Toronto Star

The city below Toronto

We launch our Ravine City series as civic leaders develop a plan for the future of our unique and often mysterious system of rivers and forests

- DONOVAN VINCENT FEATURE WRITER

It’s a scorching hot summer day and Jason Ramsay-Brown is standing atop an elevated lookout, peering at the expansive green valley, wildflower meadows and giant maples, oaks and pines that make up the Vista Trail in Toronto’s Rouge Park.

It’s the natural habitat for a man who built on childhood experience­s to make himself one of the city’s top ravine experts.

The trail is just east of Meadowvale Rd., near the Toronto Zoo. Here the air is clean, and the only sounds are the warm breeze blowing through the leaves of towering trees, and the chirping of birds that are among the 1,700 species of plants and animals in the area.

As Ramsay-Brown walks along the 1.6kilometre trail with a Star reporter and photograph­er, he points to the dog-stran- gling vine, an invasive plant that looks pleasant enough but can be deadly if you’re a caterpilla­r. Then the staghorn sumac, a flowering plant with a red cone.

“If you think about it, to have something like this within kilometres of the downtown core with this much biodiversi­ty is pretty remarkable,” says Ramsay-Brown, 42, whose thick beard and greying ponytail give him a granola look akin to a younger Jerry Garcia, the late Grateful Dead guitarist.

The author of the book Toronto’s Ravines and Urban Forests: Their Natural Heritage and Local History, Ramsay-Brown also recently sat on a group that advised the City of Toronto’s on its ravine strategy, an ongoing effort to draw up a blueprint for how to manage, maintain, protect and fund the city’s vast network of ravines.

The final report on the strategy, due in spring, is intended as a guidepost “to balance the fine line between protection and (public) use in our ravines,” according to an early draft of the strategy.

Coinciding with the city’s efforts, the Star is running an ongoing series on our ravine system, looking particular­ly at the Humber, Don and Rouge rivers.

The series will explore topics such as the health of our ravines, recreation­al uses and the vital role ravines play in flood protection.

Another of the many ideas the city will study: accommodat­ing future demand from the public by developing entry points, and improved signage and guideposts to allow better access. The city has begun “pop up” consultati­ons with residents to get their input.

Toronto’s unique ravine system with its rivers, dramatic geography and forests defines the landscape. One forest ecologist, Sandy M. Smith, a University of Toronto professor in urban forestry, calls our ravines the “green veins of the city.”

Typically a street might curve in an odd way to go around a ravine. Often, the reason a bridge is where it is to allow access across a ravine, or a former ravine site.

Technicall­y, a ravine is a trench within a valley system. Torontonia­ns talk about ravines broadly, and the definition­s may differ, but generally speaking a ravine is green space far below city streets. Ravines make up 17 per cent of Toronto’s total area.

Garth Armour, manager of horticultu­re for the city and co-lead on the ravine strategy, explains there are six watersheds in Toronto: Highland Creek, the Rouge Valley (and Rouge River), the Don River, the Humber River, Mimico Creek and Etobicoke Creek.

Dozens and dozens of ravines branch off from these watersheds, he says. They wind through residentia­l, commercial and industrial areas, parks, trails, railways, golf courses, cemeteries, hydro corridors and former landfills.

But most days Torontonia­ns drive, bike, walk and take transit alongside, over, or perhaps through ravines — and rarely think about them. The city wants to change that, and to celebrate what city staff working on the ravine strategy call “an amazing natural resource that is key to our identity.”

But striking that balance between accessibil­ity and ecological health is key, says Michelle Holland, who chairs the city’s parks and environmen­t committee.

“We need to get people interested, engaged, and get them to use ravines, but at the same time protect ravines,” she says in an interview.

Jane Welsh, project manager in Toronto’s planning department, and co-lead on the ravine strategy, points out that three pieces of legislatio­n protect against developmen­t and the cutting down of trees in ravines: Toronto’s Official Plan, the city’s Ravine and Natural Feature Protection bylaws, and a regulation under Ontario’s Conservati­on Authoritie­s Act.

“There are lot of layers of protection, but part of it (the ravine strategy) is conveying to users how they should be using the ravines in terms of respecting the natural environmen­t,” Welsh says.

Ravines were once considered utterly disposable. Torontonia­ns washed their cars in the Humber River in the 1920s, and the dumping of waste in the Don River was a massive problem for decades before recent efforts to clean up the Don. Dumping of garbage, major appliances, old car tires etc. continues to be a serious nuisance in ravines such as Rennie Park in Etobicoke.

