You will see several pictures below of houses among the Thousand Island and of Boldt Castle itself. Mr. George C. Boldt was the proprietor of Waldorf Astoria in NY as well as several other famous hotels. He purchased the island to build his wife his castle, a true labor of love. Construction began in 1900. In 1904 his wife Louise died unexpectedly and Mr. Boldt stopped all work on the castle. It fell into disrepair until the property was puchased and controlled by the NY Thousand Island Bridge Authority which began restoration. You will see some of the restoresd property as well as some of the rooms that are still a "work in progress".
From Gananoque we headed west to Kingston Ontario and entered the Rideau Canal. The canal takes one from from
Presently we are in Ottawa, the capitol of Canada. Very different than Washingto DC but very, very nice. We are spending a couple of days here before heading back down the Rideau to Kingston and than on to the Trent-Severn waterway.
Since our internet access is limited to marinas and Starbucks (where I sit now) updates may be a little infrequent.
A house along the route from Ganaoque to Kingston |
The guide said this was the shortest international bridge between Canada and the USA |
The "main" international bridge between Canada and the USA crossing the St. Lawrence Seaway |
Nice little "Summer Cottages" in the Thousand Islands |
Approaching Boldt Castle |
The main dining room |
A gazebo where they hold weddings - three the day we were there |
The stained glass dome inside the voyer of the castle |
The daughter's bedroom |
Outside gardens |
This was called "The Playhouse" and is where the family lived during the summer when the main castle was being built |
The "Power House" at Boldt Castle. This building supplied all electrical power as well as the water supply |
Seagoing ships sharing the seaway with all types of pleasure craft |
A sailboat race as we are entering Kingston |
Able deckhand Teresa manning the bow line as we get ready to enter the first lock on the Rideau Canal |
Staff of Park's Canada cranking to open the lock doors |
One of the old handcranks used to open doors |
This is Mara, a summer internee working the first lock. Many students work at the locks as summer jobs |
Different modes of transportation on the canal |
Our friends Bonnie and Charlie arriving at Smith Falls on the canal. They were heading south from Ottawa |
The locks are open to all types of watercraft, as long as you pay the lockage fee |
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