Bondi Resort Blog

Come on into our Blog for a look at the wonderful world we've got to share! With over 240 hectares (600 acres) of wilderness woodlands surrounding the resort, just ten minutes from Algonquin Park, we feature over 400 metres (1200’) of waterfront and beach; boat rentals; summer hiking trails winding through fields and woods; 20 km. of groomed cross country ski trails and snowshoeing in winter; access to nearby snowmobile trails for sledders, and a toboggan hill for the young at heart.
www.bondi-village-resort.com

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

First Cookout on the Beach for 2014

 Our wonderful S'mores Crew -- Sue, Sarah and Jackie were hard at work loading up the marshmallow sticks and doling out the chocolate.




Getting the perfect 'sear' on that mallow is a critical art.  Of course, watching it turn into basic black is also fun...

The action had to pause while the Potato Canons came out to strut their stuff and fire their taters.




Then there is our legendary Seed Spitting contest.  David, who has been hoiking out seeds since he was old enough to stand at the start line, sent his popcorn kernel an impressive 36'10".    Here he is giving some instruction to one of our future international Seed Spitters...

He shoots, He Scores, He Gets really really WET

 Taking a break from tubing and jet-skiing, Jason, Nic and Noah took to the lake for an impromptu ball game.





  Fun is where you make it.




And it really is true -- the recipe for a fabulous summer? Take a Muskoka Lake, just add kids...












Happy Canada Day. Happy Canada.

If you are lucky enough to live in Canada, you are lucky enough.


Thanks to our Sarah for this fantastic photo of one of our Bondi fawns, who wanted to get into the spirit of Canada Day.  It remains one of our all time favourite photographs.



We are also delighted with the newest music video from Commander Chris Hadfield and his brother, In Canada.  Could we be more in love with Chris Hadfield? He has been and continues to be a tremendous inspiration.

Brewster the Homeless Rooster

 Early last week, we started to hear some strange bird calling up on the Lookout Hill.   "It sounds like a rooster," said Brian. But there is no rooster here, and no rooster anywhere near here. We don't have wild roosters. Wild turkeys, yes, Wild chickens, not so much...


We were all racking our brains trying to figure out what the heck would be out there, sounding like a rooster, living in the wilderness, singing with the wolf pack, crowing at random intervals during the day.  We were baffled, and so were our Naturalist friends.  Once we had crossed "rooster" off the list of possibles, we were stymied.

Then a lovely lady came into the office to report that one of our chickens was running amok on the Port Cunnington Road. "A truly beautiful bird," she said, "I'm so afraid it will be hit by a car."

Now the hens are lovely, but not stunningly lovely..  And while they range freely, the Port Cunnington Road -- the far side of a creek and ravine -- is a little far even for the most adventurous of hens.   So Taffy and I went to collect this errant hen that had wandered a road too far.  

And there, on the side of the road, scratching in the bracken, we found Brewster, the Homeless Rooster.  The answer to what is in the woods that sounds like a rooster?  A rooster.

Dave and Mike were summoned to help with the Rooster Roundup. Taffy was not as much help as she thought she was as we herded this semi-feral fellow about, David wielding a big fishing net, Mike leaping nimbly through the bracken like a gazelle, me scurrying along on top of the bank trying to prevent escape through the great frontier.  Cars slowed down, people laughed... One fine gentleman leaned out and called, "Nancy, Now I've seen Everything."   How little he knew...  

Finally David succeeded in stuffing Rooster in a Sack.  Brewster was less than thrilled by this turn of events. Being Bird in a Bag was not his game plan.  We brought him back, and tucked him away in splendid isolation and safety while we developed a plan. After all, beautiful as he is, we don't want a rooster at the resort.  They can be quite territorial, and with the little fingers that come to help gather eggs, we don't want anything that might be scary.  Social media came to our rescue. We put out the word that Brewster the Homeless Rooster needed a forever home.

Kellie came riding to the rescue -- as it happens, she has been looking for a rooster for their farm for the past few weeks.  We are happy to report that Brewster has emigrated to Burks Falls, to be in charge of his own harem of hens.

So one mystery is resolved.  But a deeper mystery endures.  How did the rooster get into our woods in the first place?  Who dumps a rooster in a random drive-by?

Paddle Your Own, um, Board...

 It is a core workout, standing on the paddle boards.  Good fun, though!  Ours were taken out for a 'test paddle' the day after the thunderstorms.  Once around the Bay...


I'm working up to this, since I have some serious concerns about how Taffy is going to augment the experience... She has mastered the kayak, the canoe, and the ski tube, but this just plain looks slippery for a poodle...

Although David makes it look oh so simple!

After the Storm


 We had some biggish thunderstorms blow through this past week.  They came in swiftly, and left just as fast.  And in between, it was hot, sunny, fabulous.    In fact, the storms helped reduce the humidity somewhat, which was quite welcome. 





With the lake already at 80 degrees F, 26.6 Celsius, that is where everybody is these days!  And why not!


After the storm, came the rainbow.  or rainbows as the case proved to be...



Brian took the top photo --  Proof that Bondi is the Pot of Gold you've been looking for...  


And then there were sunsets to steal your breath away.



I must give full credit to my friend Jacquie for the superb photo of her son Sean on the stand up paddleboard at her home, just down the lake.  She captured the double rainbow, and the entire essence of summer at the cottage in this one image. 




We now have two standup paddleboards for rent at the resort, joining our canoes, kayaks, and fishing boats...

Showing off our Summertime Blue

 Brian was flying this week -- one trip took him to Parry Sound, and he said the air was so smooth that he barely had to touch the stick at all.  Those kind of days are precious, for pilots and for those of us on the ground looking up.


Here's a shot of Bondi -- coming in from the North East. That's the Fox Point Road leading its way past the Hidden Lake -- you can just pick out the indoor riding arena's green roof on the right side... and then it is blue lake, and more blue lake.  Fire Island dominates the photo, with Dwight Bay in the background. This is a BIG lake!
 As he came around, he got this different angle on the resort property.  For those people who mutter that "resorts are too crowded" all we can say is, you've never stayed with us!  All that land, and only 14 cottages spread around, each one separate and private, but with access to our 1200' of shallow sandy shoreline.
 Now you can start to pick out some of the docks - although most of the cottages are still invisible, because they are so well landscaped into the trees. The organic vegetable garden still looks 'earthy' from this height, but down close, the corn is shooting up out of the ground, growing daily!

We invite you to come visit -- you'll love our summertime Blues!