The Peterborough Examiner

Canucks ready to tackle winter recreation

Businesses, cities look to provide outdoor options for people to take part in during pandemic winter

- LORI EWING

At Fresh Air Experience in Ottawa, a sporting goods store that specialize­s in bikes in the summer and cross-country skis in winter, the demand for ski equipment doesn’t traditiona­lly take off until the first flakes of snow have fallen.

But business is already booming, months ahead of schedule.

After record bike sales during the first part of the COVID-19 pandemic, Fresh Air owner Jon Digney is seeing the same phenomenon with cross-country skis. He’s booking appointmen­ts for in-store shopping up to three weeks in advance.

“Traditiona­lly, when we transition from bikes to skis, we have a lull during October and November. The Christmas season kicks it off early December,” Digney said.

“This year, it’s already full speed ahead. We didn’t have any transition. We went straight from bikes to skis in a day.”

If there’s a silver lining eight months into the global pandemic, it’s that Canadians have embraced the outdoors.

But winter will present new challenges. While we know the importance of fresh air and movement for physical and mental health, the cold and shorter darker days will push people indoors.

Gabor Csonka, president of Calgary’s Foothills Nordic club, isn’t surprised that cross-country ski equipment is flying off the shelves. The sport’s benefits, he said, are numerous.

“You’re outdoors usually in a beautiful environmen­t with trees and hills. Humans need to connect with nature,” he said.

“And you don’t need to be in close contact with anyone, but you can still go for ski and have a conversati­on with someone.

“It’s just a fantastic feeling to go and ski quietly, with decent space, through the woods.”

After seeing parks crowded with summer hikers, Csonka hopes there’s the infrastruc­ture to handle a potential influx.

“Do we have enough parking spaces, toilets and trails that are groomed or maintained?” he said. “That’s a challenge.”

Across the country, federal and municipal government­s are still hammering out winter plans.

The City of Toronto’s ActiveTO program of road closures was extended into October because of its popularity. Now, Toronto will switch gears to promote its toboggan hills, snowshoein­g trails, and the city’s 50plus outdoor ice rinks.

“Embrace fall, embrace winter,” said Howie Dayton, Toronto’s director of community recreation. “There’s so many great things to explore outdoors in Toronto, so it’s a chance to really connect with nature this fall and winter and try some outdoor sport and outdoor activities that you’ve never done before.”

Precaution­ary measures around issues like skate rentals at the popular Nathan Phillips Square rink are still being ironed out.

Quebec continues to be Canada’s COVID hot spot. And with the situation evolving, Montreal has prepared various scenarios to enable residents to enjoy outdoor activities safely, the city said in a statement.

“For the time being, and provided that all conditions remain

unchanged, only individual outdoor activities will be promoted,” the statement said, listing hiking, skiing, snowshoein­g, fat biking, and skating.

A busy summer gave Blue Mountain Resort staff plenty of practice around capacity management.

Tara Lovell, Blue Mountain’s manager of public relations, said planning ahead will be key this season.

The resort just northwest of Collingwoo­d, Ont., won’t sell walk-up tickets for skiing and snowboardi­ng, they’ll need to be prepurchas­ed online.

Capacity will be kept to a reasonable number, “So that there’s enough space, whether it be in a lift line or the base lodge … so that all those spaces accommodat­e physical distancing,” Lovell said.

Blue Mountain has appointed task forces to study everything from lift lines to lessons, to dining and lodging.

“When it comes to rentals and other amenities you’d typically go indoors for, we’re exploring things like having tents and heated outdoor spaces,” Lovell said. “As much as possible, we’re getting people outside.”

Masks will be mandatory both

indoors, and anywhere outdoors where distancing is difficult, such as in lift lineups and on lifts.

Few Canadian cities do winter better than Ottawa. Sue Holloway, the first Canadian woman to compete in both summer (canoeing) and Winter Olympics (cross-country skiing), said it’s no coincidenc­e she lives across the street from Ottawa’s Mooney’s Bay.

She and her adult daughters Sarah and Alexandra are regulars on the park’s groomed cross-country ski trails.

“We’ll go out for an hour-anda-half, two hours, then go have a coffee or something or hot chocolate or a Danish, there’s always a reward,” said Holloway, who coaches young kids at the Nakkertok Nordic CrossCount­ry Ski Club.

Ottawa also boasts the multiuse SJAM Winter Trail, an urban trail that has both classic cross-country tracks, plus space for walking, fat-tire cycling, and skate skiing.

And, of course, Canada’s capital boasts the world’s largest skating rink, the Rideau Canal, which stretches nearly eight kilometres.

“It’s glorious,” said Holloway.

“There’s lots of opportunit­ies in Ottawa for people to get outdoors, and (in addition to) COVID-19 there’s our lack of sunlight in the winter and our need for vitamin D. Being outdoors and getting our sunlight as well as our exercise is just so essential to our mental and physical well-being.”

Robin Mazumder, an environmen­tal neuroscien­tist who studies the psychologi­cal impacts of urban design, talked about psychologi­cal sustainabi­lity.

Psychologi­cal sustainabi­lity is mental well-being manifested by healthy behaviours and feelings of happiness and fulfilment — and it’s threatened right now, not only by the isolation, fear, job loss, etc., around COVID-19, but other stressors such as politics and the U.S. election, Mazumder said.

“Then you’ve got winter and people’s perception­s of the winter time as being not a nice time of year,” he said.

“I’d love to see cities putting fire pits outside, putting blankets out, keeping these pop-up bike lanes and sidewalks open and really encouragin­g people.”

Sidewalk snow removal will likely be a hot-button topic. Icy, snowy sidewalks will increase isolation for many.

“If you tell people to go outside in the winter, and then they slip and break a hip or something because the sidewalk’s not cleared, then that’s a massive disincenti­ve,” Mazumder said.

If the early-season crosscount­ry sales at Fresh Air Experience are an indication, many people are at least planning for outdoor activities.

“We’re selling ski, boot, binding, pole, the full package, sometimes to full families, twos and threes at a time,” Digney said.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Fresh Air Experience owner Jon Digney is experienci­ng a higher volume of sales in cross-country ski equipment this fall.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Fresh Air Experience owner Jon Digney is experienci­ng a higher volume of sales in cross-country ski equipment this fall.

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