BAY OF QUINTE
Forget the pyramids. The Bay of Quinte has its own wonders. A giant glacial boulder mysteriously dropped here during the Ice Age. One of the oldest continuously operating lighthouses on the Great Lakes, watching over Presqu’ile Provincial Park while hundreds of migratory birds pass through each year. A Halifax bomber, shot down over Norway in WWII, recovered from the bottom of a lake nearly fifty years later and painstakingly restored at the National Air Force Museum of Canada through more than 300,000 volunteer hours. And a stretch of the Trent–Severn Waterway where seven historic manual locks still operate the old-fashioned way, with staff cranking massive mechanisms by hand as boats slowly rise and fall between levels.
There’s the Corby Rose Garden, transforming a quiet Belleville neighbourhood into something that feels more like the grounds of a formal estate. The Couldery Collection at Glanmore National Historic Site, home to the world’s largest public collection of wonderfully strange Victorian animal paintings. And long before any of these landmarks existed, the Bay of Quinte was the birthplace of Tekanawita, the Peacemaker that brought the original Five Nations Iroquois Confederacy under a constitution of peace in the 12th century.
And—because the BoQ has always embraced the wonderfully unusual—an entire museum dedicated to Canadian-made pianos.
The Bay of Quinte doesn’t really do ordinary attractions. Its wonders are historic, mysterious, and occasionally eccentric, which is probably why the BoQ has a habit of surprising people who thought they were “just passing through.”
12th EDITION — Get your copy at visitor centres and popular spots around the region, or shoot us an email at [email protected], and we’ll hook you up!
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The Bay of Quinte RMB Land Acknowledgement
The Bay of Quinte Regional Marketing Board is committed to acknowledging, appreciating and understanding the Indigenous Peoples’ historic connection to this land and to raising awareness by building relationships in collaboration with Indigenous partners and communities.
We recognize and acknowledge that we are living and working on the traditional territory of the Wendat, Mississaugas, Anishinaabeg and Haudenosaunee which includes the Kenhtè:ke Kanyen’kehá:ka (Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte) with whom we work in direct partnership with.
This partnership focuses on the common goal of celebrating the region with the Kenhtè:ke Kanyen’kehá:ka who are equal partners within the organization and at the Board of Directors table contributing to the mandate and operations.
This mandate includes listening to, learning from, and collaborating with the Kenhtè:ke Kanyen’kehá:ka and actively incorporating their culture and heritage into the practice of responsible destination marketing and management of the region.
We understand that this land acknowledgement is only a small step towards the larger process of reparations and reconciliation.
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