Friday 17 December 2010

Cycling Song


After seeing cyclists on the Welland Bike Path the week before, my return to Montreal coincided with the return of winter. While I miss taking my bike out onto the roads, I am happy to be car-less especially at this time of year. To observe the money and effort required to allow 'normal' movement of traffic in a snow-clogged city is dispiriting regarding our ability to adapt to our environment.











To ponder warmer thoughts, I like to listen to a bike-friendly singer; Coco Love Alcorn, and her summery voice. The audio on this Youtube video isn't the best, but you can also check out her music at http://cocolovealcorn.com/music/


Thursday 9 December 2010

Across the Peninsula

The Welland Canal, with its series of eight locks, is the only route for large vessels to enter the Upper Lakes from Lake Ontario.

Filling in Lock 3; the observation lock

On this day in late November, we had a warm, calm day to make our transit; a respite from the windy weather on Lake Ontario and the gales to come on Lake Erie. Along with the several dozen transits of the Canal over the years, I have also cycled the bike path that follows the Welland while my ship has been berthed in Port Colborne or Port Weller.

Portion of the path between Locks 1 and 2

The Welland Canal Parkway is one portion of the Greater Niagara Circle Route: http://www.regional.niagara.on.ca/government/initiatives/gncr/ 




While the tourism board touts this as a two or three day excursion, it is a flat ride except for the Niagara Escarpment and a long, pleasant day ride. Each time I have cycled the route, it has been while my ship was in the shipyard at Port Weller. You can do the ride in either direction, but my preference is to do it in the clockwise direction.

The reasons for this choice are both practical and esthetic. First, the entire route is a dedicated bike path except for the portion between Port Weller and Niagara-on-the-Lake, which is partly paved shoulder and partly riding along the road. As with most of 'The Waterfront Trail' in Ontario, this part is a trail in name only. I prefer to do this section in the early morning at the beginning of the ride when there is less traffic. If you do the route in the counterclockwise direction, you will be cycling along this portion later in the day when there is heavy traffic flow leaving Niagara-on-the-Lake racing for the highway to get back to Toronto.

Second, the ride up the Niagara Escarpment along the Niagara Parkway is a more gradual climb than the ride following the Welland Canal. Also, from Port Weller, you have a good couple of hours to warm up before the climb in the clockwise direction whereas it hits you in the first twenty minutes going the opposite way.

Third, when you travel between Niagara-on-the-Lake and Niagara Falls, you are cycling towards the falls with the view in front of you rather than behind you. There are lots of places to stop and sightsee such as Fort George and the whirlpool and the falls. Personally, I feel more inclined to stop and appreciate my surroundings at the beginning of a ride than at the end when I just want to get home.

A few practical considerations about this ride. There are not alot of restrooms or water sources in certain sections of the route. Between Niagara-on-the-Lake and Niagara Falls, there is one spot in a park with restrooms and a water fountain. Between Niagara Falls and Fort Erie, there is a small cafe at a marina about two thirds of the way to Fort Erie called the Dockside Grille where you can get a snack or buy drinks. Between Fort Erie and Port Colborne, the path goes through a small community called Ridgeway that has some restaurants and cafe's. I usually have lunch here because it is a pleasant spot and about half way along the route from Port Weller.


Good places to eat on Ridge Road North


Between Port Colborne and Welland, the path follows a portion of the old Welland Canal that is no longer used by the ships. There is a rowing circuit in part of the old canal. At a certain point after the rowing circuit, you can follow a path on either side of the old canal through Welland. If you take the eastern path, it will take you through Welland and a park and then stop at a railway crossing. I don't know if trains use this crossing anymore, but many cyclists use it to cross the old canal back to the main path and carryon north towards Port Robinson, Thorold, St. Catherines and Port Weller.

At Lock 3, there are restrooms and a water fountain. Take the time to visit the displays about the history of the Canal and the amazing feat of lifting the massive vessels up the escarpment.



Friday 3 December 2010

Time to put the buoys to bed

November is the time on the Lakes when all the recreational boaters, except for a few hardy souls, have pulled their boats from the water. It is also the time of year when navigation buoys that cannot withstand the forces of ice start to be removed or replaced with winter markers. It can be quite a challenge to find a calm day to grab the large steel light buoys and get them back to shore.


Weather buoys (known as ODAS buoys), as well, cannot survive the crushing forces of lake ice of a Canadian winter and must be removed. Because these buoys tend to be further offshore and installed with sensitive meteorological instruments, you really need to watch the weather* in order to get a moment to retrieve the buoy. More often than not, the suitable moment occurs during the night.


*Watching the weather doesn't mean just listening to the forecast, but monitoring the weather station reports to the west of the area you want to work as well as the weather onscene. In most cases, this means you need to get close to the work area in order to be there when there is a break in the weather. You can't sit in port and wait for calm weather because the calm weather might only be an hour or two before the wind changes direction and blows even stronger. By the time you get underway and to the work area, you've lost your weather window.