One-Tank Trip for
Sept. 24-16
(c) By Jim Fox
With the passing of
those lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer, the fall season is a colourful one with
plenty of sightseeing opportunities.
The Muskoka tourist
region is one of the top places to view the onset of fall – with its vivid colourful
palette of vibrant reds, oranges, yellows and golds throughout the lakeside
forests.
As one of the
hottest and driest summers in history, southern Ontario could see a shorter and
less vivid season, said David Phillips, Environment Canada senior
climatologist.
Midland Tours offers boat cruises to see the fall colours on the Trent-Severn Waterway including Big Chute Marine Railway. (Jim Fox photo) |
The weather
conditions will likely result in the leaves “falling earlier because they have
had to endure a little more stress than usual,” said Jordan Mulligan of
Muskoka Tourism.
At mid-week, there
was about a 15-per-cent colour change but things happen quickly as the season
reaches its peak around Thanksgiving to mid-October, he added.
Out on the water
There are many ways
to experience the Muskoka fall transformation – something that happens in just
14 percent of the world’s forests.
Get out on the
water with six fall cruises aboard “masterful vessels” that ply the blue-black
Muskoka lakes.
“The scenery is
truly spectacular at this time of year,” said John Miller of Muskoka Steamships
& Discovery Centre, home of the historic Segwun and Wenonah II steamships.
“Our captains will
sometimes adjust the route to get the best viewing, but really anywhere you
look is a dazzling array of colour – often doubly so because it is reflected
off the water,” he added.
Fall colour tours on the historic Segwun steamship are offered from Gravenhurst. |
The steamships
offer daily excursions including a Thanksgiving Day cruise on Oct. 10. realmuskoka.com
Other cruises
include the Lady Muskoka in Bracebridge; Sunset Cruises, Port Carling; SS
Bigwin, Lake of Bays; Midland Tours, Port Severn; and the Island Queen, Parry
Sound.
Algonquin
Provincial Park’s sugar and red maples reach their peak in the next few weeks
followed by a second colour wave from beech trees, yellow and white birch,
trembling and largetooth aspen, red oak and tamarack.
One of the best spots
to view the spectacle is the Highway 60 corridor through the park on trails such
as Hardwood Lookout, Track and Tower, Centennial Ridges and Lookout, and Booth’s
Rock.
When things start
to happen, latest images and live webcam views can be seen at algonquinpark.on.ca
Also colourful
is the annual harvest starting this weekend at Johnston’s Cranberry Marsh and
Muskoka Lakes Winery in Bala.
It adds cranberry
reds to the abundance of oranges and yellows around the marsh.
Having some fun during the harvest at Johnston’s Cranberry Marsh. |
There are daily tours,
wine tastings, shopping, hiking, and wagon and helicopter rides through Oct.
31.
A highlight is the
Bala Cranberry Festival from Oct. 14 to 16
Fall getaways
Muskoka Tourism
suggests the “top five” fall getaways for overnight stays:
- Killarney Lodge,
Algonquin Park: Relax in private lakeside cabins or by the fire in the lounge.
Each cabin is decorated
in a “comfortable, Canadian country style.”
Rates include three
meals daily and the use of a canoe in this lodge that has no TVs, radios or
phones in the cabins.
- Deerhurst Resort
in Huntsville, near the western entrance to Algonquin Park, offers modern
luxury to experience the fall colours.
Guests can save up
to 20 per cent on midweek stays this month and next (from $152 a night) with a
$50 resort credit for dining, golfing or retail goods.
- Residence Inn Muskoka Wharf Gravenhurst is where you can buy the Muskoka Steamships and Muskoka Discovery Centre Package and combine a stay with a fall cruise.
- Residence Inn Muskoka Wharf Gravenhurst is where you can buy the Muskoka Steamships and Muskoka Discovery Centre Package and combine a stay with a fall cruise.
- Beauview Cottage
Resort, Huntsville has fall specials in a “cozy” one-bedroom cottage with hot
tub for $189 a night.
- Rocky Crest Golf
Resort, MacTier has “breathtaking surroundings and Lake Joseph views.”
The package includes
suite accommodations, a bottle of wine, daily breakfast and one dinner for two.
Colourful fall drives are abundant in Muskoka. (Photo: Explorers’ Edge) |
If you leaf-peep
Check out the
Muskoka online report for leaf colour updates at discovermuskoka.ca/ontario-fall-colour-report
For Muskoka Tourism
getaways and events: discovermuskoka.ca
To see what’s
happening at the colourful provincial parks: ontarioparks.com/fallcolour
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Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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