The passionate hiker

The passionate hiker
Early days in the outdoors

Sunday, June 29, 2014

The Rideau Trail: Making a Start. Conlon Farm in Perth (10D) to Rathwell Road (11A)

Sun. 29 June:  The Rideau Trail: Making a Start
Conlon Farm (10D) to Rathwell Road (11A)


The Bandstand in Stewart Park, Perth
This 300+ km trail links Kingston, Perth and Ottawa.  It is by no means a straight line northwards across flat countryside.  It passes through the rugged Canadian Shield, a jigsaw puzzle of lakes and forest and low rocky hills.  

Perhaps few people walk it from end to end (or E2E as it is called), in one single trip, as there are often no convenient campsites along the way.  Instead, people pick away at sections, gradually completing the whole thing.  The trail is divided into three sections, the south section managed by the Kingston club, the central section based on Perth, and the northern section managed from Ottawa.  There are good maps of the complex route, divided into manageable well-defined and measured sections. 

As a new member of the Rideau Trail Association, I felt a compelling need to get started.  So today I completed sections 10D and 10E, covering the town of Perth and the upper part of the Tay Canal.

It’s quite a remote trail in many places, and so you have to make use of the maps to pick the best access point for vehicles.  My plan today involved dropping my bike off at the far end of my hike, so I could bike back to Perth afterwards.  Future trips will require more complex arrangements to get me to where I need to be.

Section 10D of the Rideau Trail starts at the Conlon Farm recreation area on the west side of town.  It soon crosses then recrosses the Tay River, runs through the pretty Stewart Park, and passes the Town Hall and the Tay canal basin on its way out of town.  This early on a Sunday morning, Perth was still asleep.  For several kilometres the path follows the Tay River – my kayaking route of yesterday.  The river banks are wooded, but I enjoyed many glimpses of the river.  

Further along, the trail runs along the very edge of the river, and one could be in danger of slipping off the narrow path into the water below.  The banks were eroding and sections of the trail may soon need rerouting.  

After about three kilometres, the trail turned abruptly away from the river and followed a ditch then the edge of a field to my destination, Rathwell Road.  The path was steadily becoming more overgrown as I moved away from Perth, and I had to make my way through grasses well above my knees.  There was no doubt about the route, even in the most overgrown sections.  Little red isosceles triangles nailed to handy trees, the long end pointing in the right direction, kept me safely on track.

At the Rathwell Road, I had earlier dropped off my bike, and so I was able to make an easy return to Perth along the main road from Smiths Falls, in light traffic and enjoying a cooling headwind.

I had completed just 6.6 kilometres of this long trail, but it was a start.  I felt capable of doing much longer sections in the future.  After all, it was not yet 10 o’clock in the morning.  But it had been a hot walk, and I was ready to put my feet up and relax. 

My E2E challenge was under way!  


Statistics:

Total Distance: 6.6 km (hike) + 6.0 km (bike)          = 12.6 km
Height Gain:       negligible
Time on Trail:    2 hrs. 1 min.
Dep. car:           7.40 am
Perth Basin:      8.00 am
Rathwell Rd:     9.11 am
Ret. to car:         9.41 am
Temp:               +20C to +24C
Weather:           Sunny, hot, light S. breeze


Crossing the Tay River in Perth



Beautiful Stewart Park in the middle of town
Sign opposite the Town Hall
The Anglican church spire seen across the fields
Perth Outfitters - awesome selection of canoes and kayaks
Tay River and Last Duel Park
A reminder that this long trail passes through much private land
Hugging the edge of a field - trail sign points the way
Lots of wild flowers along the trail
 
And some wild life too!
The trail runs through the woods beside the river
Some stunning views across the marshes
I had kayaked along this stretch just yesterday.
Leaving the river, the trail heads through tall grasses beside a marshy ditch
A little rough going in places, but the route is never in doubt
Rathwell Road - end of section 10E of the Rideau Trail

Saturday, June 28, 2014

The Tay Canal

Sat. 28 June:  The Tay Canal


On the Tay River
This was my first adventure in Ontario – but not a hike.  There is a strong possibility that the Passionate Hiker could become a Passionate Kayaker too.  But one step at a time. 

Today I explored the Tay Canal by kayak from its start in the centre of Perth, several kilometres downstream towards the Rideau Canal.  On a trip in the near future I will continue all the way down the Tay, through the Beveridge Locks, and into the vast system of lakes which make up most of the Rideau Canal.  One could spend a summer exploring the lakes and bays and campsites along the way

This was a good way to start.  It was a hot early summer’s day, with temperatures quickly rising from 19C to around 25C, and still going up as I biked home.  The secret to my journey was the strategically situated Perth Outfitters, with lots of lovely canoes and kayaks to rent, and really friendly and knowledgeable owners.

Total distance travelled =  about 14 km.

See the pictures.


Setting out from Perth
Soon reach a marshland - sounds of ducks and other hidden creatures
The canal starts to open up into a lake
Important looking signs!
The lake - about halfway to the Beveridge Locks
Here a large deer swam across the canal - too slow with my camera!
Some nice real estate - the only sign of human habitation on my journey
Hopefully I'm on the right side of this thing
Fascinating marshland beside the canal
Now upstream of my starting point:  approaching Perth basin
Perth basin - tempting fountains
The Town of Perth - start of the Tay Canal

The Journey

In mid-June 2014, the time had finally arrived for me to travel east from Calgary Alberta to Perth Ontario, a distance of about 3600 kilometres, across a large section of Canada.  I took five days.  Here are some pictures.

Pre-dawn mist across the Alberta prairies; grain silo skyscraper
First glimpse of the sun along the Trans-Canada Highway
Huge prairie skies.  Power pylons stretch eastwards.  Empty highway.
Leaving Alberta behind.  Cypress Hills in background.
Afternoon rainstorm in Saskatchewan - cyclist heading east
There were several lone cyclists making their way across Canada.
Sinister clouds as I passed Regina Saskatchewan
This wreck maybe caught a squall, or swerved to avoid a deer.
My third Province - and still lots of prairie to go
Diverted onto farm track west of Brandon Manitoba
The western edge of a vast Province, and still over 2,000 km to go
Lake of the Woods at Kenora, Ontario
A completely different landscape - lakes and forests
Dryden, a busy working town, but it feels isolated
First exciting view of Lake Superior:  Thunder Bay
Terry Fox memorial - Lake Superior.  A inspiring place.
A sea of mist - literally!!  Lake Superior's remote northern shore
Stunning Neys Provincial Park, I lingered here a day.
The view from my campsite beach
Moose!  Plenty of warning signs along the highway.

Goose!  No warning at all!  At the town of  Wawa.
Eastern shore of Lake Superior
This is how the Voyageurs used to cross Canada
Canal at Sault Ste. Marie and bridge to USA
Morning mist east of Sudbury
A domestic scene on the Ottawa River
Arriving Home