Sharon Hawley has finished her bicycle trip in Canada for this summer. She hopes to complete the adventure in another year. Please follow her winter adventure at http://sharonswinter.blogspot.com/

Route Map

Route Map

Tuesday, June 23, 2009


Little Manitou Lake, looks just like the many other lakes I’ve seen dotting the plain since Saskatoon. But its murky waters are three times saltier than the ocean and denser than the Dead Sea. The lake has long been known for its healing properties. Even by the Indians called it “lake of the healing waters.” Even I can float without paddling in its yellow odiferous water. But I did so not believing in the power of these waters to remove obstacles to health.

I headed north from Watrous to the tiny, rather ramshackle resort town of Manitou Beach on the lake’s south shore to relax and bathe in the heated indoor pool supplied with lake water. It was a treat to myself for having come this far and having decided that Winnipeg will be my final destination. Neither of these acts deserve a reward, but a half-day of luxury was irresistible.

It seems an icefield came here from the north and proceeded to melt about twelve thousand years ago. It left pockets and piles on the otherwise level land, like an ancient sand-and-gravel operation. The pockets became lakes, and most of them have mingled their waters with the stream water and groundwater, acting like good lakes should. But Matitou Lake did not mingle. It refused both input from streams and groundwater. It hoarded all the water that came to it from the sky. Over the long time since the ice melted, it has selfishly received and has given only as required by evaporation. But it did not give up the minerals that came with the rain. So, minute as their quantities might be, it has added them all together for twelve thousand years to produce a saline brine in which humans like me come to soak. And I did soak in its yellow, smelly water, and feel better for it.



Can you interpret this sign at the yellow-water pool?

5 comments:

  1. I must say, before I start, that is the most uninviting looking pool I have ever seen, especially as a treat, but I guess the important thing is that it felt good! Which I think you MORE than deserve for both of the reasons you disparage and beynd... that you came this far and you let the lover win over the loner, YES! Now be careful of those Manitous they seem to be little and big, beached all around you, "in Algonquian belief, a supernatural power that permeates the world, possessed in varying degrees by both spiritual and human beings, nature spirits with both good and evil powers..." and they dump various Waterous chemicals in their wake that turn water an obnoxious color, with an equally obnoxious fragrance (my interpretation of the sign). Your writing is really wonderful, I love how you can give the actions of age old nature such strong personality,sometimes selfish, sometimes generous, even lakes "behave" one way or the other as you ride through like as Michael say "a goddess" passing judgement. Hurry home!

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  2. Yeeech! With a pool that yellow and smelly, how do you know if somebody else did... something... in it?

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  3. Really, Kath and Steven, can't you appreciate the golden nuance of this aromatic bath, how refreshing and healing it must be?

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  4. Just as every morsel of food becomes a gourmet event when riding, so must a soak in the most dubious of fluids. Let me say that I am not green with envy from reading about this particular experience.

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  5. The sign says: "2.7 metres".
    2 point 7 metres. :-)

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