Lake, Espanola,Temiskaming Shores, Dryden, and many many small towns. With the exception of the Greater Sudbury municipality, all of northern Ontario's land is divided into districts.

  • @HeavyMetalBluegrass
    @HeavyMetalBluegrass 6 месяцев назад +2

    I've lived in Thunder Bay (for the last 50 yrs.) Southern Ontario can have a few million more people. We like it here just fine. I get my Amazon packages just as easily as anywhere else.

  • @pmc609
    @pmc609 6 месяцев назад

    I grew up in Northern Ontario, and worked there as a tree planter for a few summers afterward. Nice little region that not many people know about. Thanks for checking it out!

  • @Sfinxxxx1
    @Sfinxxxx1 6 месяцев назад +2

    Still cold in northern Ontario, -50C is not unusual.

  • @canadianmike626
    @canadianmike626 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Canadian shield is some of the oldest exposed rock on the planet. It was one of the first land masses and is a major source of sediment into the west of Canada and south into the US.

  • @denise4538
    @denise4538 6 месяцев назад

    I live in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario it is a great city with a lot of the chain stores and restaurants that are in southern Ontario. The Soo is surrounded native land. I go to Pow Wows and always welcomed. This winter has been unusually warm with very little snow. Not good for all the winter sports and tourism. We will have a lovely summer with lots of sunshine and temperatures below 80. Great fishing, boating and so much more.

  • @danjennings8618
    @danjennings8618 6 месяцев назад +2

    I was born in Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, right on the Michigan border. Lived in Southern Ontario for 19 years and I moved back. I love the scenery of the Canadian Shield. City has a population of 75000

    • @janlefave3048
      @janlefave3048 6 месяцев назад +1

      Love the Sault!

    • @AmandaZuke
      @AmandaZuke 6 месяцев назад

      I have no idea how we’re such a well-kept secret!

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 6 месяцев назад +1

    For those of us in Southern Ontario, the more southern parts of the shield represent “cottage country” and summer vacations spend fishing and boating. When driving north you’ll suddenly start to see rock cuts along the side of the road where the rock has been blasted out to make the road much flatter, then you know that you’ve entered shield country. When the transcontinental Canadian Pacific Railway was being constructed in the late 1800’s it was the areas in Ontario north of Superior that gave them the most trouble along with the Rocky Mountains. There were significant areas of muskeg and swampy conditions where they could pour in thousands of tons of rock to form a bed for the tracks only to have it dissapear.

  • @airborne63
    @airborne63 Месяц назад +1

    A lot of the territory that you mention is First Nations Reserves.....not available for to the General Population. All along the shore of James Bay, for example, on both sides are Tribal lands. As well, most of the arable land is in the south. The North of Ontario, for example, is mainly ROCK. The 'tree line' in the north, is where TREES STOP GROWING....it's like somebody drew a line along the ground......seeing it is amazing.

  • @wizardsuth
    @wizardsuth 6 месяцев назад +1

    13:37 "pretty cheap place to buy a home" -- That depends on the location. You may have to factor in the cost of building a road and running hydro lines. Plus a lot of the land is muskeg, which is not good for building houses or roads. It also depends on the materials you want to use. Wood and stone are plentiful, but it may be harder to ship in things like concrete, steel, drywall, etc.

  • @user-vg3jp6rm2b
    @user-vg3jp6rm2b 6 месяцев назад +3

    I'm from Sault Ste. Marie....right across from Soo St. Marie Michigan. They put a pic of the International Bridge. Fun fact if WW3 broke out that area was a target - Canadian side there railway ships, a steel mill, at one time a paper mill all sorts of lumber and mining oh yeah and Canadian side has the largest airport in the area for both sides of the border. As well as the Sault Locks for bigger transport ships. Politically important at one time just due to geography...because of our ability to convert the steel mill to make munitions and close proximity for transport to the St. Mary's River but because WE were not nor do we still not have nuclear capabilities Canada can't be targeted. Soo , Michigan however is American who is capable of nuclear weaponization is a target. The city of Soo, Michigan may not have nukes but America does. So the target is the middle of the river between the 2 cities, which with a big enough payload would take out both. I highly doubt that plan is viable now , but at one time was entirely feesible. Scary shit!

    • @AmandaZuke
      @AmandaZuke 6 месяцев назад

      Can confirm! The US military stationed men here during WWII, flying barrage balloons over the Sault Locks, because they feared it would be a high-value target. My grandfather was one of them, and he settled down with a Sault girl.

    • @brendamiller5785
      @brendamiller5785 6 месяцев назад

      Very intetesting...
      BC

  • @Azsunes
    @Azsunes 6 месяцев назад +1

    Grandfather's house was built on Canadian Shield. Had to use dynamite to blast out the basement. There is no infrastructure is the main reason, you are right that farming has a huge part of it. Where all the cities formed is around major trading posts and farm land. Many of the areas are only accessible by air during the summer and require winter for the ice roads to open up. If there were highways year round I am sure some of the communities would prosper. With our milder winters some years now the ice roads are not open long enough for the communities to get what can't be sent by air.

  • @prophetisaiah08
    @prophetisaiah08 6 месяцев назад

    I grew up in a mining town VERY deep in the eastern side of the Canadian Shield. We're right on the border between Labrador and Quebec. It's a different kind of life out there; it's extremely remote and isolated.

