Its territory is between: The main lakes of the zec are: "À la Course", Alma, Au Sable, Aux Sangsues, Benwah, Benwah, Burton, Cabazié, Cardinal, Cibardin, Cranberry, Cullin, De l'Alouette, De l'Autour, De la Rifle, Nyctale, Dizon, Domergue, Hardwood, Busard, Carcajou, Hummingbird, Owl, Owl, Lorikeet, Pipit, Plankton, Roselin, Tangara, Duck Pond, Duncan, Emma, Esgriseilles, Fildegrand, Gosselin, Grant, Hall, Hanwell, Jacques, Kinepik, La Rabeyre, Lebeau, Long, Malouin, Nouveau, Patricia, Paul-Joncas, Perdu, Petit lac Russell, Revolver, Robinson, Russell, Russell, Saint- Circus, Unnamed, Sauvole, Skead, Stubbs and West Trout.
They also set up stables for horses, shelters for provisions, equipment and goods, lumber camps and even forest farms.
Native American history Formerly, the territory of ZEC Dumoine was frequented by the Otaguottouemins, member of an Algonquin community.
The families of this community generally lived in semi-nomadism according to the needs of hunting, gathering of small wild fruits (strawberries, raspberries, bluets ...), protection, Native American trade ... Floods caused by beavers and forest fires were both constraints and benefits.
This site was recognized for a very long time as a place of meeting and exchanges between the Atikamekw, the Hurons and other Amerindian nations of the North.
He then notes: "At the mouth of the Du Moine river, there is another fort or trading post, where I found a small encampment of Maskegons Indians with whom I exchanged several articles for furs."
At a place called "Indian Point" (real name "Mos Sakik"), at the confluence of Lake Dumoine and the Orignal River, an Anishinaabe community lived until 1918.
A terrible flu epidemic almost decimated the village and only eight people, including three children, survived and left to join another community in Kipawa.
From now on, the moose, bow or black powder hunting package includes the possibility of killing a white-tailed deer.
In 1697, Sieur d'Iberville, his younger brother Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne and a handful of men paddled on the Ottawa River to confront the English in Hudson Bay.
[8][5] The toponym "zec Dumoine" was formalized on August 5, 1982 at the Place Names Bank of the Commission de toponymie du Québec.