Showing posts with label Eglinton Avenue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eglinton Avenue. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

Ontario Trails News - 10 places to xc-ski in Toronto and find your favorite XC-trails!

Find your favorite Ontario XC-trails!

7 places to enjoy cross-country skiing in Toronto

Beach Mirror
If downhill skiing isn’t your thing, stay in the city and check out the following Toronto parks for a great afternoon of cross-country skiing.
1. HIGH PARK, 1873 Bloor St. W., just west of Parkside Drive
This 399-acre park, which in 1873 was gifted to the City of Toronto by John and Jemima Howard with the understanding it would be maintained as public parkland, is an ideal location for cross-country skiing as it’s home to several open green spaces and hiking trails. High Park also has ample parking available and is easily accessible by public transit. Don’t forget to stop by the Grenadier CafĂ© after your skiing fun for a hot chocolate.
2. EARL BALES PARK, 4169 Bathurst St., south of Sheppard Avenue West
Names after Robert Earl Bales, a former Reeve (Mayor) of the Township of North York, Earl Bales Park is located on land once owned and farmed by his great-grandfather John Bales. Prior to becoming a 27.5-acre park, the property was home to the York Downs Golf and Country Club. Earl Bales Park is also home to one of Toronto’s two Ski and Snowboard Centres. The park’s ski chalet has recently been upgraded and a new quad chairlift has been installed.
3. CENTENNIAL PARK, 256 Centennial Park Rd., near Eglinton Avenue West and Renforth Drive
Once part of Hirons family dairy farm, Centennial Park opened in 1967 for Canada’s 100th birthday. Toronto’s second largest park at 525 acres, Centennial Park is also one of the city’s busiest parks and a great space for cross-country skiing. Centennial Park is home to the other Ski and Snowboard centres. The ski hill now sits atop what was once a municipal dump. It was closed and covered over to provide users with an intermediate ski slope, a beginner slope and a snowboard slope.
4. COLONEL SAMUEL SMITH PARK, 3145 Lake Shore Blvd. W. at Kipling Avenue
Measuring 194.6 acres, Colonel Samuel Smith Park is a great location for winter fun. Named in honour of Lt. Colonel Samuel Smith, the park – which opened in 1996 – was once part of his property in the 1800s. Aside from being a large space for cross-country skiing, the park also offers stunning panoramic view of the city as well as a skating trail.
5. MORNINGSIDE PARK, 390 Morningside Ave., south of Ellesmere Road
Occupying the majority of the deep valley of Highland Creek and bordering the neighbourhoods of West Hill and Highland Creek, Morningside Park is a well-used 416.7-acre green space that is great for cross-country skiing.
6. ROUGE PARK, located along Meadowvale Avenue, south of Steeles Avenue
Set to become Canada’s first national urban park, Rouge Park is a massive, diverse green space located in the Rouge River watershed along the Toronto-Pickering border. Rouge Park, known as Canada’s premier urban wilderness park, is more than 10,000 acres in size and an ideal location of winter sports of all kinds including cross-country skiing.
7. EGLINTON FLATS, 3601 Eglinton Ave W. at Jane Street
Built on the Humber River Floodplain, the land that is now home to Eglinton Flats was owned and farmed by the Scarlett family in the mid 1800’s. It later became a market garden but was flooded out by Hurricane Hazel in 1954. The land then became part of a new floodplain plan and became a park. Home to several sports fields, Eglinton Flats – Mount Dennis’s biggest park at 129 acres – has many wide open spaces perfect for cross-country skiing.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Ontario Trail News - Trail series from InsideToronto.com, On-Road Cyclists Deaths, Sport and Activity on Ontario Trails.

