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My grandparents had several large old pear trees in their back yard in Waterdown. They picked some but two seniors can only pick and eat so much. The rest was, unfortunately, left to rot on the ground. It’s a sad thing to see good albeit “ugly” organically grown produce simply spoil because there’s nobody to take advantage of such abundance, and it happens more often than you’d think. The Halton Fruit Tree Project was created to do something about it.

With funding from the Trillium Foundation, the Halton Fruit Tree Project was created in 2011 as a part of the Growing and Sharing Food in Halton initiative undertaken by the Oakville Sustainable Food Partnership and Go Local Oakville. “We held a couple of community forums in 2010 to see where the community interests lay in terms of food sustainability and environmental issues,” says project manager, Melissa Tervit. “One topic that came up time and time again was gleaning because there is quite a lot of backyard fruit in Oakville.” Prior to the Town’s urbanization, Tervit says there were many orchards and strawberry fields here.

Apples and pears are the main fruits harvested. Tervit says it’s the most successful and visible part of the project. It’s a volunteer position so she takes two months out of her life to “pick fruit like crazy. I’m addicted to gleaning fruit – I love picking apples!” she admits.

With the large amount of food waste happening in the region and all the food banks looking for donations, creating the project made sense. “We hated seeing all that fruit going to waste, especially when we have so many people who are food insecure in our community,” says Tervit. Corporations and individual residents have opened up their yards and orchards to the project for free, which meant that the only cost to get the project started was the initial purchase of equipment. “It essentially costs nothing to harvest and we donate it all to Food for Life. They take care of all the logistics and distribution,” says Tervit. Over its four seasons, the project has saved about 24,000 lbs. of produce from being wasted, and instead redirected it into Halton’s food supply.

The main source of produce is the orchard on the Cumis property on North Service Road in Burlington, where about 10,000 lbs. of apples are harvested each year. Tervit says many back yards that have just one tree can give 600 lbs. of fruit each. Last year they took in 4,000 lbs. of fruit from home back yards alone. There are also a few trees on Fourth Line near Speers Road, a small private orchard across from the entrance at Bronte Creek that has approximately 20 trees, and a couple of trees on Lakeshore Road on private property that get picked. “There’s a really well maintained old pear orchard on BSI’s company property in Burlington and they’re one of our best partners. The company maintains the orchard. We go and harvest them and we get about 1,000 lbs. of pears,” says Tervit.

Thanks to the Halton Fruit Tree Project, many people in Halton are able to enjoy perfectly good, healthy food that would otherwise waste away on the ground. “Food for Life is astounded every year at the amount of fruit that comes in just from people’s back yards,” she notes.

Although the operating season is September to early November, at this time of year you can find Tervit and some volunteers pruning trees. “I prune one small orchard and will probably help out with another.” In fact, if your company is looking for a unique team building opportunity, she would be happy to put you to work.

Local Links:
Halton Fruit Tree Project
haltonfruittreeproject.org

Food for Life
foodforlife.ca

by Becky Dumais

What could be more Canadian than celebrating all things maple? It’s a rhetorical question of course, because the answer is obvious to anyone who has survived a Canadian winter. To celebrate all things maple, there is a compendium of things to do along Ontario’s maple route from now until early April.

Maple tapping season was the inspiration behind Tap into Maple, a festival which brings together maple syrup producers, restaurants, cafes, museums and bakeries all located a short drive north of the GTA. Commonly referred to as Ontario’s “lake country,” the area encompasses Orillia, Oro-Medonte, Rama, Ramara, and Severn, all key spots for maple trees. Along the Tap into Maple route, there are 29 stopsbens_maple-3682 where you can shop, eat and stay, and where you can find out all you need to know about our beloved maple tree. “This is the third year we’ve organized Tap into Maple as we’ve found that more and more people are looking for that ‘traditional Canadian’ thing to do, especially new Canadians and those visiting Canada,” says Diane Fotopoulos-Wright, Marketing and Sales Associate with Ontario’s Lake Country.

