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urban hiking

CTV Calgary Walking Wednesday: Briar Hill and Hounsfield Heights Urban Hike, NW

July 9, 2015
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Have you walked Briar Hill and West Hillhurst in Calgary’s northwest lately? How about Hounsfield Heights, the Mount Royal of the North?

I featured the Briar Hill & Housfield Heights on my CTV Morning segment this week. This route is a wonderful mix of neighbourhoods, single track trail green space climbs with phenomenal downtown Calgary views, gardens, and the Bow River. And you’ll be pleased to know that the route travels past Amato Gelato and Dairy Lane Cafe, a wonderful little diner with outdoor patio on 19 Street, NW. Kensington Road is a perfect side-trip option if you want to do a bit of shopping, grab a book at Pages Books, or a fantastic sandwich one home-made breads, from Peppino’s on Kensington Road.

Watch my July 8 Walking Wednesday CTV Morning segment!

Join me at the Marda Loop Farmer’s Market (South Calgary Community Association) at Sat., July 11, 2015 at 9-1 pm. It is Stampede breakie day at the market- free pancakes! Check the events page for all upcoming talks and walks and signings! Or ask me to speak to your group and lead them on a walkabout!

YJackrabbit Trail, Glenmore Reservoires, it is true. I have walked Canadian cities from coast to coast and this I know is true, Calgary is the best city for walking, by a long shot. What makes Calgary such a walking paradise is the way nature is integrated into all parts of the city. When you add canopies of trees to a street, it makes for a nicer walk. Our urban forests blanket communities thanks to early parks superintendents William Reader and William Pearce.

 

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A walk in Calgary, from most neighbourhoods, can lead to a complete immersion in the wilderness followed by an exit onto a neighbourhood street with varied terrain and a great little coffee shop. Cross one of the many pedestrian bridges that criss cross the Bow and Elbow Rivers and the pedestrian is connected to a new community and interacting with new neighbours.

 

 

The variety in Calgary, the rolling topography, the escarpment viewpoints with panoramic views of the Rocky Mountains and the compact downtown core reaching prominently out of the concrete are breathtaking. The two rivers, the Bow and the Elbow, host paved pathways that connect the city. Over 700 km of these paved pathways snake through and around Calgary. Along these river pathways is nature. Full on nature, along with all the conveniences that come with a city, like access to great restaurants and shops, and of course, cafes. A personal favourite.

 

 

Glenbow ranch winter small

 

No need to stop in the winter since the paved pathways are even cleared of snow in the winter so walkers and cyclists can keep on trekking and rolling. And oh, the winter is so spectacular in Calgary. Big blue skies and snowcapped peaks in the distance.

 

 

 

 

Urban Walkers in Calgary

 

 

Single track trails and hidden stairways climb into pockets of wilderness. These hidden pathways connect the urban walker to communities that are not easily connectable by car. The pockets of nature host Saskatoon berries and Wolf-willow shrubs; prairie staples. Grazing opportunities exist everywhere is Calgary.

 

 

 

 

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Calgary’s variety means that you can choose between art and architecture, wildflowers and mountain views, people-populated commercial streets or a hidden oasis of calm. And you have all of these features on one single walkabout. Mix and match based on how you feel.

 

Les Macarons from Yann's Patisserie in Calgary

 

 

 

 

Or, you could find decadent picnic treats to bring along on the trails, like these macarons from Yann Patisserie on 4 Street, SW.

 

 

 

So, after walking Fredericton and Halifax, Montreal and Quebec City, Ottawa and Toronto and also Vancouver and Victoria, I can say, without a doubt, that Calgary is a walking mecca. A pedestrian paradise. An outdoor lovers dream city. Got the point? It is the way that nature is integrated into the city that makes it stand out. That is what makes Calgary unique. I am so privileged to call Calgary my home. What a beautiful city!

 

Lori is featuring a walk a week on her segment “Walking Wednesdays” on Calgary’s CTV Morning. Tune in or check on-line each Wednesday at 7:55 am to learn about a new walk in Calgary!

