Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Ontario Trails News - find your favorite snowshoe trail and petition gets support.

Find your favorite Ontario Snowshoe Trails!

TRAPPING CONCERNS: Couple lost family pet to kill-trap

Petition captures unexpected support 10


By Jerome Lessard, The Intelligencer

When Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry Bill Mauro reported to work Monday morning, he was likely trapped with more than 34,000 e-mails.
As of Monday afternoon, more than 38,500 people had signed the ‘No Traps On Trails’ petition, requesting Mauro to prevent more animal deaths on Ontario trails due to baited kill-trap (Conibear) set up near all-season multi-use trails.
The issue struck a nerve for Buckhorn residents Valerie Strain and her husband last December when their dog George’s head got caught in a trap located on Crown land, just a few feet from a side trail near their cottage and within 20 feet of a popular snowmobile/ATV trail.
Buckhorn is about 40 kilometres north of Peterborough.
“He died a slow death, while I struggled unsuccessfully to free him,” said Strain, who launched the online petition a week ago.
She noted the ministry (MNRF), through the area’s local conservation officer, was informed of what happened to George and investigating.
“However, they told us that there are no rules about how close to trails the trap can be set and no requirement to notify the public that they are there,” she added.
“There does not seem to be any way for the public to find out where traplines are. They could be anywhere on Crown land, on your neighbour’s property, even in provincial parks and you wouldn’t know.”
Ontario Tourism is currently running ads that show a family cross-country skiing, while their dogs run off-leash beside them.
“Where is it safe to do that?” asked Strain.
She and her husband no longer feel secure anywhere except on their own property.
The petition also hit the web in light of a similar incident where a dog was killed in Stirling after its head became stuck in a Conibear trap, near the Heritage Trail in mid-December 2014.
There, the “kill-trap” was set within 30 feet of the trail.
Stirling-Rawdon Police Chief Dario Cecchin stated the day following the incident a man was walking his mid-sized dog off-leash on the trail at the time.
“Keeping dogs on leash will keep them safe from traps, predators and from becoming lost,” Cecchin then stated. “Also, trappers need to understand and obey their obligations under the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act.”
Strain and her husband both grew up in rural areas. The couple had no idea of the risk they were taking every time they took their dogs out on the trail across their home.
“One of our responsibilities as pet owners is to keep them safe,” she said. “We failed George in that regard.”
With ‘No Traps On Trails’, Strain wants to make sure this doesn’t happen to another family pet, “or worse” to a child out on a walk with their parents.
To prevent more deaths on Ontario trails and improve the safety of everyone sharing public outdoor spaces, Strain and thousands of supporters urge MNRF to launch a public awareness campaign about the danger to pets and people from active traps and improve trapping practices and regulations.
“Including publishing maps online that show registered trapline areas, setting a minimum distance from public trails and marking trails that run close to traplines,” she said.
While Strain is not surprised by the number of online signatures captured within a week, she did not expect her initiative would escalate “so quickly”. The couple think they have found a middle ground between those who support trapping and those who don’t.
“I think it struck a nerve,” she said.
“I think people care about this. They think the request that we’ve made to the MNRF is reasonable. Even people that support trapping can get behind this.”
Jolanta Kowalski, senior media relations officer with MNRF, says there are steps dog owners like Strain can take to ensure their dogs are not impacted by legally set traps.
“The most important step is keeping control of your pet at all times by keeping your dog leashed,” she said in an e-mail to The Intelligencer.
“I offer my condolences to anyone who has lost a pet under such circumstances.”
She noted MNRF officials will consider any recommendations brought forward that might ultimately reduce the chance of a pet being caught in a trap.
The MNRF’s website has detailed information about trapping laws and practices in Ontario. More information can be found here.
jerome.lessard@sunmedia.ca

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.

Friday, February 13, 2015

Ontario Trail News - learn about accessibility communications, and all about the outdoors in Sudbury and North Bay from CBC

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Snow sailing, snowboarding, snowshoeing make for winter fun


