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Warden Woods - once again, from the top

The weather and my free time weren't cooperating this week, so I couldn't make it out for a lengthy trip. However, yesterday I had just enough time to correct a longstanding oversight. While updating my first post on the Taylor-Massey a few days ago, I noticed that I'd given a long portion of the creek through Warden Woods rather short shrift. I suppose since I live nearby, and have passed through it so often, I took the park somewhat for granted. Well no more, as I head south from the start of my last visit, at the northern tip of the park (which you can revisit here):

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Up a little side-stream to a familiar location:

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Back to the main vein:

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Past the bridge to Byng Park:

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On through Pharmacy Ave, ending at Dentonia Park Golf Course:

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Rouge River - that sinking feeling

Well, I lost another camera! And it only took, what, 2 months? So for anyone out there who laughed at me for buying that cheap little ViviCam, I ask you who's laughing now? Well...not me. This is getting rather annoying actually. But at least this time it was merely a $40 annoyance, instead of a $400+ one.

Still, I have to confess that I had trepidations about this hike before I ever set out. In fact, I always do when considering any trip out to that vast green corner of the city's far northeast - and especially now, since I've taken on this mad quest to explore every ravine and waterway in Toronto. So many streams and creeks to cover! So remote and so out of the way! So much 'wilderness' - so little 'urban'...

But, one step at a time, as they say. And indeed, this trip served as a valuable lesson in watching where you take those steps! Many thrills and chills await in this installment, so let's get started by heading down Twyn Rivers Drive to pick up where I last left off on the raging Rouge:

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My first bit of excitment started just by getting into the river valley. On the east bank a narrow path leads up a sheer cliff-face to dizzying heights. Only a razor-thin patch of dirt separates impenetrable bush from a straight fall of a few hundred feet. Not exactly the ideal terrain for a hiker wearing heavy, clumsy rubber boots - not to mention a slight fear of heights! But the views reward my misty mountain hopping:

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Just as things are at their most precarious, the path mercifully heads back down into the safety of the forest:

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The path continues on as the well-worn Vista Trail, into Rouge Park. But I have pledged to follow the river, no matter what the difficulty. Due to the previous day's rainfall, and the current foggy/dewy condition, after fighting my way through a long tract of undergrowth I'm already soaked from the knees up before I even reach the river! But, thanks to those clumsy boots, at least my feet are dry:

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After another quick detour through the woods I come out into the upper reaches of the Gatineau hydro corridor:

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Back through the woods to the river, where I encounter the first signs of frost for the season. Those damned mosquitos should be gone soon now:

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From Meadowvale to Kirkhams Road:

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Out now into the southern boundaries of the Toronto Zoo property:

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Past the first of many disused and abandoned spans across the river:

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The first section of the old Toronto Zoo Domain Ride, aka monorail - which was not, contrary to popular folklore, constructed by Lyle Lanley:

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Seeing as how I was at the zoo (or just outside of it), I had intended on snapping as many shots of the local wildlife as possible. And there was, in fact, much wildlife to observe. I caught a fleeting glimpse of a couple more deer, as well as the fleeting splashes of a couple of frogs. There were herrons-a-plenty along the river's banks, and I even spied a pair of bison off in the distance (in the zoo itself, of course). Alas, they were always too quick, or too far off to be captured by my lens, and had to make do with a few invertebrates:

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Pressing on through the vicinity of where the Rouge meets Morningside Creek:

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The river turns north and the forgotton monorail loops back around again:

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Past the barely visible swan pond at the western end of the zoo, and up to the last of the abandoned spans, as previously discovered and discussed by Lone Primate here:

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Here, where the river takes a final westward bend, just below Old Finch Ave, is where this journey comes to yet another tragic end:

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As the river course tended to alternate between level, navigable shorelines and sheer rock walls (as pictured above) on either side, I had been making a habit if wading back and forth, from one side to the other, along the way. This had not been much trouble thusfar as the river had only varied from knee- to waist-height in depth, while my camera was safely tucked away in my shirt's breast pocket. However, in making this final pass I made a fatal mistake. It's common bush-sense not to wade into rushing water when you can't see the bottom of it - and, to be fair, I could see the bottom a few feet out from where I stood. The problem was the space in between. As I sent a probing foot out to locate the riverbed, my foot kept going down, and as I began to lose balance a current swept me full in and I found myself swimming to the other side!

I suppose I'm lucky I didn't drown. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for my camera. I should have known something bad would happen here. The last time I was at the Toronto Zoo, when I was about 6 or 7 years old, I was attacked by a goose! And now this! One bright spot, however, has to be the resiliency of my SD Card. Hat's off to A-Data for making memory cards that really take a lickin' and keep on tickin'! This was, in fact, the same card that was in my old Sanyo camera that I dropped in the Highland last year. I don't know what I would have done if I lost the record of this trip. It was, perhaps, the most arduous of my many hikes so far - over 5 hours of tough slogging through a mostly trail-less, and clearly hostile landscape - a hike I would not have wanted to take again.

