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The following are just a few travel ideas for the Rideau. Several of these are detailed in the Rideau Paddling Travel Guides. Look at your first couple of trips as exploring the possibilities. Once you've "discovered" the Rideau you'll come back again and again. My main word of advice is to avoid "beelining", don't look at a trip as a point A to point B paddle - explore the shorelines, bays and islands. Take your time. Use the Town of Perth's motto to "Make Haste Slowly." For links to the references to accommodations and put-in and take-out locations in this section please review the Paddler's Trip Planner Page. The Paddling FAQ also offers valuable information. Day Tripping
If you are travelling in group you can leave one vehicle at your destination point to return to your starting point. I solo a lot so my starting and ending points are the same, but given the shoreline on the Rideau there is no need to backtrack along the same route. A few of my favourite day trips are:
This is really the same as a day trip and any of the day trips above will also provide for a good weekend trip. Come up on Friday night, camp and spend Saturday and Sunday paddling. On a weekend trip it is a great experience to travel through at least one lock. Week Tripping In a week you can see a lot of the Rideau. You can set this up as a round trip, follow one shoreline up and the other shoreline back so there is no following the same route. Or, if travelling in a group, leave a vehicle at your planned destination point. Another option is bus, Voyageur Bus Lines serves the Rideau Corridor. For details of their schedules see: www.greyhound.ca/en/ Cottage/B&B/Inn Tripping An easy (& decadent) way to spend a bit of time paddling the Rideau is to rent a cottage or stay at a local B&B or Inn on the Rideau for the time you plan to spend (a weekend, week or longer). You can paddle right from the cottage/B&B/Inn and easily day trip from your location. You'll know that after a day of paddling you have nice comfortable bed to return to. You can pick the best weather days for paddling and take another day or two to tour the Rideau by vehicle and check out potential sites for next year. Accommodation listings can be found on my Rideau Accommodations Page.
A term for "Shoreline Paddling" this is always interesting on the Rideau. By following the shoreline you get to see all sorts of different cottage architecture and property development (see my cottage tour and boathouse tour galleries on my photo gallery page). This is also where most of the wildlife hangs out. Whether you do it as a day, weekend or multi-day trip it is much more interesting to putter along the shoreline than it is to beeline it between locks. Lily Paddling The Rideau is host to several Class 1 wetlands, home to all sorts of wildlife. One of the best times to paddle these is the spring before the lily pads are out and while migratory birds (i.e. ducks) are still around. In the summer many back bays are full of lily pads, which, although challenging paddling, can be interesting, home to frogs, dragonflies, turtles and many species of birds. A few of my favourite lily paddles are:
Rideau Paddling Travel Guides. back
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