Dougw wrote:
There must be records for the past 100 years indicating the water levels and when logs were added or removed to keep everything fairly consistent.
This what Northbase was referring to. Muskoka Natural Resources you think could do a better job in controlling the water levels with all the modern forecasting and equipment available to them. One correction to make is the previous problem. It was spring 2013 not 2012. For me the cottage season year starts May, So it has only been 3 springs since the last problem. The majority of the docks and boathouse bases are wood cribs. Provided the wood and spikes are completely under water, the structure is solid for 10's of years. The weak and rotten part is the top of the crib which is not completely under the water all the time. Spikes rust thru and wood rots. Most deck tops on the docks are heavy, but they will float. The very high water rips the deck off the crib. It can then float out of position. break up or float away to become a hugh floating deadhead as Boomer said.
In the summer JULY of 2013 we were still finding large pieces of dock, Muskoka chairs, wood benches, containers floating into our small bay.
The Sears store sold over 200 refrigerators in 2013. Their in for another good sales year.