OWL Rafting- Business and 20+ acres. Potential+++

Business and Land For Sale: $6,500,000.00

Property Type: Tourist Commercial

ONLINE VIDEO: https://youtu.be/WnVnBv__XaA

OWL Rafting designated as a Canadian Signature Experience

Everyone knows about OWL rafting, the whole region has even been renamed 'Whitewater'! One chance to own a world-renowned and 'Canadian bucket list' business with 20+ acres of prime Ottawa River land. Some key details: high growth and profitable industry, access to best Whitewater in Ontario, resort, cabins, cottage, land, new glamping site, equipment, new coffee shop; everything is turn-key and meticulous. Amazing staff and management are all ready to continue crafting this private access business which attracts thousands of people each year. It's the right time to let new energy and new ideas flow through OWL rafting. Create your new incredible life and invest in the future of Eastern Ontario and international tourism. Reach out for a full sales package covering all the details. Financials & Assets are available with NDA.

Established: 1981
Buildings:
 over 25
Parking: Open Gravel parking lot
Site influences: Resort, Whitewater Region
Inclusions: Complete inventory and asset list available with NDA

 
 
 

Whitewater Region

Whitewater Region is a township on the Ottawa River in Renfrew County, located within the scenic Ottawa Valley in eastern Ontario, Canada . Whitewater Region is made up of the former municipalities of Beachburg, Cobden, Ross and Westmeath, which were amalgamated into the current township on January 1, 2001.

Whitewater Region is named after the stretch of world-famous whitewater on the Ottawa River, popular for rafting and kayaking. This section is part of the Ottawa River Provincial Park.

The township also claims a distinctive place in Canada's history. An astrolabe bearing the date 1613 and believed to have belonged to Samuel de Champlain was discovered within the township. A monument commemorating this historic site is located just outside Cobden on Highway 17.

Foresters Falls was founded in the early 1840s by Oliver Forester, a prominent pioneer who was the community's first postmaster. By the 1870s the community had three stores, a grist mill, and a sawmill, all of which were destroyed in a fire later that same year. The Canadian Northern Railway does not pass through Foresters Falls, save for at a small intersection outside the town known as Miller's Corners. A large railway bridge, known to the locals as Black Rock, crosses a gully just beyond Miller's Corners. The rail track was torn up in the late 2000s but the bridge remains and is now a popular route for ATVs. Foresters Falls is now a small community having regressed since the invention of motorized transport. Attractions include the Ross Township Museum that is located in the heart of Foresters Falls.