40 Days and 40 Hikes : Loving the Bruce Trail One Loop at a Time
40 Days and 40 Hikes : Loving the Bruce Trail One Loop at a Time
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Author(s): Ross, Nicola
ISBN No.: 9781770417779
Pages: 384
Year: 202404
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 30.29
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Day 1 Queenston Heights / Laura Secord Start Time: 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, May 3, 2022 Trailhead Weather: Cool, dull, threatening rain, though none came Distance: 16 km Elapsed Time: 5h BT Section: Niagara BT Map: #1 Main BT Walked: 0 km to 5.3 km Ascent: 437 m / Descent: 408 m Side/Other Trails: Sir Isaac Brock Side Trail, Laura Secord Legacy Trail Flora/Fauna of Note: American robins ( Turdus migratorius ), Northern cardinals ( Cardinalis cardinalis ), Downy woodpecker ( Picoides pubescens ), Hairy woodpecker ( Leuconotopicus villosus ), Eastern wood-pewee ( Contopus virens ), Eastern towhee ( Pipilo erythrophthalmus ), coyote ( Canis latrans ) In which I learn Niagara Falls is no match for an etiquette teacher and her cat; Laura Secord didn't need a cow; Canadian history isn't dull and nature could use all the friends it can get. Staring at green luminescent letters that read "No Overnight Parking," I asked the machine in Queenston Heights Park, home to the Bruce Trail's southern terminus, "What do you mean no overnight parking? It's 7:30 in the morning and I'm here to begin my adventure." When cursing wouldn't convince the machine that night didn't end until 10 a.m., I realized that hiking the Bruce Trail "my way" might be a dream -- already a ticket dispenser was dictating my plans.


I jumped back into my car and headed downhill toward the village of Queenston. Finding a more enlightened ticket dispenser, I parked my car and hoisted my daypack into place. With my GPS, notebook and pen in hand, my slightly altered journey had begun. * * * The blue blazes of the Sir Isaac Brock Side Trail directed me onto an earthen path that zig-zagged up toward Queenston Heights Park to the official start of the BT. As I neared the top, I stopped at a clearing and looked down at the mighty Niagara River thinking, Had I parked up above, I would have missed this view . Linking Lake Erie to Lake Ontario and forming the border between Canada and the United States, its limestone-green clouded flow surges over Canada's Horseshoe Falls at 35 kilometres per hour making it North America's most powerful cataract and an irresistible draw for a 63-year-old unemployed dance and etiquette teacher named Annie Edson Taylor. In pursuit of fame and fortune, Taylor's gamble was to become the first person to plunge over Niagara Falls in a barrel. On October 24, 1901, with her orange cat clutched to her chest, this Michigander was sealed into a four-and-a-half-foot-long barrel made of one-and-a-half-inch-thick oak with the words Maid of the Mist hand-painted on the side.


Her handlers pushed the barrel and its precious cargo into the Niagara River's surging current. It bobbed along, gradually gaining speed. Minutes later it plunged over what amounted to a 14-storey-high building -- a mere speck in the river's calamitous flow. Taylor and her cat, unlike four of the other 13 people who attempted this feat before it was outlawed, survived the ordeal. Accounts suggest that upon being released from her confine, she asked, "Have I gone over the falls?".


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