You are not logged in. Would you like to login or register?

1/15/2016 12:22 pm  #1


The Outdoor Adventure Show

So I think I'm going to go to this next month. First time!
Better choice for our ilk than the Boat Show, I figure.

I'm sure many here have gone previous years. Any comments as to what it's like?
Things not to miss?
Disappointments?


http://outdooradventureshow.ca/toronto/


Dave
 

1/15/2016 12:28 pm  #2


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Better still the Wilderness and Canoe Symposium

http://www.wcsymposium.com/content/31st-wilderness-and-canoe-symposium

 

1/15/2016 3:07 pm  #3


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Where is the location of the Wilderness and Canoe Symposium? All I see are dates

 

1/15/2016 3:59 pm  #4


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Monarch Park Collegiate, 1 Hanson St. Toronto
 

Last edited by Scruff (1/15/2016 4:01 pm)

 

1/16/2016 11:00 am  #5


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Been to the Outdoor Adventure show twice.  

Pros:

1)Discounts: if you are in the market to buy something. Tent City usually has a booth and I got a good deal on a canoe pack. Canadian Outdoor Equipment had a good booth, too. Eureka has tents displayed. Swift and other canoe retailers are there.I always stock up my first aid kit from the medical supply booth...best prices on bandages, splints, etc, and surgical clamps you can use to remove a fish hook ;-)

2)Presentations: They can be interesting. I saw a presentation on Pukaskwa, which made me go there last summer; on the wolf howl program at Algonquin, which made me NOT want to go there.

3)People: I met Max Finkelstein (Cdn Heritage Rivers, cross-Canada paddler), Kevin Callan (Happy Camper), David Lee (Passionate Paddler), Jeffrey M (from this site, of Jeff'sMaps fame), etc...

Cons:

1) A lot of stuff that is not so interesting. The usual dreck at trade shows. Some new gadget or ginsu knife, etc. If you're not interested in scuba diving, that corner is not worth visiting. Lots of tourism booths from countries in the Caribbean, China, Korea, Japan, etc. Every US state or region this side of the Rockies has a booth. I felt sorry for some of them. Not too many people from Toronto planning adventures in Missouri...

2) Noisy. Sometimes it was hard to hear the presentations in the main room because of the zipline going overhead, etc. Guess I'm getting old, complaining about folks having fun... Get off my lawn, too!

3) Its a three day show, and often the best seminars are on different days and times, so you always miss something you'd like to see because you're not gonna trek all the way back out to the airport on the same weekend.


I think it's fun to go. What else are you gonna do on a weekend in February if you live in Toronto and you don't have a hot tent? That said, it is often on the same weekend as the Wilderness Canoe Symposium, and I've never been there, and it looks mighty interesting...

Last edited by LaLoche (1/16/2016 11:10 am)

 

1/16/2016 3:14 pm  #6


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Oh but there are people from Toronto headed to Missouri and Arkansas.  There is wonderful spring paddling on several hundred miles of wilderness rivers ( yes really wilderness, camp on gravel bars). Every time I go down there are plenty of paddlers from Ontario. One year on the Buffalo everyone I met save me and the two people I was with were from Ontario.

Its really great in redbud/wildflower season.
The desert Southwest also attracts Ontarians..

The WCS only is a day and a half so you can do both.  Be forewarned. The seats at Monarch Park Collegiate get hard.

 

1/16/2016 7:46 pm  #7


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

Thanks, LaLoche. Glad to know there are likely to be some deals to be had.
I'll be looking to see what may be available in a double-bladed canoe paddle, among other things.

 


Dave
     Thread Starter
 

1/17/2016 2:22 pm  #8


Re: The Outdoor Adventure Show

I go every year, mostly because I want to see the new canoes that are out but I also attend the presentations. I'm hoping one year they can somehow land Ray Mears. 

 

Board footera

LNT Canada is a national non-profit organization dedicated to promoting responsible outdoor recreation through education, research and partnerships.