West Humber River - taking chances
Still not having discerned what went wrong with my camera, and with the weathermen forecasting thunderstorms all day, I was taking a bit of a chance heading up to the other end of the city yesterday for potentially nothing. But, after last week, I suppose I figured my luck couldn't get any worse, so I rolled the dice - and I'm glad that I did! My camera remained in working order (such as that is), and, although the skies stayed dreary and overcast, I managed to keep dry and see some interesting sites along the way. So let's start west of Kipling Avenue and head further west along the West Humber River, as it winds between Ester Lorrie and Garland Parks:
My last trip found me in Scarborough's Rouge Community Park (though really more a giant swamp than a "park") - and on this trip, once past Martin Grove Road, I find myself entering the West Humber Community Forest (though really more of your typical park than a "forest"):
Some art of varying degrees of quality under Highway 27:
Just past the Highway, a scenic little oxbow pond materializes which seems very popular with the area's geese:
Back on the West Humber Trail, through Garfield Weston Valley Gardens:
Over the bridge and into the Humber Arboretum where my chance-taking really starts to pay-off. This area must have some of the tamest, most acclimatized wildlife in the city, with groundhogs posing for pictures and deer so close to the pathway you can almost pet them - all while joggers, bikers, and rollerbladers whiz by. I suspect this may be due, in part, to a man I notice along the way constantly heading back and forth to feed the animals some sort of trail mix. I reckon it must be pretty good stuff, whatever it was - I nearly tried some myself:
Continuing on through Humberline Park:
From Humberwood Boulevard to Finch Avenue, now, with even more wildlife along the way:
The luxury of a paved trail ends shortly after Finch. From there you're on your own in reaching the 427:
Dam!:
Ending at the immense Claireville Reservoir and surrounding Conservation Area: