Showing posts with label Cycling in Toronto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cycling in Toronto. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Ontario Trails News - news and activity information from all over Ontario's 2600 trails!

 Advertise with us!

Toronto police have a simple plan to help reduce traffic and parking issues ... two blocks away, said shewalks her children to school every morning.
Google PlusFacebookTwitterFlag as irrelevant

Re: Ontario commits $25 million for cycling infrastructure, April 14. Ontario ... the “convoluted” environmental assessment (EA) process for bike lanes.
Google PlusFacebookTwitterFlag as irrelevant
This is the first time in 11 years that a member of the Georgian Nordic Ski Team has made the special training group. Noah Thompson, 15, finished the ...
Google PlusFacebookTwitterFlag as irrelevant

The township's project also led to them winning the Ontario Power Authority's 2013 Community Conservation Award. The awards will be presented at ...
Google PlusFacebookTwitterFlag as irrelevant

TRAIL PLANNING BEGINS JUNE 2, 2014


 Algonquin College On-Line Trails Education


ONTARIO TRAILS MOBILE one of 12 MUST HAVE APPS


Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Ontario Trail News - Toronto Hikes, Bikes and Helmets and more from Ontario Trails!

Home News High Park walking tours get city dwellers...insideTORONTO.com
The walks are volunteer-led with support of Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation. 
July 21: Exploring Spring Creek Ravine with Stephen Smith Aug.
See all stories on this topic »
Hike through Taylor Creek Park shows off Don ValleyinsideTORONTO.com
Detailed instructions and maps for pre-planned hikes along the Don River are 
available online, fromToronto and Region Conservation Authority's Walk the Don ...
See all stories on this topic »

__________________________________________________________________________________________

8
COMMUNITY

CALENDAR

Home  Opinion  Editorial  EDITORIAL: Discover your own trail adventure here...
|
|
Bookmark and Share
Jul 24, 2013  |   
 Vote 0   0

EDITORIAL: Discover your own trail adventure here in the city

Beach Mirror
Our city is a bustling place where the day-to-day grind can take a toll. For those looking for a little back-to-nature respite, we’ve got the perfect adventure waiting for you, just steps away from your front door.
In this edition’s special feature, we highlight local hiking trails and others across the city where people can go to spot wildlife, keep active, socialize and re-energize.
Other stories we’ve collected online will take you butterfly watching along the Leslie Street Spit, jogging through the ravines of the Don River and exploring the ecosystems of the 250-acre Humber Arboretum in north Etobicoke.
There’s a surprising number of hiking and walking trails in our city. There are so many, we couldn’t list them all within our feature.
When you walk some of them it’s easy to forget you’re in the middle of a bustling urban centre - like when you’re following the winding trails through the tall, dense forests of High Park. Others have landmark reminders, like the condo tower that looms over the meadowland of the Humber Arboretum.
But all, some would suggest, have the power to refresh the spirit. The federal non-profit group Turtlefeather True Nature uses outings along these trails to help women who have experienced abuse gain confidence and reduce stress. It’s also a welcome outlet for groups like the Metro Toronto Fitness Club, who has been taking to the trails for years (nearly 50 in this case), seeking not only outdoor activity but new friendships. The group meets weekly for social walks and organizes social activities on a regular basis.
Though one wouldn’t normally associate hiking and city life, these protected green spaces prove the two can complement one another and we hope our feature will prove to our readers that hiking is accessible here in our communities.
So pack a lunch, grab the sunscreen (and bug spray) and head out on your own trail adventure. These green spaces provide a natural oasis that can’t be fully appreciated until you’re there.
Take time for yourself, or bring the whole family and discover the great outdoors right in your backyard.
________________________________________________________________________________

Frustrated by B.C. safety laws, Vancouver prepares to roll out helmet vending machines at bike-share stations

 |  | Last Updated: 13/07/25 8:04 PM ET
More from Tristin Hopper | @TristinHopper
In 2010, the city of Melbourne, Australia, introduced helmet vending machines for its bike-sharers.
Premier of Victoria / YouTubeIn 2010, the city of Melbourne, Australia, introduced helmet vending machines for its bike-sharers.
Despite its near-rabid commitment to bike lanes, this week Vancouver became the last of Canada’s three most populous cities to inaugurate a municipal bike-share system. Throughout, proponents have laid the blame for this laggard-status squarely on B.C.’s 17-year-old helmet law. Unlike in Toronto or Montreal, any lidless Vancouverite caught atop two wheels faces a $100 fine. But now, with city hall having given the go-ahead for shared bike stations to hit Vancouver streets by 2014, the city has a convenient workaround: Helmet vending machines. The Post‘s Tristin Hopper asks the relevant questions.
Q Really? A machine that dispenses helmets?
http://www.helmet-hub.com/
http://www.helmet-hub.com/The HelmetHub machine, completed and revealed at MIT, is capable of stocking and collecting up to 36 helmets at a time.
A Yes, and it’s not even Vancouver’s idea. In 2011, the geniuses at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology developed the HelmetHub, a refrigerator-sized machine that cranks out 36 helmets. The year before, the city of Melbourne, Australia, introduced helmet vending machines for its bike-sharers. Even Canadian companies have entered the helmet-vending game. Two years ago, the City of Vancouver contracted a local company, SandVault Group Global Solutions Corp., to build a prototype in only 41 days. But now that Vancouver has signed with Alta Bicycle Share, the company that built the Melbourne system, the SandVault machine remains hidden from public view. “It’s an eight-foot tall ornament in my warehouse,” said SandVault president Rick Murray.
Q So, Melbourne already has this system. How did that go?
A Not so well. Even with heavily subsidized helmet-dispensers, “the bike scheme has been crippled by Melbourne’s compulsory helmet laws,” wrote the Melbourne daily newspaper The Age. One problem was that the city only had two helmet vending machines, and everybody else had to pick theirs up at a local 7-Eleven. Now, as a stop-gap solution, the city’s bike-share operators have simply begun handing out free helmets and asking users to attach them to the bikes when they were done. Last month, Alta Bicycle Share CEO Michael Jones told a Vancouver Metro reporter that they intended to learn from their mistake in Vancouver. “It’s going to be a seamless rental process … you can rent the bike and the helmet at the same time,” he said.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Ontario Trails News - Paddling, Cycling, Hiking and More - all on Ontario Trails

