you may be able to look up the value by going Google and looking for a site that you can describe the object in queston, and it might be able to calculate the value
$100 for uncirculated grade.
$18
The voyageur design has been constantly used for the Canadian dollar since 1935. The first silver Canadian dollar was struck in 1911 and only two of these remain.
Canadian Canoe Museum was created in 1957.
Canadian Canoe Association was created in 1900.
The current brass $1 coin has a picture of a loon, an aquatic bird common in Canada.Older $1 silver coins carry a picture of a voyageur (fur trapper) rowing a canoe. That animal, of course, is a human male.
The Canadian Canoe portal does not sell canoe equipment, however, it does link to a classifieds section for Canada where you can look specifically for Canoe equipment in your area.
French-Canadian explorers who travelled by canoe (or foot) during the fur trade were called Voyageurs.
the plains peopls
Tom Thomson
The Canadian website CANOE offers horoscopes daily from the following signs: Aries , Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo , Virgo, Libra , Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius and Pisces.
2 ... a bronze by Rob Bell in men's Canadian singles at the 2008 Games in Beijing and a silver by Jessica Fox in women's kayak singles at the 2012 Games in London.
You are asking about a 1965 Silver Dollar from Canada (KM#64.1). The coin is 36mm in diameter, weighs 23.3276 grams and is 80% silver, giving it an ASW (Actual Silver Weight) of 0.600 troy ounces. The obverse (front) has a portrait of Queen Elizabeth the Second and the words "Elizabeth II D - G - REGINA" (partially abbreviated Latin for "Elizabeth the Second, By the Grace of God, Queen"). The reverse (back) of the coin bears an image of two natives in a canoe in front of an island (the so-called "Voyageur") with "CANADA" above the image and "1965" and "DOLLAR" below it. 10,768,569 such coins were produced in 1965. According to the Standard Catalog of World Coins, the coin is in most cases worth little more than its silver value (about US$10.71 with silver at US$17.85 as of May 4, 2010), with a numismatic premium of a dollar or two for particulary nice uncirculated specimans. The exception to this lies in the fact that there are 3 sizes of beads just inside the rim of the coin (small, medium and large) and two versions of the "5" in the date (pointed and blunt). The combination of medium beads and a pointed "5" can be worth US$15-$40 in uncirculated condition. It is, however, very difficult for the casual observer to identify which size bead a given coin has, especially without a couple of examples to compare against. (One indication is that, with medium beads, the upright on the right side of the "N" in "REGINA" points directly to a bead, while it points between beads for both the large and small bead variety.)