All walk segments will be posted on her blogs, Facebook and Twitter.


Peace Bridge and Calgary

It was an excellent start to a Saturday morning when I opened the Calgary Herald newspaper, wait, I didn’t have to open it since I WAS ON THE FRONT PAGE! Sorry to yell, but it was a great start indeed.

Click on the photos below to read the stories on the Calgary Herald website. See you out there, walking the city!

 

BLOG NOTE: I post more often on the www.calgarysbestwalks.ca blog

 

Snapshot of Calgary herald Article

 

 

Calgary Herald Article walk suggestions

My book, Calgary’s Best Walks, is released on March 9, 2015! Here’s a teaser video to get your pumped up about walking in Calgary. Check the books website for more information on the book, and a full list of book launch events!

 

www.calgarysbestwalks.ca

s Best Walks Front Cover

Best-selling author of Calgary’s Best Hikes and Walks and Calgary’s Best Bike Rides and Trails, Lori Beattie is back with a brand-new guidebook. Full colour maps, informative walk descriptions and sidebars, lead and inform you as you walk throughout Calgary.

Calgary’s“Queen of the Urban Hike” is back with a new guidebook that leads locals and visitors throughout the best parks, neighbourhoods, people-watching streets and pathways of Calgary. Stroll the River Walk past the East Village, climb out of the downtown core up McHugh Bluffs for Rocky Mountain views, meander the Weaslehead nature trails or mingle with the mule deer in Nose Hill Park’s ravines. Bring your kids, your dog and your sense of adventure. Detailed maps lead you through neighbourhoods and natural parks, to hidden staircases, along paved river pathways and onto people-populated walking streets. Take a step off the beaten path in your own backyard!

To be published by Fit Frog Books, March 2015

 

Check www.calgarysbestwalks.ca for book launch events and free sample walks. 

 

 

 

 

The Joy of a Good Walk this Holiday Season

November 29, 2014
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Snowshoeing Rawson Lake, Kananaskis Rockies, Alberta

 

With the Christmas season is upon us, things start to get a bit hectic. The malls fill up with shoppers (including you), family come from afar to stay in your guest room, you cook and bake for said family, you make lists, and look for parking at Chinook mall, and then you start to wonder WHAT exactly what is so great about the “holiday” season. I am here to tell you that a good walk is all that you need.

 

Turn off your texts and in fact, leave the phone behind and walk away. Keep walking until you feel alive (sane), relaxed and refreshed. And most importably, until you feel happy. It works, I do it everyday.

 

The Huffington Post had a great article this listed some walking quotes. Here is an excerpt.

 

Here are 17 eloquent literary quotes that remind us of the simple, restorative power of a good walk:

“I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in.” — John Muir

“Now shall I walk or shall I ride?
‘Ride,’ Pleasure said;
‘Walk,’ Joy replied.” — W.H. Davies

“To walk is to lack a place. It is the indefinite process of being absent and in search of a proper.” — Michel de CerteauEve snowshoeing in the Kananaskis

“If I couldn’t walk fast and far, I should just explode and perish.” — Charles Dickens

“Only thoughts won by walking are valuable.” — Friedrich Nietzsche

“Walking and talking are two very great pleasures, but it is a mistake to combine them. Our own noise blots out the sounds and silences of the outdoor world; and talking leads almost inevitably to smoking, and then farewell to nature as far as one of our senses is concerned. The only friend to walk with is one… who so exactly shares your taste for each mood of the countryside that a glance, a halt, or at most a nudge, is enough to assure us that the pleasure is shared.” — C.S. Lewis

“I am alarmed when it happens that I have walked a mile into the woods bodily, without getting there in spirit.” — Henry David Thoreau

“After a day’s walk everything has twice its usual value.” — George Macauley Trevelyan

“I would walk along the quais when I had finished work or when I was trying to think something out. It was easier to think if I was walking and doing something or seeing people doing something that they understood.” — Ernest Hemingway