Ontario Travel Divas: Plenty of sights for photo shoot in Naftel's Creek
Huron News Now


The trail meanders through mixed conifer plantations, hardwood and wetland areas. It is a great length for young families and even strollers would make it through the majority of the trail.
Naftels Creek Hiking
Naftels Creek Hiking
Naftels Creek Hiking
Naftels Creek Hiking
This trail is only one of the 28 that exist in Huron County, so if you are interested in Hiking, make sure to pick up copy of the Ontario’s West Coast hiking guide or visit it online: www.hikehuron.ca
______________________________________________________________________________

Post storm sunset
blogTO (blog)
Get to know a Toronto startup: Hurrier What a genius idea! Was in a bind the other day and had to send over cupcakes for my daughters birthday, thankfully i had just heard about Hurrier, and lo... Should e-bikes be allowed on Toronto bike trails? E ...
See all stories on this topic »


______________________________________________________________________________

Offshore perspective on cycling in Toronto - from Yahoo Answershttp://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20130717061826AAW651X

______________________________________________________________________________

Cyclist sustains serious injuries
CottageCountryNow.ca
BRACEBRIDGE – A Bracebridge man has sustained serious injuries after leaving the roadway whilecycling on Muskoka Beach Road toward Gravenhurst. At approximately 10 a.m. on Sunday, July 21, members of the Bracebridge detachment of the Ontario ...
See all stories on this topic »


______________________________________________________________________________

By: CONOR MIHELL
Darryl Blazino’s midlife crisis came earlier than most. He’d raced through high school, blasted to university degrees and started a dental practice in his hometown of Thunder Bay, Ontario, in his 20s. It wasn’t long before he started to burn out in the face of 60-hour work weeks. He recognized pending crisis in 1996 and made a pact with himself to change by the year 2000. “It seemed my life was slipping by, and if I didn’t make a conscious and concerted effort to take control I felt true happiness would always be a dream for the future,” he writes in his new book, A Brief Time in Heaven (Dundurn Press, $29).
Blazino’s “watershed moment” was a canoe trip in Quetico Provincial Park with his friend, Rod Mackenzie, who sold him on the park as remote “motorless wilderness area.” What began as a nostalgic “fishing trip” for Blazino morphed into something more tangible. Mackenzie taught Blazino the all-encompassing joys of canoe-tripping amidst the myriad lakes and rivers at the Ontario-Minnesota border. “To him everything was great,” writes Blazino. “Where I accepted the paddling as a means to an end, [Mackenzie] actually enjoyed it—just as he did portaging, chopping wood, setting up the tent and cooking.”
Epiphany came at Chatterton Falls on the Maligne River. “That evening my eyes and ears opened to all the beauty in which I was immersed,” Blazino notes. “It was as though time was progressing in slow motion. The rocks, the water, the pines, the setting sun and the vivid colors were so etched in my brain that to this day I can close my eyes, and I am there. The magic of Quetico had cast its spell on me.”
A Brief Time in Heaven captures the magic in a series of memoirs detailing over a decade worth of canoe trips in the Quetico. Blazino recalls encounters with wildlife, close calls with danger, the new thrills he’s discovered in introducing the wilderness to his young family and, of course, great fishing. It’s fitting that Chatterton Falls cracks the top five in his “terrific 20” list of favorite places to visit in Quetico. Though not quite coffee-table size, the book’s large, airy format and ample, full-color photographs harkens back to pre-tablet publishing.
The Carolinian Canada Coalition is dedicated to stewarding a healthy ecoregion in collaboration with a wide range of public and private stakeholders. CCC programs have been focusing on research, awareness and effective action by connecting people who care for nature since 1984.
Carolinian Canada Coalition
Grosvenor Lodge
1017 Western Rd.
London, ON N6G 1G5
Canada



Enhanced by Zemanta