Mahanak’s Flying Moose - Toronto, ON, Canada
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member blackjack65
N 43° 42.127 W 079° 34.521
17T E 614790 N 4839773
Manac is the largest manufacturer of trailers in Canada and a leader in the manufacturing of specialty trailers in North America. Their logo is a winged moose.
Waymark Code: WMZHT0
Location: Ontario, Canada
Date Posted: 11/15/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
Views: 0

Manac offers a wide range of vans, flatbeds and specialty trailers such as dumps, low beds, grain hoppers, chassis, chip and logging trailers, all of which are sold in Canada and the United States. Manac services the heavy-duty trailer industry for the highway transportation, construction, energy, mining, forestry and agricultural sectors and manufactures its trailers in facilities located in Saint-Georges, Quebec, Penticton, BC as well as Oran and Kennett, MO.

Well before the arrival of the first white settlers, the Abenaquis tribe lived in a village where the Mechatigan and Manosak rivers meet.

The Abenaquis tribe would return to this area every year to stock up on food, which was plentiful here thanks to the two rivers and the surrounding forests.

According to the legend, Mahanak, the son of the grand chief Metgermett, befriended a young moose that had lost its mother when she tried to protect it from a pack of attacking wolves. When Mahanak found the young moose, it was badly injured and weak and was slowly dying.

The two friends became inseparable. One spring day, Mahanak and his friend were returning to the village after a long trek through the Etchemin countryside. They were forced to take a different route because the melting snow had caused the mighty Manosak River to rise. In an effort to avoid a huge rock, the two companions lost their foothold, fell into the raging river and were swept away by a powerful current.

Mahanak managed to grab hold of the moose’s antlers and climb onto its back. As they were approaching the Devil’s waterfalls, Mahanak implored the spirits of the forest to come to their rescue.

The spirits remembered Mahanak’s act of kindness on the day he saved his young friend. The spirits helped the moose descend the falls by keeping its head above the water and saving Mahanak from drowning. Two old hunters, who had witnessed the scene, said that the moose had descended the falls slowly, as though it had wings.

The following night, Mahanak had a dream. The spirits of the forest told him that his moose would be leaving him to go to the land of the spirits where it would watch over the inhabitants of the forest. Mahanak then saw his companion nod good-bye and slowly fly away, opening its mighty wings. By sunrise, the moose had disappeared.
Name or use 'Unknown' if not known: Mahanak The Flying Moose

Figure Type: Combination of two figure types

Artist Name or use 'Unknown' if not known: Marcel Dutil

Date created or placed or use 'Unknown' if not known: 2000

Materials used: Fiberglas and steel

Location: Manac offices

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