At the heart of the maple event are the maple syrup producers, who offer tours of their sugar bushes where visitors can watch how the boiling process is conducted. There are also local events that show how maple syrup production has changed over the years. Then there are the shops that sell (drumroll please) maple-filled goodies from fudge, to butter tarts and even sausages.

Local museums get in on the act by offering maple-themed programming for kids and families, and local accommodations have put together maple-themed overnight packages for those who want to extend their stay. Fotopoulos-Wright says it’s a great area to visit in the spring, when maple syrup production is beginning. “The area comes alive with the sweet smell in the air and you can see the steam rising from the barns.”

Here are three great stops along the Maple Route:
Gimme Some Sugar
There’s no better example of “all things maple” than what happens at the Steamy Kettle Sugar Bush. Located in Barrie, the farm has more than 5,000 maple trees on its 200-acre farm, which has been in the family since 1840. With that many trees to tap, there’s always enough maple syrup to go around and the Steamy Kettle obviously do it well. The farm won the “best tasting” award for its divine maple syrup.

bacon_waffles_vertGet Outta Town
Saturday, April 30 is the day the town of Elmvale, outside of Barrie, transforms itself from your typical small town to a place where the streets are filled with vendors offering everything maple, including maple syrup, all types of delicious food, books, collectibles and other treasures. Look for the Sugar Shack information booth if you’re in need of directions and if you want to buy tickets for the bus to the sugar bush tours. A visit wouldn’t be complete without taking in the town’s all-day breakfast with pancakes and sausages.

Jumping (Flap) Jacks
The Shaw family has been “tapping” into maple trees since 1904 and many of the original trees are still producing “liquid gold” today. From the start date in early February through to mid-April, families can visit their Pancake House, and then hike through the bush where 4,000 trees, all connected with tubing, collect around 160,000 litres of watery maple sap each season. There are also horse-drawn wagon rides that wind through the trails.

 Along with your taste for a traditional Canadian experience, you’d better pack your toothbrush!

Local Links:
Tap Into Maple Route
ontarioslakecountry.com/tapintomaple

Shaws Catering
shawscatering.com/maple-syrup-bush

Steamy Kettle Sugar Bush
steamykettlesugarbush.weebly.com

Elmvale Maple Syrup Festival
emsf.ca

Written by Denise Davy

When it’s bleak or blanketed with snow outside, you can still keep your hopes alive for spring by having greenery indoors. Both air plants and terrariums offer a low maintenance way to cultivate your green thumb. Spiky, alien-like air plants can thrive anywhere, even on a fridge magnet, whereas terrariums are like small self-contained eco systems.

Centro_Airplants
Find this at Centro!

Plant Fancy
Air plants (Tillandsias) are part of the orchid family, and can live for up to eight years – no soil required. They’re found naturally in tropical regions, attaching themselves to bark and other natural surfaces. “I find that air plants are almost architectural,” says Jennifer Klassen, manager at Centro Garden in Burlington. “They have a form to them, so people use them as adécor piece. Some of the bigger ones, (called ‘zero graphica’), are made to sit on the table on their own.They’re quite large.” Smaller plants can be grouped in twos or threes and Klassen suggests grouping plants with different textures and varying leaf sizes with other items such as rocks or moss. They can be displayed practically wherever your crafty imagination takes you: on a tabletop or hanging in a glass globe, on a wall, on pieces of wood, as a fridge magnet or even set in seashells. Erica Lowartz-Cozzarin of Sheridan Nurseries also suggests they can be a beautiful alternative for the bride. “These (plants) have gained popularity as bouquets for weddings because they’re so adaptable,” she says.

Know Your Roots
Air plants don’t actually have root systems, but instead they tail_fullxfull.374120977_ez7uke in nutrients through their leaves. “You can water them by putting them in a bowl or dish with water and let it sit for about 15 minutes,” says Klassen. “It soaks up all the water through the leaves. Do that about once a week.” Succulents, which are often used in terrariums, have a thick leaf and need little watering. “They hold a lot of water and have a root system so you’d water them once every two weeks or once a month, depending on where they’re located in your home.

