A cottage; typically with no electricity
Example | Meaning |
He's there all the time and you're- y-- yo-know, we've had the camp totally destroyed by bears ah before, so. So I start walking up the camp and th-- and- to the camp, and the bear ran behind ah a little building we had. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
So I start walking up the camp and th-- and- to the camp, and the bear ran behind ah a little building we had. And ah- so I got into the shed, and when I came back out the bear was ah on his hind legs and he was hissing. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
Well with my friend Jackson we used to go to like the z-- Lake-Rufus. Rufus-Lake, he's got like a camp out there. We go there camping or my buddy Cameron up in Hearst, they got a camp maybe a hundred kilometres west of Hearst. Interviewer: Oh wow. Speaker: Go there and one summer we went there and we decided, "Oh, we'll camp out in this island. Great idea." 'Cause we just watched Survivorman before and of-course halfway through the night we're like, "Oh." We got hungry. So we're like, "Let's just make a raft log and go all the way across the lake back to the camp." And one guy goes to sit in his raft and all-of-a-sudden boom, everything falls apart. So we just took a couple p-- pieces of trees and took my belt and tied them together and just swam back and oh, it was awful. No, and once we got back to the camp the generator was off and everything was locked up so we went there for nothing. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
Yeah, he was um- he was a scout-master and they- was the Catholic scouts. And ah they had a camp ah- and a- a property ah at Remi-Lake and they used to go there every summer. Yeah, he was- he was in a lot, my dad. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
Vodka was his drink. But- I-don-t-know. I-- it was ah- it was like ah- we never noticed the poverty or-anything. We were never in poverty. And ah my sister ah went to work in the bush in the camp as a cookie. Interviewer: Ah. Speaker: So she had nice clothes, so when she went to work I wore her clothes. 'Cause I only had a yellow blouse and a black skirt in- High-school. So I wore her clothes and hung it up back before she came. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
It- that'd be a train track, like, it's a little dinghy-line, and they had cars and when they portaged, they'd have a big paved frame and they'd block and tackle it up and they'd load it on the cars and then go through to another portage or to the camp, or- Yeah. Well, like, for guys that went hunting, like, you had to load everything. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
I was working up at the camp, and, uh, it snowed, and you-know, uh- like, you-know when there's about a foot of snow, it's fresh snow, and you- all you have is the tire tracks, eh? Interviewer: Yeah. Speaker: I'm driving along up to camp, I'm just following the tracks. That's all you see, is- is two- two tire tracks here in the bush, ice-road, eh? And, all of a sudden, woah, uh- big, uh, herd of wolves come out. Timberwolves. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
Yeah, I think it was- it c-- probably when we were four-wheeling or-something. 'Cause like he would- like if we were at the camp or-something. We have a camp out in the bush, we always go there. Like he would get like pissed off 'cause he couldn't drive the four-wheeler then. I'd be like, "Oh no, I'm driving. Like you're a bad driver." And he'd just get mad and start fighting you-know. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Well ah I-don-t-know, there's not a lot to do at our camp, honestly. Like in the winter w-- 'kay yeah, there's this cool thing we do in the winter. We'll go out there in the winter and we'll sit in a camp or-something, have a smoke or-whatever. And then we'll go outside. The snow will sit on the trees and we would go around and just like take the baseball bat or-something or like the hammer we have and just like hit the tree really hard and all the snow . |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
It's a- it's a really- it's more of a private lake. Like this camp, not a lot of people know about it. It's like kind-of in the bush. It's on a small lake. I forgot now what the lake's called but in the winter we'd go around the lake with our Skidoos and do like I-don-t-know. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
You go down the road and it goes to the cross-country ski club but then there's a trail there that brings you up north. And you go to the place where like the falls are and it's a really nice place- like you-know, everyone goes there like to fish and camp out and-stuff. And we go there to fish but we have a spot that's like- we'll park at the top of the rocks, like the perfect view, you can see the falls and-everything. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
I remember 'cause like I went Skidooing all day and then you get home, you-know you'd have uh- yeah last year, last year was awesome. I remember that day was so perfect. I went Skidooing- we went Skidooing at our camp all day with our buddy and he- it was funny 'cause the way- this is- this is- this one's really funny. H-- his Skidoo like- he blew his belt and his spare belt's like- like- usually there's like a piece of like the- like the- I'll call it the hood. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Example | Meaning |
Normally we get snow in December there, and last year we were using the four-wheelers and the side-by-sides to go to our camp on New-Year-s 'cause we always have a party with ah our family from Toronto. They always come down and there's always ah- there was- we were using the four-wheelers, there was still not enough snow. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Yeah. And then if we weren't at our camp they were playing Call-of-Duty on my P-S-4 and their parents would get mad at me 'cause that's all we'd do sometimes, but that's all they wanted to do, so. I just let them do that. So, yeah. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Like I've heard of crazy stories but I've never seen like that craziness and, I've been at- well I did one thing that I kind-of regret but, that was ah- yeah well, me and my friend, we told my parents we were going to go drink at my camp or-whatever, so, we went there. Then I remember we ended up- it was like nine o-clock and we got a text from someone in town that there was a party. So we were like, "Okay, let's go to it, there." But I didn't tell my parents. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Well there was always- well, he'd always like tell us stories of the war and how like- 'cause we'd eat supper or-whatever and we'd have like spaghetti and he'd always tell us like, "Oh yeah, I remember when I was in the war there, and we were at the camp and all we'd get was mutton and the chef at the end would have just this one big square cake and everybody'd go get a piece and-" I heard that one a couple times. |
A cottage; typically with no electricity |
Mechanically or artificially reproduced, esp. of music.
Example | Meaning |
There 'd be- probably a band because I grew up in that band (inc). There was no disc-jockeys and all that nonsense. They had big bands. So I 'm pretty sure it was- they had bands. Not canned music as I call it. |
Opposite of live music |
A form of lever for canting over or turning timber, etc., consisting of a wooden bar with an iron catch or hooked arm near its lower end which passes over the log, grips it, and so affords a hold by which it may be pulled over; called also cant-dog.
Example | Meaning |
Speaker: ... we didn't have a log loader on the truck so you'd- you get a side hill, you'd pile the logs on side hill and dig a hole so that the truck would be level and- cant- cant hook them, cant lever them onto the- onto the- Interviewer: Can't do which? Speaker: C-- ah, cant hook. ... Cant hook indeed. ... Cant hook is a- is a- ... A cant hook has a handle like that and then has a- a- a- a steel thing that goes around like that with it. |
A form of lever for canting over or turning timber, etc., consisting of a wooden bar with an iron catch or hooked arm near its lower end which passes over the log, grips it, and so affords a hold by which it may be pulled over. |
carnival; also, a person who works at a carnival.
Example | Meaning |
Ten minutes later, there the carney walks by- just puked all over him by accident. |
A person who works at a carnival. |
Speaker: But some of the carneys- they'll rip you off if they have the chance. Interviewer: Really? Speaker: My friend dropped his wallet and the carney stole it on him. Then he ended up fighting the carney afterwards. |
A person who works at a carnival. |