Abbé Huard Lake
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Abbé Huard Lake (french: Lac de l' Abbé Huard) is a small lake in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec, Canada. It is drained by the
Abbé Huard River Abbé Huard River (french: Rivière de l'Abbé-Huard) is a river in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec, Canada. It is a tributary of the Romaine River. The lower part of the river, where it meandered through sand and gravel deposits, ...
, a tributary of the
Romaine River The Romaine River is a river in the Côte-Nord region of the Canadian province of Quebec. It is long. It is not to be confused with the Olomane River that is to the east and had the same name for a long time. It flows south into the Gulf of Sain ...
.


Location

Abbé Huard Lake is in the unorganized territory of Lac-Jérôme in the Minganie Regional County Municipality. The lake is a little more than north of the municipality of
Baie-Johan-Beetz Baie-Johan-Beetz is a municipality and village in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec in Canada, located some east of Havre-Saint-Pierre. It has the lowest population of all incorporated places in the Côte-Nord region. History Jo ...
on the north shore of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. It is the source of the Abbé-Huard River, a tributary of the Romaine River. The river is the second northeast branch of the Romaine River. The lake is about east of the Romaine 3 Reservoir. A map of the ecological regions of Quebec shows the lake on the border between sub-regions 6j-S and 6n-T of the east spruce/moss subdomain.


Name

Abbé Huard Lake is named after the abbé
Victor-Alphonse Huard Victor-Alphonse Huard (born Joseph-Alphonse, sometimes given as Joseph-Victor Alphonse; 28 February 1853 – 15 October 1929) was a French-Canadian churchman, naturalist, writer and editor. He was a popular educator and promoter of the natural sc ...
(1853–1929), a naturalist and a professor at the Chicoutimi Seminary. He visited the region between
Pessamit Pessamit (formerly Betsiamites, or Bersimis), is a First Nations reserve and Innu community in the Canadian province of Quebec, located about southwest from Baie-Comeau along the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River at the mouth of the Betsiam ...
and Natashquan in 1895, and described the trip in his ''Labrador et Anticosti'' (1897). In his ''Dictionary of Rivers and Lakes of the Province of Quebec'' (1914), Eugène Rouillard points out the lake was probably named after the Abbé Huard before the river. The
Innu The Innu / Ilnu ("man", "person") or Innut / Innuat / Ilnuatsh ("people"), formerly called Montagnais from the French colonial period ( French for "mountain people", English pronunciation: ), are the Indigenous inhabitants of territory in the ...
call the river ''Uauiekamau Hipu'', or "Round Lake River". The Naskapi call the river ''Umuauk Shipu'' or "Loon River", a literal translation of the French ''Rivière Huard''.


Usage

A 2007 report stated that Abbé-Huard Lake (Uauiekamas) had last been visited in fall about ten years ago by a family that also visits Abbé-Huard River and Nuhetihk Lake. They stayed for three months, mostly trapping beaver and marten from camp 140. A 2018 report said that Abbé Huard Lake is used by the indigenous people of the region every two or three years. For example, in August 2016 two Innu users spent five days on the lake fishing for brook trout. They traveled there by float plane provided by the Innu Aitun committee, stayed in a family camp built in the fall of 2015, and used a paddle boat for trips on the lake. In September 2016 the two Innu spent a week on the lake hunting for moose, caribou, partridge and beaver, and fishing for brook trout. The took four beavers but no deer. As before they flew in and stayed at the family camp. The informant did not notice any changes to the region around the lake during his two visits.


Notes


Sources

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See also

* Lac-Jérôme, an unorganized territory *
Abbé Huard River Abbé Huard River (french: Rivière de l'Abbé-Huard) is a river in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec, Canada. It is a tributary of the Romaine River. The lower part of the river, where it meandered through sand and gravel deposits, ...
*
Romaine River The Romaine River is a river in the Côte-Nord region of the Canadian province of Quebec. It is long. It is not to be confused with the Olomane River that is to the east and had the same name for a long time. It flows south into the Gulf of Sain ...
{{DEFAULTSORT: Lakes of Côte-Nord