Late summer rides in the Ottawa ValleyDay rides in the hills across the river have been been limited in the past several weeks, with lots of very welcome family visits here and away, and the not-so-welcome but regular and inescapable prep for autumn and winter. This year, the to-do list features rehabbing old windows and setting up the installation of a big new one, and completing the last parts of our spiffy and efficient new furnace system. (Winter evenings in the basement workshop are now
vastly more comfortable
In the past three weeks, though, I've managed a few shorter rides up into the Gatineau Hills. We've had sunny and warm-to-fresh days, with cool comfortable nights. Midday temps in the low 20s, and night-time lows around 10-12--ideal for cycle-touring, but see above for why I haven't done that.
With motorists on holidays elsewhere, even the roads in the hills have been pleasantly uncrowded, often with more cyclists than cars. But the bike paths through the wood have been delightful: the trees responded to our cool damp late spring by growing a rich thick green canopy that is still almost completely intact. The bike paths beckon a rider -- they're cool, and dappled with sun and shadow.
Below, I've attached several photos from a couple of rides in the hills, as well as two late-evening views of the Ottawa River, taken from its southern shore.
Both humans and bears are doing their annual prep for the cold to come, so the parks people kindly set out reminders to cyclists and hikers to be alert to les ours noirs. (#1) I see them occasionally, but I also take care to let the bears know that there are creatures that
they should watch out for: The Rohloff's freewheel at 40 km/h down a long downgrade in 14th sounds like a large swarm of African bees, angry and moving fast.
Bears like blueberries, of course, but by late August, those are all gone, as are the redcurrants in the roadside bushes on the lower slopes. The sumacs are just starting to turn (#4), as are other bushes and shrubs, so there are welcome splashes of crimson along my route (#5). If you don't suffer from allergies, goldenrods (#2) make a nice contrast to the green, though they are fading by the time the reds appear.
Pink Lake, atop the first big hill and at the first lookout, is named for a settler some two hundred years ago. It is a rarity, a meromictic lake--there's only a handful of these, among the gazillion lakes in Canada--devoid of oxygen below about 14 metres. Pink Lake is a beguiling blue in spring and early summer, but the accumulated runoff of phosphates during the 60s and 70s has left it with a perennial crop of green algae each August. You can see that in #3 below. I swam in Pink Lake in late August as a teenager in the early '60s, but you can no longer do that.
One place you can swim is the Ottawa River. At the end of August we visited friends who have a cottage on the south shore of the river, about 60 kms northwest of Ottawa. It's a magnificent river, especially in the early evening light, and on my visit, even the clouds co-operated