Going the extra mile: Hiking in North York

North York Mirror
Take a hike.
It’s what people are doing on trails all over North York.
“The idea is (to enjoy) a big piece of greenery in the centre of the city,” said Jeffrey Kay, a resident of the Eglinton Avenue and Bathurst Street area who is the spokesperson for the Jewish non-profit Mosaic Outdoor Club.
“Because it’s close, you don’t have to go far for your recreation.”
Members of his group love visiting greenspace in North York, from exploring the ravines along the Don River to walking the trails at Earl Bales Park and Edwards Gardens to snowshoeing in G. Ross Lord Park to learning about local historical sites.
While the club enjoys activities inside and outside Toronto, North York trails offer access to the great outdoors close to home, Kay said.
“Within minutes, you can be enjoying nature at its best,” he said.
“We are fortunate to have deep ravines cutting through our neighbourhoods. With little effort, we can be surrounded by the sounds of birds, little mammals and rustling leaves. The noise of traffic has disappeared.”
Members of the Metro Toronto Fitness Club have been meeting every Sunday morning since 1964 to run or walk the trails of North York, regardless of extreme heat alerts, raging blizzards or any weather in between,
“People are really keen and they come winter and summer. We have never failed to meet one Sunday since the club started,” said board member Edie Tisch, who has served as manager, vice-president and social convenor during her 30-plus years with the club.
“Somebody is always there. It’s a tradition that no Sundays are missed. We’re dedicated. Not everybody comes every Sunday but there are always people who come. That’s amazing.”
Tisch, a North York resident for 29 years before moving to mid-town Toronto about 14 years ago, recalled one Sunday morning when a snow storm prevented her from getting her car out of the driveway.
Rather than put her feet up, she walked from her home to the club’s home base, at the pavilion at Wilket Creek and Sunnybrook Park at Eglinton Avenue and Leslie Street, to join her fellow club members.
Tisch wasn’t disappointed when she arrived. Another 15 or so hardy souls also showed up.
During a stroll through the park last week during an extreme heat alert, Tisch explained that the club has evolved over time from its early days as running club for people over 40 to today’s group for runners, walkers and pole walkers of all ages.
Much of the club’s appeal is its camaraderie and social activities, including the weekly “social mile” where members share jokes and stories, barbecues, the Egg Nog Jog holiday event and dinner/dances, including one planned for next May to mark the club’s 50th anniversary.
Members love the weekly hikes, which begin at Sunnybrook Park and then follow any number of routes such as through Edwards Gardens or over to the Ontario Science Centre, said Tisch, adding the club now meets during the winter at Banbury Community Centre.
“(This is) a beautiful area, all the trees and the wonderful greenery. It’s really something that you don’t find everywhere,” said Tisch, a long-time volunteer with a number of organizations such as the Canadian Cancer Society and the Heart and Stroke Foundation.
Lesley Blackmore is the founder and executive director of Turtlefeather True Nature, a federal not-for-profit organization that helps women who have experienced abuse heal through encounters with nature.
Through its Turtlefeather: Women in Nature program, participants “are introduced to the wonders of spending time in nature while improving their outdoor skills, increasing confidence and reducing stress,” she said in an email.
“It is our hope that through nature experiences, working in conjunction with other agencies, we can help stop the abusive cycle from continuing. The natural environment is a catalyst for exploring personal fears, facing challenges, and decreasing or eliminating self-imposed limitations. Women can’t help but feel good and powerful when immersed in the beauty and mystery of nature.”
Among Blackmore’s favourite walks are the trails at G. Ross Lord Park and the Forest Valley Outdoor Education Centre southwest of Finch Avenue and Bathurst Street.
“It’s a little piece of wilderness in the city; I have seen large adult buck deer running through the fields. There are a variety of areas to explore from river front trails, wooded areas and of course open fields,” she said.
“Wilderness/nature outings can refresh your spirit, allow you to reconnect with yourself, reflect on your needs, revive your power to create and enable you to relax and tune into the natural rhythm of the world around.”
For information about trails, visit the Ontario Trails Council at www.ontariotrails.on.ca
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NIPIGON, Ont. -- A married couple on a cross-country cycling tour is dead after they were hit by a pickup truck on a stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway in ...

MS Bike Tour Returns to Cornwall with 600+ CyclistsChoose Cornwall
Cornwall Ontario - Over 600 cyclists will pedal their way along Cornwall's recreational path onAugust 10th and 11th as part of a regional bike tour that serves as ...
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Ontario NewsroomOntario Newsroom
 
News Release

Providing More Opportunities for Active Living and Excellence in Sport

July 26, 2013

Ontario Government Supporting Provincial and Multi-sport Organizations

Ontario is helping to get people across the province healthy, physically active and involved in competitive sports.
This year, 19 provincial sport and multi-sport organizations will receive support through Ontario'sSport Priority Funding program. The program will help the organizations coordinate athlete and leadership development sessions, certify coaches, officials and volunteers, host athlete training camps and stage competitions.
Ontario created the Sport Priority Fund to help:

  • Introduce more people to sport with programs that help develop physical skills and promote active living.
  • Offer recreational sport opportunities that encourage people to have fun, be social and stay healthy.
  • Provide competitive sport opportunities to help athletes improve and measure their performance against others in competition.
Providing more opportunities for people to stay active and keep athletes on top of their game is part of the Ontario government's efforts to create healthy and prosperous communities.
 

