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Village Squire, 1980-07, Page 19as family and group camping. The official season runs from mid-May to mid-October. POINT FARMS Many camps take advantage of one of Western Ontario's natural resources, Lake Huron. Point Farms Provincial Park, a 598 -acre park six kilometres north of Goderich on Highway 21, is no exception. Park superintendent Doug MacEachern said the official season runs from May 9 to September 2. Point Farms has two campgrounds, Colborne and Huron, with 200 tent trailer sites. Each site has a picnic table, fire grill and space for a car, and each campground has a comfort station with flush toilets, hot water and laundry facilities. Water taps are located conveniently throughout the camp- grounds. A vehicle permit costs $2; bus permit, $10, and annual vehicle permit, $20. Campsite and vehicle permits for overnight range from $5 for an unserviced lot to S7 for a site with electrical hook ups. Separate group camping areas are provided for youth groups under the age of 18, such as Boy Scouts and church organizations. Senior citizens are admitted free of charge, and Sandra Currie, district information officer, estimates 30 per cent of the park's campers are seniors. Visitors come from centres such as Kitchener, London and Stratford, and Michigan. Local campers are usually day or week -end users. The sand and pebble beach with its shallow water is a natural drawing card. No beach patrol is provided; families and groups are responsible for supervision. Motorboating, sailing and canoeing are popular. No boat launching ramp is available within the park, but boats can be launched and rented in Goderich. Fishing is good at the mouth of the Maitland River in Goderich and rainbow trout are caught in the spring at Port Albert Fishway, 13 kilometres north of Point Farms. Bass, rainbow trout, perch and pike are most likely catches in Lake Huron. Marilyn Wightman, visitor services programmer at Point Farms, explains recreation is geared to campers of all ages. The park has a softball diamond, soccer field, horseshoe pits, children's play- ground and two -kilometre fitness trail. Corn roasts, group campfires and hayrides to the beach are popular as well as slide and film programs, shuffleboard and table tennis on rainy days. A weekly newsletter announces demon- strations of outdoor skills, arts and crafts programs, barn dances and plays. In 1974, a 90 year old barn on the park was renovated into an Activities' Centre. Barn dances are held weekly; with a live band and caller as many as 250 people have attended these dances. Each Sunday, a local minister holds a church service. Puppet shows are staged; Blyth Festival performers appear at Point Farms occasionally, and Lambton Youth Theatre performs in the park three or four times a summer. For sixteen years, Point Farms' staff concentrated on an ambitious rec program, and now they're also highlighting the site's historical value. In the 1870's, Point Farms Hotel was a popular resort with a five -story central observation tower, landscaped lawns overlooking the beach and a stage coach carrying passengers between the hotel and Goderich. Only remaining evid- ence of the resort is a giant spruce identified in early photos at the southwest corner of the hotel. Preserving the pioneer barn was the first step in combining recreation and history at Point Farms Provincial Park. SUGAR BUSH Three kilometres south of Bayfield on Highway 21 is Sugar Bush Inn, owned by John and Gail McIntyre. Just off the busy highway is a motel, restaurant, ice cream stand and trailer sales and service. Behind the buildings, campers find a different world, quiet and peaceful, among 80 acres of woodland and gullies that stretch to the shores of Lake Huron. The 200 sites with electricity, water, sewers average 40 feet in width and 70 feet to 200 feet in depth. They accommodate everything from small tent trailers to large luxury models. Visitors come from centres, like Burlington, Chatham and Toronto, while local campers from Clinton, Hensai: and Kippen also camp at Sugar Bush. Gail McIntyre has discovered many people, who stop in for the night, stay for a week and return next year. About 65 per cent of the campers are retired people using the trailer as a cottage. Some spend winters in Florida; summers at Sugar Bush. Permanent campers can lease lots on a one or five year basis. They maintain their own sites, planting flowers and vegetables in the spring and mowing lawns in the summer. New trailers with efficient furnaces allow some to return through the winter for cross country skiing. Singles and families with young children also camp at Sugar Bush, and overnight and weekend sites are always available. Facilities include a swimming pool, sauna bath and large recreation hall. The basement of the hall is reserved for children to enjoy music, games and films. Upstairs in the hall with its large fireplace, adults gather for card games, parties and dances. The Hallowe'en party is the most popular, although it comes after the close of the official season. Shuffleboard, horseshoes, summer barbecues and an annual golf tournament at nearby Bayview golf course are other activities enjoyed by Sugar Bush campers. LO OK THE GIFT THAT... KEEPS ON GIVING EW E LLE RY KIT FORM - MAKE 11 YOURSELF CUSTOM MADE - AT LOW COST STONES ARE NATURAL MINERALS IMPORTED FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD. NO GLASS OR PLASTIC. Tiger Eye, Carnelian, Amethyst Quartz, Garnet, Moonstone, Jade, Opal, and Tots more. Rings, Pendants, Beads, Necklaces, Belt Buckles, Bola Ties, Bracelets, etc. VISIT...MINI MINERAL MUSEUM - NO CHARGE. o�'IL,Yti CMS 51 ST. DAVID ST., GODERICH, ONT. N1A 1l4 511-9972 McLeod Fisheries Wholesale and Retail Fresh Fish OPEN DAILY 9:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. NORTH DOCK BAYFIELD Props.: Donald & Kathryn McLeod 565-2470 VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1980 PG. 17