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 ...
See all stories on this topic »

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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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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 »

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Jul 24, 2013  |   
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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.
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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.
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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Ontario Trails News - Mountain Bike Championships and Run for the Toad announcements - taking place on Ontario Trails

Hardwood Hills prepares for games

Orillia Today
The countdown is on and staff at Hardwood Ski and Bike is well aware nothing short of perfection will be acceptable.
On July 10-26, 2015, elite mountain-bike riders from around the world will descend on the Oro-Medonte facility, looking to win gold at the Pan Am Games.
“I think it's really exciting for our area and it will give us a chance to showcase some of the great facilities," said Hardwood facility general manager Jack Sasseville.
A total of 14 municipalities will host events, with many building new facilities as part of Toronto’s $2.4 billion bid.
The fact Hardwood was chosen to host mountain biking events was not a big surprise to Sasseville.
"We feel we have some of the best facilities in Ontario, if not Canada, and being chosen to host this event in mountain biking reinforces what we have believed all along.
“There are few other facilities who have the kinds of challenging trails that we do," he said.
Since receiving the news, Hardwood has been holding regular on-site meetings with Pan Am Games staff.
Earlier this month, staff at Hardwood faced a major pre-Pan Am Games test, when it hosted the Canadian championships. Various members of Canada’s Olympic team, including Emily Batty, Catharine Pendrel, Geoff Kabush and Max Plaxton, were on hand to compete at Hardwood and get a feel for the new trails.
Hardwood will also host the 2014 nationals next July.
John Sustersic, Hardwood spokesperson, said the national finals offered a preview of what to expect in 2015. About 2,000 spectators and racers flooded the course at nationals.
Hardwood also hosted a recent spartan race, an obstacle course event that attracted close to 10,000 individuals.
“By comparison, if we look at the number of participants at the Pan Am Games, it will probably be under 100,” he said.
But the Canadian finals created the foundation for the on-going work, in preparation for the Pan Am Games.
“This year, Hardwood has invested heavily in trail building and, through an Ontario Trillium grant the Ontario Cycling Association received, they were able to hire a crew to work on the course at Hardwood for the national finals,” said Sustersic.
“We’ve added a couple of rock jumps. We’ve added an MBX course. On that course, we have redone one of the turns. We’ve added a walled berm,” he said.
Sustersic noted a lot of the features built into the course were added as a result of feedback from riders.

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Run For The Toad To Host ACU Canadian 50km Trail Championships At Pinehurst Lake

Preview of Event , Athletes This Weekend
Published 07/23/2013 | By Kw Now! Local Sports News
ACU, Run For The Toad, 50km marathon, Kw Now Media
ACU 50 K Event To Attract Big Names In Sport
Run for the Toad To Host ACU Canadian 50km Trail Championships

The Run for the Toad has been selected by the Association of Canadian Ultramarathoners (ACU) to host the 2013 Canadian 50km Trail Championships.

The Toad is entering its 12th year and is Canada's largest trail running event garnering 1250 athletes in the 25km run, 25km walk and 50km run and 50km relay distances offered at Pinehurst Lake Conservation Area 4km north of Paris, Ontario.

Many of the top runners in the sport have taken part in the Run for the Toad over the past decade including Canadian Olympian Reid Coolsaet and World 100km Champion Ellie Greenwood. The event draws competitors from all over Southern Ontario, across Canada, from all over the US and even a delegation from Great Britain is committed to taking part in this years event.

This year offers a $7000 prize purse in the 50km event which is attracting some of the top names in the sport to attend. Cleve Thorson, the 2012 winner and course record holder, will be back to defend his title. Roburt Tranter from London, Ontario who just represented Canada at the Wold Trail Championships in Wales will be competing to challenge Cleve for the win. On the women's side Stacey Cleveland and Stacie Carrigan, both from the Okanogan Region in BC, will be competing at the 2013 event. Both represented Canada as well earlier this month in Wales leading the Canadian women to a 4th place finish in the team event. Stacey Cleveland finished 7th overall in the field and Stacie Carrigan close behind in 13th.

In addition to the athletes listed above, a total of 11 individuals who have represented Canada at a World Championship are on the entry list to compete this October 5th.

To highlight some of these athletes the Run for the Toad and the ACU will be hosting a press conference to kick off the Toad Training Run Saturday July 27th at 8:30am. The training run itself garners more participants than most trail races in Canada with numbers ranging between 350-400 turning up to get a preview of the trails they will be racing on in October.

In attendance for this training run will be the Race Directors George & Peggy Sarson, Armand LeBlanc as the representative for the ACU, Nadeem Khan, the Media & Communication Representative for the International Association of Ultra Runners, defending champion Cleve Thorson, Pinehurst Lake Park Superintendent Brad Straus, Grand River Conservation Foundation Executive Director Sara Wilbur.

Please join us Saturday July 27th at Pinehurst Lake Conservation Area at 830am to take part in this exciting panel of athletes and officials to kick off Canada's Largest Trail Race at the 2013 Run for the Toad. Just a reminder registration for the Toad Training Run closes at 6 pm on July 24, 2013.

Related Links:
Run For The Toad Website
Learn more about Run For The Toad competition
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