“I find more pleasure in wandering the fields than in musing among my silent neighbours who are insensible to everything but toiling and talking of it and that to no purpose.” — John Clare

“We ought to take outdoor walks, to refresh and raise our spirits by deep breathing in the open air.” — Seneca

“I always feel so sorry for women who don’t like to walk; they miss so much — so many rare little glimpses of life; and we women learn so little of life on the whole.” —Kate Chopin

“Thinking is generally thought of as doing nothing in a production-oriented culture, and doing nothing is hard to do. It’s best done by disguising it as doing something, and the something closest to doing nothing is walking.” — Rebecca Solnit

“Above all, do not lose your desire to walk: every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts and I know of no thought so burdensome that one cannot walk away from it.” — Søren Kierkegaard

“Perhaps the truth depends on a walk around a lake.” — Wallace Stevens

“Walks. The body advances, while the mind flutters around it like a bird.” — Jules Renard

“[Walking] is the perfect way of moving if you want to see into the life of things. It is the one way of freedom. If you go to a place on anything but your own feet you are taken there too fast, and miss a thousand delicate joys that were waiting for you by the wayside.” — Elizabeth von Arnim

My path to becoming an author video

June 9, 2014
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Last week I presented to some Calgary junior high kids at a career day. I was asked to tell them how I became an author. It was a fun event where I was grouped with other professionals who also presented. There was me, a CFL football player, Rocco Romano, who is in the Hall of Fame (how cool is that!), and an artist who paints with various mediums. We were categorized in the room called “other”. Unlike the doctors, lawyers, architects and police, we were hard to categorize. I guess you could have called us “niche” or “various” or “random” but whatever you call us, we were all people who were making things up as we went.

I told the kids that the key to becoming an author is DON’T FOLLOW THE RULES. That is the key to doing many creative pursuits. Unlike becoming a doctor or a lawyer, there is no “author degree”. For those who want to write fiction, you can take creative writing courses in university, which doesn’t make you an author but will help make you a better writer. For those people like me who write guidebooks, cookbooks, self-help, instructional or non-fiction, you are simply taking your passion, your expertise, and making a book out of it. No degree for that.

It all starts with a “great idea” (the easy part) and then follows with making that idea become a reality (the hard part). To become an author, I told them, it helps a lot to be very self-motivated and also, to really enjoy working on your own, without any feedback on whether you are doing a good job.  Oh yes, and be prepared to crash and burn; to fail. Not all of your ideas of great. And that’s okay. Just get back up and start over, with another idea. And when you find the right idea, the one that makes you really excited, that makes you animated, then the next step is to sell that idea.  You could “sell” it to a publisher or, if you self-publish, to your end user, or the book store, or to a distributor.  TELL EVERYONE WHAT YOU WANT TO DO and don’t be afraid to try and do it.

There are many paths, be creative, make things up. Here’s my career day  video on my path to becoming an author .

 

Take an purposeless walk to boost creativity

May 2, 2014
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As I work away on my brand new urban hiking guidebook, Calgary’s Best Urban Hikes (due out Spring 2015!), I am happy to be able to procrastinate and read a wonderful article about all the benefits of taking a walk. I know about all of these benefits since walking is what I love, what I write about and how I spend much of my time. Walking through Calgary has become my life; leading people on urban walks, publishing urban hiking guidebooks, speaking about slowing the pace and walking more, and always encouraging people to leave the cellphones at home, to be alone and enjoy the observations, creative thoughts and random interactions that walking in an urban environment invites.

As I mentioned, I am publishing a new book. The world of self-publishing is all new to me since my previous two books were published by a publisher. I just handed over the manuscript and they did the rest. Now I must sort through all the logistics of creating the content and taking it to press. I must find a designer and cartographer, who is also a whiz in printed and Ebook design. Done. I need to find a distributer to get my books to the stores. To be done. And how about someone to edit the book, a printer, and a publicist? Or when it comes to marketing, should I go it alone and use social media, my traditional media contacts, Kickstarter, Youtube and blogging to reach my audience?

