Among Autumn Leaves
Ever since I first
moved to Toronto, I have been fascinated by the Don Valley. It’s a stretch of
green along the Don River moving from north to south (and, one suspects, vice
versa). Calling it a stretch of green sounds like it is manicured parkland, but
it’s not. It’s a forest, filled with mature trees and many of them maple. It
shows the first delicate green in the spring, winter’s snow creates a monochrome
wonderland, and in the Fall… In the Fall, it is a blaze of colour.
(click on photos to
embiggen)
For years, I gazed on
it from a car zooming along the Don Valley Parkway, the prettiest highway in
the land. Watching the changing seasons sweep over this valley, enjoying a
swath of wilderness in the middle of the city, spanned by dramatic bridges, has
always been one of my favourite parts about Toronto.
But it wasn’t until
last year that I actually went into the woods and I have the Arthritis
Walk to thank for this. Once we’d discovered it, we naturally went back for
more leisurely walk in
the woods. I have never been surrounded by so much green.
This year, we’ve been
watching the weather and the valley and this weekend both cooperated. It was
time for an autumnal stomp through the woods.
And it was every bit
as beautiful as I’d expected. Maybe even more so — it was impossible to
anticipate how it would feel being surrounded by all this glorious colour. It
was a feast for the senses. The sights, the sounds, and the scent of the wood
combining to chase away any thoughts of work or stress, leaving me only in the
moment.
We weren’t the only
ones in the woods that day. This is a well-traveled
trail, filled with people taking their dogs for a walk, others just having
a walk without dogs, runners and bikers out for some exercise. I kept imagining
riding a horse there — it was made for that.
It also brought my
mind to imagining this area before the city got built up around it, before
people started supporting this structure and that, and before even the European
settlers came. It must have been absolutely breathtaking in its natural state.
We didn’t see a lot of
wildlife, I suspect because of the crowds of people, but there was a squirrel burrowing
through the carpet of leaves. And there was a downy
woodpecker (I think?), adding a new bird to my list of the ones I’ve seen.
There were a lot of
dogs and all of them were in dog-heaven. Being able to run through leaves,
smell the wilderness, and dive into the creek let them feel quintessentially
canine. And more than one had found a stick to carry. One settled for a small
tree.
It was overcast, but nice,
for most of the walk. And then the sun came out, bringing the colours even more
to life, and casting shadows on the forest floor.
It was a beautiful
day, one I will remember for a long time.
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