Terrarium Firma
Another way to incorporate interest and live plants into your home is with a terrarium. Think of it as an aquarium, but for plants instead of fish (and with way less water). All you need is a glass container with a lid and you can create a miniature garden or forest. To create your own, start with a clear glass container with a lid (even a Mason jar), place a bit of charcoal at the bottom, and then add a bit of soil. “It doesn’t need much water at all,” explains Klassen. “If you find there’s condensation inside, take the lid off for a day to let some of that moisture out. They’re self-sufficient eco systems,” she says, and they do best in a brightly lit room. Along with terrarium_5succulents, Lowartz-Cozzarin suggests you put some cacti and fairy gardening plants into the arrangement. “You can even go with something exotic such as an orchid,” she says. “Mosses and spreading plants, such as babytears, act as carpets and they can work well also.” Practically anything can be added to a terrarium, provided it matches the scale. Try incorporating rocks, different coloured mosses, driftwood sticks or fungus from a tree. Lowartz-Cozzarin suggests any rocks or fairy gardening pieces would make great accessories. Before creating your terrarium or displaying your air plants, take the kids out for a nature walk and have them collect items along the way. If by chance they find a unique log, bring that home too and create your own unique piece.

Written by Becky Dumais

Local Links:
Centro Garden, Burlington
centrogarden.com

Terra Greenhouses – Burlington/Milton
terragreenhouses.com

Sheridan Nurseries – Oakville/Mississauga
sheridannurseries.com

 -By Becky Dumais

Skating is one of the greatest winter activities. If you know how to skate it would seem almost a romantic pursuit for some and involves fierce competition for others: gliding hand in hand with someone around the rink, getting hot chocolate after while chatting with rosy cheeks or shouldering an opponent aside to get at the puck.

Both Oakville and Burlington have several indoor rinks to use all year and recently have increased the number of neighbourhood rinks available. That means there’s more ice surface to go around and an even greater opportunity to connect with your immediate community.

 

Thanks to neighbourhood groups who submitted applications to the city of Burlington to look after rinks in their local park, the following 16 parks will have ice during this season: Brant Hills, Champlain, Central, Emerson, Fairchild, Glen Afton, Ireland, LaSalle, Nelson, Optimist, Orchard, Palladium, Sinclair, Skyway, Sheraton, and Tansley Woods.

Weather permitting, the Parks and Open Space department at the Town of Oakville will be offering outdoor rinks at these locations: Clearview Park, Langtry Park, Nottinghill Park, Falgarwood Park, Glenashton Park, Bloomfield Park, Sixteen Hollow Park, Millbank Park, and Bronte Heritage Waterfront Park.

Zeroing in even further on local rinks is having a custom rink built or do-it-yourself right in your backyard. Custom Ice in Burlington sells kits for homeowners to set up and operate the backyard rink of their dreams. How about a portable refrigerated ice rink system with useable ice up to 50°F or less? That’s an ice surface you can enjoy for up to five months. Portable rinks are rolled out in the fall and in the spring are rolled back and stored in the off-season.

HockeyShot in Oakville offers Backyard Skating Rink Kits in various sizes. Their top seller is a 20′ by 40′ Rink-In-A-Box. Keep the professional experience up by adding accessories such as an Ice Resurfacer to your repertoire.

Once everyone’s done more than their share of times around the ice, call everyone over to your outdoor hot chocolate station for a hot cup of cocoa, marshmallows, candy canes and other fixings (maybe a little Baileys or Kahlua for the adults) and a few snacks, plus a few places to sit and relax after an enjoyable workout outdoors.

If you’ve but if you’d rather build one from scratch, consider these tips for a DIY rink at home:

Friday Night Lights

Extend the opportunity to get outdoors for a skate into the night. If you’ve got good porch/backyard lighting that’s a good start. Consider attaching some lights to posts around the rink for extra ambience. They’ll also come in handy if you have to resurface the ice when it’s early morning before the kids head out.

One Word: Zamboni

Ok so you can’t fit the real thing on your ice surface – nor do you need it, but you will need to be able to maintain the ice. First, shovel, use a snow thrower or broom, and then flood the ice with several layers of warm or hot water. Make sure the water flows out evenly for each layer.

