{"id":849,"date":"2016-05-05T13:36:34","date_gmt":"2016-05-05T17:36:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/burnstownpublishing.com\/?post_type=product&p=849"},"modified":"2019-08-06T10:49:36","modified_gmt":"2019-08-06T14:49:36","slug":"destination-algonquin-park-tracks-to-cache-lake-and-the-highland-inn","status":"publish","type":"product","link":"https:\/\/burnstownpublishing.com\/product\/destination-algonquin-park-tracks-to-cache-lake-and-the-highland-inn\/","title":{"rendered":"Destination Algonquin Park: Tracks to Cache Lake and the Highland Inn"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
PRE-ORDER ONLY<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Today\u2019s visitor to Cache Lake may wonder about some unusual features visible there. Near the parking lot is a long, low, retaining wall, a concrete sidewalk and steps leading to nowhere, and a short, isolated section of rusting railway track. All are disappearing under a blanket of pine needles. Close by, two hydrants jut out in the middle of a red-pine plantation, and a noble white pine near the public washroom, towers over the surrounding red pines.<\/p>\n This majestic white pine is the only living witness to much of what evolved in this historic area of Algonquin Park not so long ago. Here a once-grand hotel complex, train station, park headquarters, and golf course thrived for half a century. Nothing \u2014 or at least very little \u2014 of the Highland Inn, camps, associated buildings, and rail lines is still in evidence at Cache Lake. If the pine could talk, it would tell some of the stories about the buildings and the people who worked in them a century ago.<\/p>\n