  • @myragroenewegen5426
    @myragroenewegen5426 6 месяцев назад

    Go take a look at some nature pictures of the areas around the Canadian Shield, Tyler, it'll give you a sense of wht a lot of the landscape feels like. Along the highway there will be the usual wild grass and tree landscape of North America, but large rock chunk expanses will crop in a variety of interesting colors will crop out of the ground, not large enough to loom over like mountains, but quite defining the horizontal view of the drives along. Some of the road areas do really look like maybe they were blasted out of this rock, but, again, it isn't like being in a purely rock landscape. Canoeing in Ontario's lakes it's fairly common to find rock islands with trees just managing to exist and a fair bity of colorful lichen and moss. Again this is very cool but fundamentally different than seeing the rocky mountains, which amazed me when I was a tourist in Alberta.

  • @rrain3375
    @rrain3375 6 месяцев назад +1

    They don’t mention but Northern Ontario is home to several Native Indian Reserves. The British pushed them to Northern Ontario. The same applies to Manitoba where a large Native presences is in the Churchill area of that province.

  • @Upgraydez
    @Upgraydez 6 месяцев назад +1

    As a Canadian in Manitoba, I can't fathom people living everywhere, and having towns everywhere.

  • @kellyhayes8046
    @kellyhayes8046 6 месяцев назад +1

    besides the cold in winter and flies in summer and lack of work except mining and logging there is no work

  • @porker5749
    @porker5749 6 месяцев назад

    Immediately after I typed that comment below, there was a 15 second time frame of the video played before he felt the need to interrupt it once again. Bravo Tyler bravo!

  • @InsaneHunter01
    @InsaneHunter01 6 месяцев назад +2

    Why didn't you look at Northern Quebec? Has fewer people than North Western Ontario. The type of tourism that exists in North Western Ontario, are hunting tours. Big game such as moose, deer, and bears.

  • @alexanderdavidd
    @alexanderdavidd 6 месяцев назад

    It’s crazy to me that source videos like in this one cite Hamilton as a major city and tech hub, when an hour away is Kitchener Waterloo, which is literally Canada’s Silicon Valley, host to 2 internationally recognized universities, and the base of Google in Canada, on top of being the place where Blackberry was headquartered, etc etc. K-W always gets forgotten.

  • @Barec76
    @Barec76 2 месяца назад

    I live in NW ON. On lake superior. Northern ON is filled with reserves and cold winters. I live in one of the only big cities with 100k+ people. But it doesn't act like a big city. It's 8 hrs from anywhere surrounded by forest.

  • @CarboneCat
    @CarboneCat 6 месяцев назад +2

    As for tourism, the northern parts of the country is popular to European and Asian tourists because they are looking for an experience in the wilderness.

  • @Diddlybomp
    @Diddlybomp 6 месяцев назад

    I live in Elliot Lake and have lived all over Northern Ontario between Sault Ste Marie and Sudbury. Fishing is amazing here...so many lakes... Watch out for deer and moose on the highway though. Industry in the area is mainly mining copper and nickle in Sudbury, steel plant in Sault Ste Marie (soo), and alot of forestry all along... Paper mills, lumber, logging .... Winter sucks unless you have a snow machine... Mountains are round and alot of rolling hills...
    Its nice having alot of untouched wilderness to traverse... I love and its a great place to raise my kid.

    • @Diddlybomp
      @Diddlybomp 6 месяцев назад

      Oh... dont forget the bears lol..... lots of bears

  • @Catstimesinfinity
    @Catstimesinfinity 6 месяцев назад

    I live in northern canada. Its cold and snowy and we have short days in winter, long days in summer. Our town used to be an indigineous settlement but now its a mining community holding some of the biggest names in mining.
    Indigenous do get many oppritunities to work up here via various programs and companies. "We took your land, sorry, help us dig oil, we will make it easy for you to ibtain the job".
    Luckily reclamation is a big priority in canada so when the oil site is complete, its turned into a park.

  • @daveboyle307
    @daveboyle307 6 месяцев назад +1

    In northern Alberta, there is the biggest one in the world, it’s visible by satellite. It is a huge beaver pond, you would have to hike into it. And also at one point all the water stops, slowing into the Great Lakes and it flows into the arctic circle.

  • @gilmcleod8087
    @gilmcleod8087 6 месяцев назад +1

    You should check out the cottage country(Muskoka )of Ontario. Lots of movie stars live there in the summer and although it's not considered northern Ontario, it is the gateway to it. Everyone says Canada is so beautiful but only show B.C. and Alberta but northern Ontario is stunning in its own right. The highway between Sault Ste Marie and thunder Bay is amazing!

  • @NoahBarzel
    @NoahBarzel 4 месяца назад

    I live in Thunder Bay, feels like we are in the Middle of nowhere. 7+ hours West to Winnipeg and 7+ hours East to Sault Ste. Marie, 3 1/2 hours to Duluth, MN and 6+ hours to Minneapolis

  • @hazmatt_bignell
    @hazmatt_bignell 6 месяцев назад

    I fly two hours north of thunder Bay every year for a fishing trip, great times.

  • @FeldwebelWolfenstool
    @FeldwebelWolfenstool 6 месяцев назад +1

    When I was a kid in N.Ontario, I thought of how cool it would be to own a silver mine. Now I do.