  1. On Wednesday, CBC Sudbury told you about some neighbourly folks in North Bay who've been building and sharing a giant backyard luge for about 15 years now. It spans five properties, and it seems to bring the whole neighbourhood together. If you missed the story and video, check it out below:
  2. ...But, recreational backyard luging is just the tip of the fun iceberg. There's a lot happening this winter in Northern Ontario!
  3. As many in the region already know, if you fill jugs of equal size with sand or some other dense material, you can skip the fancy curling rocks and still have yourselves a DIY curling match on the lake. They're doing it from Sudbury to Dryden!
  4. My dad and his homemade curling rink stencil. #jugcurling
    My dad and his homemade curling rink stencil. #jugcurling
  5. #JugCurling #IceColdPitches
    #JugCurling #IceColdPitches
  6. This snow sailor in the Timmins area is harnessing the wind with a colourful sail to whip around on the snow like a pro:
  7. #NORTHERNONTARIO #CANADA #TIMMINS #SNOWFUN #SNOWSPORTS #SOUTHPORCUPINE #SOPO #SAILING #SNOW #SNOWSAILING
    #NORTHERNONTARIO #CANADA #TIMMINS #SNOWFUN #SNOWSPORTS #SOUTHPORCUPINE #SOPO #SAILING #SNOW #SNOWSAILING
  8. Winter camping can be a beautiful thing for those in the north with a hardy and adventurous spirit:
  9. If people weren't playing hockey this winter, it would be a story. Here's what Canada's unofficial national game looked like recently in Elliot Lake:
  10. #pickup #hockey #elliotlake #ontario #ighockey #instafun #fun #snow #winter #wilderness #wildcatsnation #wildcats #epic #awesome #goodtimes #love #beauty #nature
    #pickup #hockey #elliotlake #ontario #ighockey #instafun #fun #snow #winter #wilderness #wildcatsnation #wildcats #epic #awesome #goodtimes #love #beauty #nature
  11. These guys might be a bit young to remember Ross Rebagliati's gold medal win for Canada in the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan. But, Rebagliati is credited by many with putting snowboarding on the map for Canadians . The sport is now commonplace at hills around the northeast, like these ones in North Bay and Sault Ste. Marie.
  12. #snowwars  #northbay  #cheapskates  #cheapskatesnb  @cheapskatesnb  #snowboarding
    #snowwars #northbay #cheapskates #cheapskatesnb @cheapskatesnb#snowboarding
  13. Went snowboarding this weekend with these gents! #snowboarding #winter #saultcollege #saultstemarie #searchmont
    Went snowboarding this weekend with these gents! #snowboarding #winter #saultcollege #saultstemarie #searchmont
  14. Skidooing, snowmobiling, sledding—whatever you call it, it's the definitive winter Motorsport of the north. Check out these sledders in Moosonee, Manitoulin Island and North Bay.
  15. Climbing hills in msne with a 900lbs machine #skidoo #skandic #600wt #moosonee
    Climbing hills in msne with a 900lbs machine #skidoo #skandic #600wt #moosonee
  16. Skidoo's 1973, 1997, 2010 #elan #formula #mxz #tnt #250 #600triple #600 #manitoulin #skidoo #snow #braaaaaaaap #brap #windmills
    Skidoo's 1973, 1997, 2010 #elan #formula #mxz #tnt #250 #600triple #600 #manitoulin #skidoo #snow #braaaaaaaap #brap #windmills
  17. 200k to #northbay today. #mxz #skidoo #winter in #Ontario #enjoytheride
    200k to #northbay today. #mxz #skidoo #winter in #Ontario #enjoytheride
  18. Others are enjoying the quietude of more rudimentary winter gear: people are snowshoeing in North Bay and Sudbury.
  19. #CranberryTrail #NorthBay #snowshoe
    #CranberryTrail #NorthBay #snowshoe
  20. Went on a little adventure #snowshoeing #winter #brewsinthebush #sudbury ❄️🍻
    Went on a little adventure #snowshoeing #winter #brewsinthebush #sudbury âť„️🍻
  21. ...And finally, perhaps the most quintessentially "northern experience" (at least in popular lore): dogsledding. Here's a video of a fellow in Moosonee who bailed off of a dog sled a few years back.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Ontario Trails News - OTC writes MOT to get action on Hunters Bay Trail - makes difference.

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Note - at OTC We've been working with partners on this file since 2003.

