Joseph takes off for Northwest Ontario, a region distinguished by Canada’s great outdoors. On the 300-mile drive along the Trans-Canada Highway from Thunder Bay, on Northwest Ontario’s eastern edge, to Kenora, near its Western border with Manitoba, the granite outcroppings of the Canadian Shield are revealed and the boreal forest covers the landscape. And there’s water, water everywhere. Within its 204,000 square miles there are just 250,000 people, yet there are 5,000 wilderness camps and lodges and 150,000 fishable lakes. Joseph engages in fishing, hiking, climbing, kayaking, canoeing, sailing – if it can be done outside then Joseph’s doing it. In addition, he discovers that the Northwest is in the middle of transforming itself from a region devoted to using up the environment to one that celebrates it – in new parks and conversation areas, farmers markets, downtown preservations and an emerging culinary scene. It’s a turn for the better for the people who live here and Joseph finds a wealth of opportunities for those who visit.