The waterways of Canada are trade routes - Birchbark Canoe
Birchbark Canoe The birchbark canoe was the principal means of water transportation for Indigenous peoples of the Eastern Woodlands, and later voyageurs, who used it extensively in the fur trade in Canada. Light and maneuverable, birchbark canoes were perfectly adapted to summer travel through the network of shallow streams, ponds, lakes and swift rivers of the Canadian Shield. As the fur trade declined in the 19th century, the canoe became more of a recreational vehicle. Though most canoes are no longer constructed of birchbark, its enduring historical legacy and its popularity as a pleasure craft have made it a Canadian cultural icon. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.c...

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1960 New Brunswick Province of Canada

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The Lost Viking Fleet Hidden Beneath The Fjord | Vikings The Lost Realm

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Canoe: Icon of the North - Full Film

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Birchbark Canoe

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This River Has Been Cutting Wood Since 1346!

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CÉSAR ET SON CANOT D'ÉCORCE | Documentaire complet | Office national du film du Canada

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Dangerous Grindstone Installation in 1971

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Land & Sea: Overfishing on the tail of the Grand Banks

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We Test 7 Tour De France Bikes From 7 Decades

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Canoeing the Yukon River from Whitehorse to Dawson City | GOLD RUSH | CANADIAN WILDERNESS |

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Path of the Paddle: Solo Whitewater

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Fort William and the Fur Trade | NORTHWEST COMPANY | VOYAGEURS | CANADIAN HISTORY |

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VOYAGEURS OF LAKE SUPERIOR

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Path of the Paddle: Doubles Whitewater

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Land & Sea: Saving part of sailing history in Nova Scotia

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German Pilots Laughed At Canada’s “Wooden” Mosquito, Until Its Four 20mm Opened Up On Them

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Working Sailboat Hauls 15,000 lbs of Lumber to Remote Alaska Village

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The Last One (PBS Special with Popcorn Sutton / 2022 remaster)

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How to build a canoe, using birchbark and materials harvested from the land | Mi’kma’ki : Gwitna’q

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