Sorting through this multi-faceted publishing project is overwhelming and therefore it takes a  lot of long walks for me to wrap my head around it. It takes getting away from my computer and the four walls that confine thinking and limit fresh ideas; the walls that make me think “in the box”. Walking is the perfect activity to reach my creative potential. The slow pace allows me to change my route mid-stride, to explore a side-street, to mix in some purpose, like getting groceries or doing my banking, with a stop to watch the deer on a inner-city Mount Royal lawn as I did yesterday, and to mull over all the possibilities and approaches I will take with my book creation.

Take a read through the BBC article on Purposeless Walking below. And then plan your next walk where you are free to explore, to observe and to think. You’ll never look back!

 

1 May 2014 Last updated at 04:51 ET

The slow death of purposeless walking

By Finlo Rohrer BBC News Magazine

A number of recent books have lauded the connection between walking – just for its own sake – and thinking. But are people losing their love of the purposeless walk?

Walking is a luxury in the West. Very few people, particularly in cities, are obliged to do much of it at all. Cars, bicycles, buses, trams, and trains all beckon.

Instead, walking for any distance is usually a planned leisure activity. Or a health aid. Something to help people lose weight. Or keep their fitness. But there’s something else people get from choosing to walk. A place to think.

Wordsworth was a walker. His work is inextricably bound up with tramping in the Lake District. Drinking in the stark beauty. Getting lost in his thoughts.

Charles Dickens was a walker. He could easily rack up 20 miles, often at night. You can almost smell London’s atmosphere in his prose. Virginia Woolf walked for inspiration. She walked out from her home at Rodmell in the South Downs. She wandered through London’s parks.

Henry David Thoreau, who was both author and naturalist, walked and walked and walked. But even he couldn’t match the feat of someone like Constantin Brancusi, the sculptor who walked much of the way between his home village in Romania and Paris. Or indeed Patrick Leigh Fermor, whose walk from the Hook of Holland to Istanbul at the age of 18 inspired several volumes of travel writing. George Orwell, Thomas De Quincey, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Friedrich Nietzsche, Bruce Chatwin, WG Sebald and Vladimir Nabokov are just some of the others who have written about it.

From recent decades, the environmentalist and writer John Francis has been one of the truly epic walkers. Francis was inspired by witnessing an oil tanker accident in San Francisco Bay to eschew motor vehicles for 22 years. Instead he walked. And thought. He was aided by a parallel pledge not to speak which lasted 17 years.

But you don’t have to be an author to see the value of walking. A particular kind of walking. Not the distance between porch and corner shop. But a more aimless pursuit.

In the UK, May is National Walking Month. And a new book, A Philosophy of Walking by Prof Frederic Gros, is currently the object of much discussion. Only last week, a study from Stanford University showed that even walking on a treadmill improved creative thinking.

Across the West, people are still choosing to walk. Nearly every journey in the UK involves a little walking, and nearly a quarter of all journeys are made entirely on foot, according to one survey. But the same study found that a mere 17% of trips were “just to walk”. And that included dog-walking.

It is that “just to walk” category that is so beloved of creative thinkers.

“There is something about the pace of walking and the pace of thinking that goes together. Walking requires a certain amount of attention but it leaves great parts of the time open to thinking. I do believe once you get the blood flowing through the brain it does start working more creatively,” says Geoff Nicholson, author of The Lost Art of Walking.

“Your senses are sharpened. As a writer, I also use it as a form of problem solving. I’m far more likely to find a solution by going for a walk than sitting at my desk and ‘thinking’.”

Nicholson lives in Los Angeles, a city that is notoriously car-focused. There are other cities around the world that can be positively baffling to the evening stroller. Take Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital. Anyone planning to walk even between two close points should prepare to be patient. Pavements mysteriously end. Busy roads need to be traversed without the aid of crossings. The act of choosing to walk can provoke bafflement from the residents.