Snow, Shovel

Keep the rink clean, clear and ready for use at all times by shoveling after each snowfall. Leaving the snow on the ice for too long could damage the surface you’ve worked so hard on.

Local Links:
Hockey Shot, Oakville
hockeyshot.ca

Custom Ice Rinks, Burlington
customicerinks.com

 

No matter where you grew up, as long as it was in the Northern Hemisphere, chances are you traversed more than one hill over and over again in order to hop on your sled, and enjoy the thrill of whizzing down the hill.  You will recall going home exhausted with wet snow pants, soggy socks, rosy cheeks and a smile on your face.

Tobogganing is a quintessential wintertime activity that everyone in the family can enjoy. Thankfully we live among the varied terrain beneath the Niagara Escarpment, and there are lots of nearby hills to access.

Oakville
Old Abbey Lane Park
Three hills beside Abbey Lane Public School
Location: Glen Abbey, 1110 Old Abbey Lane

Oxford Avenue & Upper Middle Road
A gentle hill that’s ideal for younger kids, easy to walk up.
Location: Southeast corner

Bronte Creek Provincial Park
This huge hill has two sides and is perfect for all ages. Weather permitting, bring your skates for a lap or two around the outdoor skating rink.  Purchase of a day pass is required to access the hill.
Location: 1219 Burloak Drive

Appleby College
Kids have been sledding here for many years, enjoying the scenery and the lakeshore of this private school.
Location: 540 Lakeshore Road West

Burlington
Upper Middle Road & Headon Road
Passers-by in wintertime witness lots of families on this popular hill, ideal for small children and their parents.
Location: Upper Middle Road

LaSalle Park
A small hill great for a quick bit of outdoor play for toddlers and preschoolers.
Location: Waterfront Trail

Lowville Park
A wide hill with a variety of slopes ranging from easy-going to steep.
Location: 6207 Guelph Line

Bolus Gardens Hill
A wide hill with a steep incline and lots of room at the base.
Location: 930-978 Francis Road

Orchard Park Public School
An ample-sized hill where lots of neighbourhood families gather for a fun afternoon sledding.
Location: 5151 Dryden Avenue

Milton:
Sixteen Mile Creek (At Commercial and Laurier)
Park at Rad Brothers at the corner of Derry Road and Ontario Street, then head for the hills.
Location: 585 Derry Road West

Glen Eden Tubing Park
Hop on the lift and get pulled to the top, zip down and do it all over again. Admission charges apply.
Location: 5234 Kelso Road

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Tips for Winter Fun Outdoors:
Eyes on the Almanac
Check out the weather conditions before heading outside

Dress for the day
Dress in layers, wear proper mittens or gloves (as long as they’re warm enough and they can make good snowballs).  A good hat is essential.  Ski masks are also great to keep extra toasty for windy days.  Thick socks are also important to keep feet warm.  Switch summer socks for thick winter ones to keep feet extra warm.

Post-Hill Party
Kids will look forward to a snack and a hot drink after an afternoon outdoors.  Bring a thermos of hot chocolate with you to enjoy on the hill; visit your favourite coffee shop on the way home or head to your kitchen and make a batch of hot drinks for the family.  Pour it into your favourite mugs, add some mix-ins (Bailey’s for you, whipped cream or marshmallows for the kids), put on the fireplace and relax.

By Becky Dumais

Local Links

City of Burlington
burlington.ca

Glen Eden
gleneden.on.ca

Toboggan Hills
tobogganhills.com

 

There’s something to be said about walking into a clean home, but we can do without inhaling an onslaught of harsh chemical odours and fumes. What about using natural or “green” cleaning products? You can lessen your exposure to harmful ingredients that may have negative effects on your health, and the planet.

Since the mid 20th century, about 85,000 new chemicals have been introduced to the market through various products. I recall the strong scent of vinegar on cleaning day from my childhood. Perhaps it’s time to get back to sourcing more natural ingredients in our cleaning routines, and feeling healthier and enjoying cleaner household air at the same time.

