The week at The Cow and Sow keeps a schedule a Fenelon Falls regular can recite without looking: burgers on Monday, ninety-nine-cent wings on Tuesday, ribs on Wednesday, two-for pizza on Thursday, and a Friday fish fry that runs all day. That rhythm is the clearest read on what the place is — a downtown saloon and eatery built for the way a small town actually eats out, a few steps from the falls that give the town its name. Dickon Robinson opened it in 1996, and the menu still carries his first name on a plate. It is where locals, cottagers, and boaters tying up for the night all end up.
The menu reads like a pub that never decided to specialize, which is its own kind of decision. Poutine alone fills a column — classic, the CBR, the Mr. Pickle, a spicy buffalo, a chili build — under a fries section the kitchen calls the Spudpatch. Around it sit the Cow & Sow Burger, the house pizza and its calzone cousins (listed, inevitably, as cow-zones), wings dusted or sauced, and a Reuben that holds its own against the flashier orders. The Greek streak is real and not decorative: a proper Greek salad, and Dickon's Chicken Souvlaki, the founder's plate, grilled chicken on the same logic. The kitchen keeps a sense of humour about dessert, too — a deep-fried Mars bar, deep-fried pickles, and bacon butter tarts that read as pure Kawartha.
Those nightly specials describe a restaurant that runs on regulars rather than occasions. A five-dollar happy hour holds the late afternoon Monday through Friday, and each evening's deal gives a table a reason to land on a particular night rather than wait for one. None of it is chef-driven, and none of it pretends to be; the cooking is confident pub food, priced to bring the same people back week after week.
The place keeps two speeds. On a quiet weekday afternoon it works as a downtown lunch counter; by evening, with a game on, it fills and turns loud. Summer tilts the balance — the patio opens, a peach sangria turns up on the table, and boaters who have locked through the Trent-Severn at Lock 34 walk up from the water for burgers and chicken before carrying on. Live music and open-mic nights handle the later hours, and one storefront answers a midday sandwich and a Saturday night out.
The continuity is the point. Robinson opened it in 1996 and, by local accounts, kept it running 364 days a year in a tourist town that has long argued with itself about whether to close for the winter — a year-round answer in a seasonal place. Lorraine and Emily Forbes, a mother-and-daughter team, bought the restaurant in 2019 and reopened it after a renovation, keeping the founder's name on the souvlaki and the lights on at the same corner. The house line — that every guest is already a friend, or soon will be — is the sort of thing a small-town eatery can either earn or simply print, and the steady weeknight crowd suggests which.
Upstairs is the second act. The Loft puts pinball, pool, retro arcade games, and a minibar over the dining floor, and books for private gatherings of up to sixty — and it has begun to spin off products of its own: Grady's Ghost, a house hot-sauce line, and Pinball Pilsner, brewed with Boshkung Brewery and named for the machines it sits beside. A 1996 saloon that bottles its own ghost-pepper sauce and pours a collaboration pilsner beside the pinball is doing more than coasting on its years. It has kept its name for nearly thirty years by giving Fenelon Falls a fresh reason to climb the stairs.