“A lot of places, if you walk you feel you are doing something self-consciously. Walking becomes a radical act,” says Merlin Coverley, author of The Art of Wandering: The Writer as Walker.

But even in car-focused cities there are fruits for those who choose to ramble. “I do most of my walking in the city – in LA where things are spread out,” says Nicholson. “There is a lot to look at. It’s urban exploration. I’m always looking at strange alleyways and little corners.”

Nicholson, a novelist, calls this “observational” walking. But his other category of walking is left completely blank. It is waiting to be filled with random inspiration.

Not everybody is prepared to wait. There are many people who regard walking from place to place as “dead time” that they resent losing, in a busy schedule where work and commuting takes them away from home, family and other pleasures. It is viewed as “an empty space that needs to be filled up”, says Rebecca Solnit, author of Wanderlust: A History of Walking.

Many now walk and text at the same time. There’s been an increase in injuries to pedestrians in the US attributed to this. One study suggested texting even changed the manner in which people walked.

It’s not just texting. This is the era of the “smartphone map zombie” – people who only take occasional glances away from an electronic routefinder to avoid stepping in anything or being hit by a car.

“You see people who don’t get from point A to point B without looking at their phones,” says Solnit. “People used to get to know the lay of the land.”

People should go out and walk free of distractions, says Nicholson. “I do think there is something about walking mindfully. To actually be there and be in the moment and concentrate on what you are doing.”

And this means no music, no podcasts, no audiobooks. It might also mean going out alone.

CS Lewis thought that even talking could spoil the walk. “The only friend to walk with is one who so exactly shares your taste for each mood of the countryside that a glance, a halt, or at most a nudge, is enough to assure us that the pleasure is shared.”

The way people in the West have started to look down on walking is detectable in the language. “When people say something is pedestrian they mean flat, limited in scope,” says Solnit.

Boil down the books on walking and you’re left with some key tips:

  • Walk further and with no fixed route
  • Stop texting and mapping
  • Don’t soundtrack your walks
  • Go alone
  • Find walkable places
  • Walk mindfully

Then you may get the rewards. “Being out on your own, being free and anonymous, you discover the people around you,” says Solnit.

 

 

 

From the Globe and Mail article on Jan. 5, Fifteen things Canadians can do to be healthier this year, here are two fantastic suggestions by two experts in mental and physical wellness; get outside and walk more! Living a healthy lifestyle is pretty simple stuff.

 

 

 

 

 


Try a revolutionary ‘new’ treatment

There is a super expensive new drug coming out. It reduces heart disease by 60 per cent, cancer by 27 per cent, Alzheimer’s by 50 per cent and arthritis by 47 per cent. It’s now our best treatment for fatigue and low back pain. It cures a third of erectile dysfunction, and cuts anxiety and depression by 48 per cent. People even lose weight on this stuff … Okay, it’s not new or expensive or even a pill. It’s walking. If I had to pick one thing, I’d say movement is the best medicine.

Mike Evans, staff physician at St. Michael’s Hospital, associate professor of family medicine and public health at the University of Toronto

 

Take it outside

Go for a noontime walk outside, especially in winter. Why? You get at least five times as much light as the brightest office (even on dark, stormy days). You get exercise (well, at least some activity). And you avoid big lunches (or at least have less time to eat). All of which helps your mood, memory and weight.

Raymond Lam, professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia and director of the Mood Disorders Centre, UBC Hospital

 

 

Merry Christmas!

 

 
 

 
 

 

I hope you will join us on the snowy trails this winter! The snowshoeing and cross-country skiing is fantastic right now in the Alberta and British Columbia Rocky Mountains. The urban hikes in Calgary are great year-round. Come on out for a fresh walk and cup of coffee at unique local coffee shops in Calgary.

Check our calendar of events, the winter programs begin on January 7th. Come once or get a membership for the winter session.

Join us for a fresh, outdoor, active New Year!

Hope to see you on the trails in 2014,

– Lori