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Chemical-laden cleaning products can cause myriad short term or immediate health problems. You might feel satisfied at how the house smells after scouring and scrubbing, but those strong fumes can lead to headaches; dizziness; skin, respiratory and eye irritation; and asthma attacks. Some cleaners also contain known or suspected carcinogens, neurotoxins, reproductive system toxins and hormone disruptors. Jerry Balice, owner at NEX Wellness in Burlington notes that even though manufacturers say that in small amounts these toxic ingredients aren’t likely to be a problem, continued exposure, also known as “toxic load” can contribute to disease.

The smaller members of the home are even more vulnerable. “Because of their smaller size and weight, and because their vital organs are still developing, children have a reduced ability to eliminate toxins from their developing bodies and are at greater risk of being affected by these toxins over the long term,” says Balice. Topping the toxicity list are drain, oven and toilet-bowl cleaners; chlorinated disinfectants; mildew removers; and wood and metal polishes. Even benign products, such as dish detergent, can contain toxic chemicals, he advises.

Whether you choose to make your own vinegar solution to remove mold and mildew, or you decide to purchase natural, chemical-free products, you’ll feel better knowing that you’ve eliminated chemicals from your home along with the mold, mildew and spaghetti stains. Plus, you won’t have to worry any more about accidentally spilling bleach on your beige bathroom towels.

What to Watch For
Often you can more accurately assess a product’s safety by reading through its ingredients list. Watch out for these toxins as you shop:

Phthalates (in fragranced household products such as air fresheners and dish soap). Known endocrine (hormone) disruptors may not be listed, but if the label says “fragrance”, chances are phthalates are present.

Perc (perchloroethylene) – a neurotoxin found in dry-cleaning solutions, spot removers, and carpet and upholstery cleaners.

Triclosan (antibacterial foaming agent used in dishwashing detergents, hand soaps and even toothpaste). In addition to contributing to antibiotic resistant microbes, it’s also suspected of being a hormone disruptor and possible carcinogen.

2-Butoxyethanol can cause sore throats, pulmonary edema, and liver and kidney damage.

Ammonia (a polishing agent for bathroom fixtures and sinks, also a glass cleaner). It can cause chronic bronchitis and asthma. Avoid the combination of ammonia and chlorine bleach – together these create highly toxic chloramine gas that can injure lung tissue.

Chlorine (in scouring powders, toilet bowl cleaners, mildew removers, laundry whiteners and household tap water). These compounds can severely irritate the lungs or burn skin and eyes and may be a thyroid disruptor.

Sodium hydroxide (in oven cleaners and drain openers) is extremely corrosive, causing severe burns if it touches the skin or eyes. Inhaling sodium hydroxide can cause a sore throat that lasts for many days.

Article courtesy of NEX Wellness   |   nexwellness.com   |   672 Brant Street   |   905-634-5000

Local Links for natural cleaning products:
Centro Garden, Burlington
centrogarden.com

Goodness Me, Burlington
goodnessme.ca

Simply Green Baby, Bronte
simplygreenbaby.com

Whole Foods, Oakville
wholefoodsmarket.com

Soap & Water, Oakville
soapandwatereveryday.com

By Rebecca Dumais

You’ve heard it before, “butter will kill you and broccoli will save your life”. But culinary icons like Julia Child, Chef Michael Smith and Martha Stewart have always believed that butter is beautiful. All around the country, butteristas like myself have discovered something new to excite our palates: artisanal butter, produced in small quantities, from natural ingredients by small-scale producers.

I was smitten by the butter bug years ago at the Savour Stratford (food) Festival. Among the duck confit with sauvignon blanc and the Berkshire pork with merlot, chef Jonathan Gushue, formerly of Langdon Hall, bravely and simply served house butter on fresh baguette. That’s right, just plain bread and butter! It was a daring move but there was nothing plain about his butter. One mouthful and I was instantly taken aback. The fragrant, creamy, rich, almost nutty, salty flavours began to luxuriate across my tongue and I swooned over a mouthful of sweet, creamy, decadence.

Gushue’s butter had the cleanness of a crisp Riesling, the brightness of crème fraîche, luxurious legs of a voluptuous chardonnay and the tender sweetness of a Chantilly cream. Flavours danced from sweet cream to heavenly vanilla with a light almond-like finish.