QUICK FACTS

  • Provincial and multi-sport organizations offer a diverse range of sport programs including basketball, synchronized swimming, hockey, rugby and many others for people of all ages and abilities across the province.
  • There are 85 provincial and multi-sport organizations in Ontario that are eligible to apply forSport Priority Funding.
  • Sport Priority Funding projects support the goals of the Canadian Sport Policy — a guide for all governments, institutions and organizations committed to realizing the positive impacts of sport on individuals, communities and society.
  • A number of projects receiving funding this year will build capacity and increase excitement about the upcoming 2015 Pan/Parapan American Games by boosting participation in sports that will be featured at the Games.
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Friday, July 6, 2012

Outoors on Ontario Trails - Bike, Ride, Horse or Canoe this Weekend

Riding for a purpose
Welland Tribune
If Ontario is to become a desired destination for cyclists, it will need continued growth of major events like the Great Waterfront Trail Adventure Tour. The fifth annual 730-kilometre cycling tour begins July 14 in Niagara-on-the-Lake and spans some ...
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Mother, son team tackle the Great Waterfront Trail
Hamilton Spectator
The GWTA is a great way to try bike touring and explore the many communities along the shores of Lake Ontario. With manageable distances, regular rest areas and snacks, accommodations (including camping at conservation areas, historic forts and more), ...


Separating bike lanes « Spacing Toronto
Toronto needs separated bike lanes -- on wide, fast roads such as the Richmond/ Adelaide corridor, suburban Eglinton Avenue where the LRT will be built, or the ...
spacingtoronto.ca/2012/07/05/separating-bike-lanes/

Ontario Youth Unite for Cycling - Share the Road
A Youth Cycling Advocacy Committee will learn about cycling advocacy work already underway, select areas to focus on, then plan an Ontario Youth Bike ...
www.sharetheroad.ca/ontario-youth-unite-for-cycling-s15651

Hundreds of racers expected for Walden stop
The Sudbury Star
The City of Greater Sudbury and Walden Mountain Bike Club have partnered with Chico Racing to host the Ontario Cup Cross-Country Mountain Bike Series at the Naughton Ski/Bike Trails. TheOntario Cup is a seven-race series with stops across Ontario...
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Wolfpack hopes to howl at home course
The Sudbury Star
Crystal Sabel rides a lot of momentum into Sunday's Plastiglas Ontario Cup XC Mountain Bike Series event, hosted by her own Walden Mountain Bike Club. Sabel has been a standout all season for the Walden club's Wolfpak Racing Team, winning four ...
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Ontario Trails | Facebook
To connect with Ontario Trails, sign up for Facebook today. ... The Ontario Trails Council (OTC) - Conseil des Sentiers de l'Ontario – is a charity that promotes the ...
https://www.facebook.com/OntarioTrails?filter=1


   ONTARIO TRAILS COUNCIL E-NEWS - Every Friday

    • Local Trail News 
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Trails Education Courses 2012

Trail Education Courses -  23 Sessions and Counting We have it all - 14 modules - and soon On-Line! Book Today.
Course Calendar  - click the link on the course name to download the flyer for that course!
Course Descriptions 

Register - click on your choice, register on-line



We appreciate the support fo the Ontario Trillium Foundation
Courses are for information and knowledge exchange purposes only. All courses are offered on a first come first serve basis. Instructors reserve the right to limit class sizes. Courses may be offered more than once in the calendar year. Some minimum student levels are necessary to run certain courses, so offered courses may change without notice.Explore Brantford's trails | Your online newspaper for Brantford ...
Brantford is truly the hub of the Ontario outdoor trails system. The Paris to Cambridge Rail Trail is made from an original packed gravel rail bed that follows the ...
www.brantnews.com/news/explore-brantfords-trails/

Canoeing on Ontario's Grand River
Toronto Sun
Slipping along the banks of Ontario's Grand River in a canoe, it's easy to imagine yourself as a pioneering explorer searching for new trade routes.
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Rouge Park - Ontario Trails Council
Upper Left: First Aid training; setting up tarp shelters. Lower Left: Judy, Erik and Christine at a Rouge Park event. Above: Hike Ontario trail training March 2012 ...
www.ontariotrails.on.ca/.../4_2012_Rouge_park_trail_team_p...

Harper Government Helps Commemorate the War of 1812 in Norfolk
DigitalJournal.com (press release)
NORFOLK, ON, July 5, 2012 /CNW/ - An investment from the Government of Canada in Norfolk's local heritage will help commemorate the War of 1812, promote tourism, and stimulate the local economy. Support for the Port Dover Harbour Museum's project ...
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Go Fish! Ontario Family Fishing Week runs July 7-15
MarketWatch (press release)
During OFFE, Canadian residents between the ages of 18 and 64 years who would normally be required to purchase a fishing license, can fish Ontario waters license-free. Conservation license limits apply, as do all other provincial fishing regulations ...
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