Tag Archives: Edmonton’s river valley

Fort Edmonton Trail in the Spring

Fort Edmonton footbridge

Beautiful walk this afternoon along the Fort Edmonton/Terwillegar trails, featuring two of the city’s newish footbridges. It’s a beautiful walk, although the foliage is not quite there yet. Last year when I walked on this particular trail for the first time with Sharon and Stella, it was a revelation. We are so lucky in this city to have such beautiful, diverse trails.

The river, from the bridge
Woohoo!

About half way along the trail, we ran across a tree decorated with Oilers gear. The playoffs are about to start. Let’s go Oilers! Addendum: they were swept in the first round πŸ™

Terwillegar footbridge, looking in the direction of the dog park

Sunny, about 12C. A slow but steady recovery from the $&!?@! mini cold-snap. 14,024 steps.

Park patrol

Cool Clouds

MacKinnon Ravine looking extra beautiful

Solo walk in MacKinnon Ravine. I wanted to see what the ratio was between ice and pavement. It’s about 90% pavement and 10% ice. For the ice part up the hill, I’m glad I brought my spikes.

Along River Road

I started along Victoria Promenade, and then down into the golf course. Most of the road was ice free, as was the entirety of River Road up until the last part of MacKinnon Ravine. Lots of deep puddles. Since I had my spikes on (I put them on half way) I walked along the adjacent path in the trees. A short but very pleasant diversion of the main trail.

The sky was amazing! Really unusual, streaky clouds. A great day for a walk.

More sky!
The adjacent south trail along MacKinnon Ravine
The fleeting display of spectacular cloudage now dissipated

7C 13,142 steps

Melty

The museum trail, overcast but warm

Another pleasant, melty walk through the Museum grounds to Tom’s and then over to Numchok Wilai for some Thai take out. For a couple of vegetarians, their Massaman Beef is out of this &$!?# world!

6C, 10,088 steps.

Meet Up in Hawrelak

Janna, Grace, Colleen, Lisa and Kate

Wow what a gorgeous day! It feels like spring.

Walked to an absolutely packed Hawrelak Park for a socially distanced but affectionately close weenie roast with Janna, Grace, Colleen, Lisa, and Kate. With the exception of Lisa (Colleen’s partner) and Barb, who was not there, these are the wonderful gals I spent my birthday with in Scottsdale in 2013.

The park was absolutely packed. I’m not sure if there was an event, but I think the combination of the warm weather, blue skies, and covid lockdown drove folks to the park, and particularly the lake (for skating). I’m glad I walked down there because there wasn’t a parking spot to be found.

This was taken from a video, which I can’t seem to upload

It was fantastic to see my friends again…in person. It takes a lot of coordination to share meals with people outside your bubble these days. Lots of separate containers, disinfectant and personal utensils, so thanks to Colleen and Lisa for the major set up, including the weenies and the fire.

The last couple of times I’ve been around a wood stove or bonfire, it starts out feeling great, but then later it’s like I’ve been in the backseat of a car with two heavy smokers (you know, like every car trip of my childhood). It takes 24 hours for me to lose that slightly sick feeling. I never used to be that sensitive to smoke, but I am now. Hopefully soon we will be able to gather indoors.

5C, 13,512 steps.

No Filter

The warm up begins…slowly. It was unbelievably cold for a couple of weeks so no real walks from the 5th to the 15th.

There is no filter on this photo along Ravine Drive. The sky was that blue!

I often stop here to listen to the birds while Tom carries on for another 20 minutes or so. When I come with him on his walks, I clock in around 13,000 steps but he likes a few more, so I stop here and he walks over the nearby Mackenzie Bridge. Because I wear micro-spikes, my feet can get really sore walking on cement and this walk from Glenora to the end of Ravine Drive involves a lot of cement thanks to responsible homeowners who clear their sidewalks and a lot of melting. He just wears hiking boots and seems fine. I guess I’m the unstable one in the relationship! Who woulda thought?

Sometimes he walks on the sidewalk and I walk next to him on the street, where there is still snow and ice close to the curb. That’s one of the tradeoffs of spikes. I stay upright (always a good thing), but the impact on my feet (if I’m on cement) is substantial.

Anyway, beautiful day for a walk after two weeks of sloth.

-9C and climbing.

Around the ‘hood

Trees at the museum

Well, it was a beautiful day, sun-wise. The temperature is starting to drop after a pretty warm January overall.

‘My’ trail at the museum
Looking southeast
Looking southwest

Too late to coordinate with Tom, but we met coming around the corner along Ravine Drive!

Looking over the 102 bridge at Groat Road

About -13C to -11C over a couple of hours. 10,170 steps