This might sound like the language of oenophiles or perhaps cheese aficionados. But it isn’t. It’s the lingo butteristas have adopted; people who seek out butters that are made from a single herd, others that reflect a region’s terroir, and complex flavours from the fermentation of cultured butter, or compound butters that absorb the flavour of their aromatic ingredients.

7-flavored-butter-recipes-1-size-3

Butter is a dairy product churned into a spread, yet all butters are not alike. Butter has many flavour compounds – over 120 of them to be exact from fatty acids to dimethyl sulfide. What this means is that all butters take on their own characteristics. But in order to show terroir or distinctiveness, it must begin with a pure, high quality ingredient – one that the majority of Canadians unfortunately do not appreciate.

In Canada, we’re surrounded by a sea of commercial butter made with the milk of the high yielding, low fat Holstein cows. And why not? Canadians are obsessed with avoiding fat, but herein lies the problem. Canadian cream is a skinny 35 per cent compared to the European 48 per cent and it’s the butterfat content in cream that seduces us into loving butter. So how can conventional butter compare when you start with a lesser-quality raw ingredient?

A simple butter tasting will reveal everything you ever wanted to know about buying good tasting butter, but it isn’t an easy tasting to organize. You can find imported French butter in Quebec and Belgian butter in Ontario, but butter doesn’t seem to spread itself across the country as well as it could. For example you’d never find a pound of British Columbia’s delicious Foothills Creamers Butter in Ontario, or a Quebec Lamothe Cremerie butter in Saskatchewan.

So what to do? Buy the best that is available. Look through the dairy counters of your local specialty grocer to find products made by local Ontario suppliers such as Limestone Creamery or Stirling Creamery. If you can’t find artisanal butters, pick up a pound of cultured butter, it’s considered to be the equivalent of a reserve wine.

So join the ranks of Childs, Smith and Stewart by loving butter but go all the way and get to know your butters the way others know their wines. Today, butter has never been more beautiful.

Local Links:

Whole Foods, Oakville
wholefoodsmarket.com

Fortinos, Oakville/Burlington
fortinos.ca

Longos, Oakville/Burlington
longos.com

Denninger’s Foods of the World, Burlington
denningers.com

Goodness Me, Burlington
goodnessme.ca

The Organic Garage, Oakville
organicgarage.ca

Monastery Bakery, Oakville
monasterybakery.com

Written by Lynn Ogryzlo; a food, wine and travel writer, international award winning author and regular contributor to Look Local Magazine. She can be reached for questions or comments at www.lynnogryzlo.com.

 

The City of Burlington is encouraging residents to apply to manage a rink close to home, with help from the Neighbourhood Rink Program.

“A neighbourhood rink is a great opportunity for Burlington residents to come together and enjoy the winter season,” said Chris Glenn, director of parks and recreation. “We want to encourage neighbours to be active outdoors, play together and support each other through maintaining a rink.”

The City of Burlington has 12 parks across Burlington available for neighbourhood rinks:

  • Brant Hills Park
  • Bridgeview Park
  • Central Park
  • Ireland Park
  • LaSalle Park
  • Lowville Park
  • Mountainside Park
  • Nelson Park
  • Orchard Park
  • Sheldon Park
  • Sherwood Park
  • Tansley Woods Park

Neighbourhood rinks are free to install and use.

The City of Burlington will work with neighbourhood group to support each rink by:

  • Providing a training manual for participating residents on ice maintenance
  • Providing and installing hoses and boards 

Each resident neighbourhood group needs to:

  • Have a minimum of six committed households for each winter season
  • Be over the age of 18 to sign the application
  • Live at different addresses
  • Flood and maintain the ice
  • Provide snow shovels to clear the rink and make sure the rink is shoveled and clear of snow for neighbours to use.

How to get started:

Applications are online at www.burlington.ca/neighbourhoodrink until Nov. 1, 2015. Applicants will be advised of approval by Nov. 6, 2015.

For more information, visit www.burlington.ca/neighbourhoodrink , email skating@burlington.ca or call 905—335-7600, ext. 6454.