TransCanada link could extend Hunters Bay Trail

Huntsville Forester
HUNTSVILLE – A west-end trail could soon wind a little further along the waterfront in Huntsville.
Rebecca Francis, sustainability co-ordinator for the Town of Huntsville, and Colleen MacDonald, manager of parks and cemeteries for the town, presented a report to town councillors during a general committee meeting on Jan. 28 about the possible extension of the Hunters Bay Trail.
Francis said the long-standing project would add 2.4 kilometres, including 750 metres of waterfront, to the west end of the 3.8-kilometre multipurpose trail that winds along the Muskoka River.
She said plans for the trail extension – which would travel from Orchard Park under the bridge at Highway 11 to Lakewood Park Road before connecting with the Trans Canada Trail at Old Ferguson Road – have been a topic of discussion for more than a decade.
But she said two changes have prompted the possibility to actually completing the project – 2015 Pan Am and Para-Pan Am Games legacy funding and new Ministry of Transportation policies.
“Trans Canada Trail Ontario has been given legacy funds for the Pan Am Games,” she said.
The legacy funds will support Trans Canada Trail connections.
“There are over a dozen projects on the list for that legacy fund and Huntsville is one of them,” said Francis. “They have about $200,000 they have earmarked to help us with this project.”
And, she said, the ministry has finally agreed to let the town build part of the trail on a provincial right of way as the ministry now has policies that support active transportation.
The project would cost about $583,000. The town has applied for $203,500 from the games’ legacy fund and Trans Canada Trail, a national organization, would fund a further $168,250. The town would be responsible for about $211,250.
Francis said the games’ legacy funds would have to be spent in 2015. And the project would have to be complete by 2017 to qualify for the national Trans Canada Trail funding.
Coun. Jonathan Wiebe asked if Francis thought this would be the best way to spend budgeted active transportation funds.
“There are a lot of projects in active transportation that I would love to see happen and this is just as good as any of them,” responded Francis.
She said the trail extension would provide a west-end active transportation corridor into downtown, while promoting a tourist attraction and providing enhanced public access to waterfront.
Councillors agreed to discuss the project during the 2015 budget meeting scheduled for Feb. 11.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Ontario Trail News - answer our survey on the benefits of trails, and snowmobiling in Peterborough

Be sure to answer our survey on the Benefits of Trails

OPINION EDITORIAL

PoV: Snowmobiling plan worth consideration

Wednesday, February 4, 2015 11:05:09 EST AM
Observe safety guidelines and common sense when operating a snowmobile. Wear a helmet, warm clothes and don’t drive impaired. Snowmobiling is not allowed on public property in Camrose.
Observe safety guidelines and common sense when operating a snowmobile. Wear a helmet, warm clothes and don’t drive impaired. Snowmobiling is not allowed on public property in Camrose.
_______________________________________________________________________________

Snowmobile tourism is big business in many parts Ontario, but not so much in Peterborough. This area, a tourism jewel, attracts visitors galore over the three other seasons, but come winter, things slow down.

That's why opening some of the city's trails up to snowmobiles in winter makes sense - to a point.

Ontario boasts 30,000 kilometres of interconnected snowmobiling trails. Avid riders often take a week or two to journey around the province along these trails, spending on food and fuel and staying in lodges and inns that cater to the snowsuit crowd each winter.

There's very little sign of them in Peterborough, though.

Head out in to the county and further north, west and east and you find safe, mapped routes that offer snowmobilers a chance to explore a side of Ontario most of us don't see in winter; the Abitibi Canyon Loop, the Bon Echo run and the Goldrush Tour near Timmins are good examples. Communities in the north go to great lengths to accommodate their snowmobiling visitors, even constructing smaller secondary bridges to get them across rivers and ravines in some areas.

Nobody's proposing anything that major here. Not yet, at least. But there is a suggestion before council to allow snowmobiles on sections of the Trans-Canada Trail as it comes into the city, particularly a new section to be built this year south of Lansdowne St.

It's an interesting idea, one with some issues associated with it, but something worth considering.

The positives: The trails are barely used in winter. They're impassable on foot, and while they're well-suited for cross-country skiing, that sport is enjoyed by a fairly small group, and is definitely not a tourism draw.

Trail groups would maintain the routes in winter, so taxpayers are off the hook for that; cost wouldn't be a problem. Combined with the Pan Am Games paying for the trail revitalization and the city gains a tourism draw without going out of pocket.

There are negatives, some of them raised already by city staff, who recommend against the idea. Skiers and snowshoe enthusiasts are no doubt going to have concerns about snowmobilers on the trails. People living nearby will have something to say about the noise. Safety, of course, will always be an issue. These are valid concerns - but do they outweigh the benefits?

So, as city staff start work on a plan for the trail, it makes sense for council to try this out. Give it one year, one full winter. Weigh the pros, weigh the cons, and make the right decision. Going forward, there's potential for tourism growth here, and the city deserves to have that trail explored.