Still, I think I'll take this as a sign to take a brief hiatus before purchasing my next martyr - err, camera, that is. The UofT book sale season is coming up, and I should be saving my money for that. Maybe I'll find some of the books mentioned here about Toronto's urban wilderness, and read about someone else's hikes for a change, in the dry comfort of my home...
 
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Adventurous and courageous are traits I admire.
Thanks for not drowning!
 
Thanks CityPlaceN1!

I'm still on my brief hiatus, but I'm not about to abandon the thread. So I thought I'd post this classic pic from the Waterfront Toronto website which, I think, rather comically embodies the essence of "urban wilderness" through time:

http://www.waterfrontoronto.ca/image_galleries/history_and_heritage/?8112#8132

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People washing their cars in the Humber River in 1922


Imagine trying that today?
 
Highland Creek - payback

OK. So I really did intend to go out and get a real camera this time. However, on my way to an actual camera store I remembered mattelderca's suggestion to check Canadian Tire for one of their occasional sales. So I did, and there to my suprize I spotted a ViviCam 5022 on sale for $25! That's right, two-five. How could I lose? Besides having a few less megapixels (which I didn't need), and a shorter zoom (which I rarely used), the 5022 seemed a virtual dead-ringer for my recently deceased ViviCam X024 (for which I payed a now seemingly exorbitant $40). Was this all too good to be true? Naturally.

To begin with, where the X024 had limited options, the 5022 has virtually none. No scene selections, no white ballance control, not even a timer! Just picture size and an anti-shake function (which I 've found to be pretty much useless on any camera I've ever tried). But worst than that is the view screen which, aside from being about an inch smaller than the X024's, is so dark and renders so slowly that every picture you take is pretty much an act of guess work. At this rate of technological devolution, I may soon be going out on these trips with a camera obscura, or perhaps just a sketch pad and some crayons...

However, despite all these drawbacks, I was happy to find the resulting photos to be of basically the same quality as the old ViviCam (for what that's worth). And, at a measly $25, I'm now practically daring the urban wilderness to claim this camera from me! And so, thusly emboldened, what better place for me to tempt the fates than the location where I lost my first camera one year ago this week - at the last little vestige of the Highland Creek, heading north from Finch between Tiffield Road and Dynamic Drive. So let's try this again, shall we?:

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Through Nashdene Road towards McNicoll:

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As the creek heads under McNicoll Avenue, into the nightly abyss of subterranean Scarborough, I discover a somewhat sinister artifact. Anyone who has read Stephen King's "IT", as I did as a lad, may recall that the "real name" of Pennywise (the supernatural child-killing clown who dwelled in the sewers of Derry Maine) was Robert Gray. Needless to say, I don't think I'll be venturing under here anytime soon:

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Up the road, over a hill, and through the trees, what remains of the Highland Creek re-emerges as a large, ornamental pond in Milliken Park:

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Barely visible through a dense strip of cattails, the last little trickle of the Highland Creek seeps to its conclusion at the top of the park, just below Steeles Ave:

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Cairns Brook - hidden treasure

A little bonus update to make up for my prolonged absence, and also to demonstrate the probable impossibility of ever covering all of Toronto's creeks and streams. I happened to sight this forgotton little spot, just off Cairns Avenue near Coxwell & Eastwood, purely by chance. At maybe only 30 or 40 yards in length it's not on any map I've seen. My guess is it could be a continuation of the stream which runs through Wembley Woods just to the north. Perhaps a sufficiently old map of the area might confirm this hypothesis:

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EVCco,

It's very interesting that you were scouting the Rouge river at the exact same time as I was sampling for freshwater mussels there. I thought I should ask - did you by any chance see any large shells or live specimens?

It would look something like this:

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Also, have you found any such specimens or shells in any of your other walks in the GTA? I would greatly appreciate any info. Thanks!
 

A lamentable loss to the landscape,
if I may alliterate...


EVCco,

It's very interesting that you were scouting the Rouge river at the exact same time as I was sampling for freshwater mussels there. I thought I should ask - did you by any chance see any large shells or live specimens?

Also, have you found any such specimens or shells in any of your other walks in the GTA? I would greatly appreciate any info. Thanks!

Now that you mention it I do tend to see these along the river banks now and then. Never live though, that I can recall.
Unfortunately, I couldn't tell you where exactly I've seen them since I never took much notice of them before. But I'll certainly keep an eye out from now on!
 

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