Water Sports à Bridgeport East, Kitchener, ON

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Résultats à proximité dans la catégorie Water Sports à Bridgeport East, Kitchener

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91 Hollinger Cres, Kitchener, N2K 2Y8

(519) 742-5415
Learn Scuba Diving with us! 3 Locations in Ontario. Professional Instructors. We can fit anyone in our rental department. Huge selection of scuba equipment in our Dive shops. Travel with Groundhog divers to the best locations in the world.

Résultats à proximité dans la catégorie Water Sports

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3734 KING E, Kitchener, N2P 2G5

(519) 896-0290
Trip Outfitters, Bateaux et Sports nautiques, Kayaks, Sports et Loisirs, tours, Canoe & kayak rental service, Outfitter, Sports & Recreation Venue, Canoes, Canot-Fournisseurs pour excursions, sporting goods, Canoe & Kayak Rental, Cano
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75 University Ave W, Waterloo, N2L 3C5

(519) 885-1310
Swimming, Sports et Loisirs, Ecoles de natation, Bateaux et Sports nautiques, swimming instruction, Swim club, Instruction
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625 WESTMOUNT RD, Waterloo, N2J 2Z4

519-884-6620
In the early 1800s, the Grand River was a source of transportation, power and water for local communities. Settlement led to deforestation, intensive farming and urbanization, which began to hinder the natural cycles of the river. By the 1930s, river conditions had become so severe that annual floods, drought and pollution were affecting public health and the economic development of the communities up and down the Grand. Something had to be done. Sponsored by the Grand Valley Boards of Trade and modeled on the fledging Tennessee Valley Authority in the United States, the "Grand River Conservation Commission Act" was passed by the Province of Ontario in 1932. The commission was the first watershed management agency in Canada when it received its formal Letters Patent in August, 1934. This was the first time local municipalities had banded together to address water management issues on a watershed scale. The founding partner municipalities were Brantford, Galt, Kitchener, Fergus and Caledonia. William Philip of Galt was the first chairman, and the commission's head office was in Brantford. Other municipalities soon joined the partnership. In 1948, the Grand River watershed municipalities formed their own Grand Valley Conservation Authority under this new act. This new agency had extended powers in the 1950s, which allowed it to acquire many wetlands, forests and natural areas in the watershed. The valley authority also acquired park land for camping, swimming, fishing and canoeing. Many of today's popular conservation areas, including Elora Gorge, Rockwood, Pinehurst Lake and Byng Island, were purchased and developed during this time. This new authority's objectives began to parallel those of the commission. Early provincial conservation authority publications even included the commission as a special section. The two agencies merged in 1966 to form today's Grand River Conservation Authority.
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400 Clyde Road, Cambridge, N1R 5W6

(519) 621-2761
The Grand River flows 300 kilometres through southwestern Ontario from the highlands of Dufferin County to Port Maitland on Lake Erie. The Grand River Conservation Authority manages water and other natural resources on behalf of 38 municipalities and close to one million residents.