Burlington is one of Canada’s best and most livable cities, a place where people, nature and business thrive. Sign up to learn more about Burlington at www.burlington.ca/enews.

Fall walks are an ideal way to enjoy the seasonal colours and refreshingly crisp air. When you participate in a ghost walk, learning about local history and ghostly lore, it might be more than the cooler temps that send a chill down your spine.

Burlington Ghost Walks
Paranormal researcher and resident of Burlington for the last 25 years, Patrick Cross guides ghost-seekers through “ 200 years of history in two hours”. The tour starts and ends at Emma’s Back Porch, Burlington’s oldest restaurant. It was once known as the Estaminet and was owned and operated by Emma Byrens and her husband. It opened in 1910.

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Employees might get more than supplies when they venture into the basement at Emma’s. It’s known for cold spots, temperature changes, voices and mysteriously moving objects. Emma herself may appear on the original staircase.

Other stops include the Cenotaph at Burlington’s City Hall, and St. Luke’s Anglican Church cemetery. St. Luke’s is the oldest church in Burlington and was the original burial place of Joseph Brant.

Oakville Ghost Walks
Run by the Oakville Historical Society, downtown ghost walks run just after Thanksgiving to Halloween. The tour is about an hour long, running about a block and a half south of Lakeshore. Stops include the Erchless Estate and historic homes.

Two years ago during a tour, OHS member Wendy Belcher and her group stopped at the Erchless Estate. When she stopped talking every light in the house went on. Did the building cleaners come early? Belcher doubts it, because there were no cars in the parking lot that night.

Participate in one of these fun, educational walks this fall, but beware: your eyes and ears may play tricks on you. Did something really go bump in the night, or was it just your imagination?

by Becky Dumais

Local Links:
Burlington Ghost Walks
burlingtonghostwalks.com

Oakville Ghost Walks
oakvillehistory.org/ghost-walk

Downtown Hamilton Ghost Walks
ghostwalks.com/downtownhamilton

Check out our EVENTS page for dates.

With the onset of October, two classic images of fall come to mind: brilliantly coloured fall leaves and pumpkins. In addition to celebrating the fall season at your Thanksgiving dinner, the best way to embrace and experience the season locally is on the Halton Pumpkin Trail. This self-guided route highlights unique pumpkin and harvest-themed experiences including local, seasonal cuisine and many opportunities to enjoy the outdoors.

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Local Fare & Tastings
Pumkpin gets spiced up at several restaurants along the trail. For example, head to Latitude Food & Drink in Georgetown for their weekly pumpkin specials. Café Carthago on Cornwall Street in Oakville will be offering homemade foods, including an enticing pumpkin butter tart. Stoney’s Bread Company in Kerr Village in Oakville will be adding pumpkin soup to the menu. Try a pint of pumpkin craft beer at Nickel Brook Brewing in Burlington.

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Events & Attractions
In keeping with the season, one of the fun Halloween events includes the Milton Haunted House fundraiser. It’s an eerie experience customized to be extra frightening for adults but mild for children. Civic Square in Burlington will once again have Treats in Our Streets for trick or treaters downtown.

The trails at the Royal Botanical Gardens are yours for the hiking. The Great Pumpkin Trail is a magical nighttime adventure. The glow of hundreds of jack-o-lanterns will light the way and guide you along a kilometre of woodland and garden trails. Enjoy hot squash soup in the café. For a ton of outdoor fun, Conservation Halton has a wonderful Fall into Nature program.

pumpkin-hands

Farms
Local farms in Milton have acres and acres of pumpkins to pick from. Andrews’ Scenic Acres has grown them in every size, shape and colour. Springridge Farm’s annual Harvest Festival includes wagon rides, a Boo barn, baked goods, and a corn trail. At Stonehaven Farm Market, navigate the giant corn maze, sip hot apple cider and savour some baked goods.

After your trail trekking, appropriately themed accommodations can be found in Georgetown at the Stone Edge Bed & Breakfast.

These are just a few samples of what’s happening on this year’s trail. Experience it yourself from September 14 – October 31.

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Local Link:
Halton Pumpkin Trail (download the map route or view online)
halton.ca/pumpkintrail