“We used rivers and creeks for sewers,” Ramsay-Brown says. “We’ve filled in wetlands because they were inconvenie­nt to build on. For example, the Portlands industrial district used to be one of the biggest wetlands on Lake Ontario. We dredged it and filled it in. “But we’re starting to sober up.” Ramsay-Brown, who owns a web developmen­t business with his wife, was born and raised in Toronto, and ravines have been a passion since his youth. As a boy he visited ravines as part of city-run day camps, or with his mother, who took him to creeks, where they would eat sandwiches. “And then as I got older . . . I’d go to ravines by myself,” Ramsay-Brown recalls. “Then in my 20s they became a constant experience. I’d use them to commute and unwind at the end of the day.

“So ravines were like an escape, a place to go to feel connected with nature,” he says, referring to the time he spent in Sunnybrook Park, Glendon Forest, Wilket Creek, Cedervale Ravine, Moore Park and the Don.

Ramsay-Brown has explored more than 100 ravines, urban forests and parks in Toronto over the last 15 years.

But it was an unexpected question from his young daughter years ago that inspired him to write his book about ravines.

Alife of peeks at valleys

Starting around age 11, Ramsay-Brown was out exploring in ravines on his own.

His parents separated before he was born and his mom was busy with her job. They lived near Avenue Rd. and Eglinton Ave., in a quadplex, renting a two-bedroom apartment.

“I walked myself to and from school, got a transit pass when I was very young, and had to take myself around to anything I needed to do,” he recalls. “I could walk to Rosedale ravine.”

In his teenage years, Moore Park ravine, near Mount Pleasant Rd.,

north of St. Clair Ave. E., was often called the “party ravine,” where young people went to escape the clutches of their parents. There were a lot of “shenanigan­s” going on in and around that area, Ramsay-Brown says.

But most of his recollecti­ons are of a different variety. “For me the memories are largely the isolation and solitude, the ability to sit and think.”

A lasting memory for Ramsay-Brown is the first time he ever saw a great blue heron, a large wading bird with bluish-grey plumage.

Ramsay-Brown was in the Don Valley, around age 11, when he saw the bird in the river, but he didn’t know what it was. Up to that time he could only name sparrows and pigeons.

“The bird looked like a completely alien thing,” he recalls thinking.

As an adult, Ramsay-Brown became interested in volunteer work around ravine and park stewardshi­p. He got involved in tree plantings organized by the city, and the Toronto and Region Conservati­on Authority. He also joined community-based cleanup efforts targeting ravines.

“I started to feel more and more that I wanted to make a contributi­on. Certainly at that time, what these places were like is substantia­lly different than what we’re seeing now. I can remember tons of shopping carts in the Don Valley, but even here (in the Rouge) it wasn’t uncommon to find used tires and abandoned tents.

“There was a disposable quality to these places. That sort of inspired me to think, ‘how can I give my time to make these places better, rather than just coming to visit them?’ I started to engage more in terms of the political realm, and activist realm.” His activism took him to groups like Pollu- tion Probe, for whom he fundraised before he went to high school. In 1969 the environmen­tal lobby group had famously held a “funeral” for the Don River, at one time considered the most polluted stream in Ontario. That story affected Ramsay-Brown when he learned about it years later from friends and family.

“I remember being so inspired that a small group of people found a way to wake people up to these kinds of issues.

Now he’s a member of the Todmorden Mills Wildflower Preserve stewardshi­p team, the Beechwood Wetlands stewardshi­p team, and will soon join the Toronto Field Naturalist­s, all volunteer organizati­ons.

The push to write his 2015 book about Toronto-area ravines and urban forests was sparked by a question five years ago from his daughter Abbey, then 4, as they drove to school along Pottery Rd. near Todmorden Mills.

She looked out the window and saw a different landscape below the bridge: a river, trees, plants. No road or traffic lights.

“She started asking questions. As a parent, when your kid shows any interest in something you’re passionate about it’s a real gift. So I promised her right then and there a summer of ravines. I took her out, sometimes two or three times a weekend, to various places.

“Everywhere, from the Etobicoke Creek, to Petticoat Creek (in Pickering), German Mills, Leslie Street Spit, everywhere I could think of that showed what nature is like in the city.”

Mostly self-taught when it comes to nature and ecology, he began to realize that on every ravine walk with his daughter there was always a question she asked that he couldn’t answer.

“That got me trying to find more and more informatio­n about these places. The informatio­n was fragmented. It was hard to find answers, and there was a surprising­ly large amount of contradict­ory informatio­n. That’s what started me on the book.”

The book features 29 ravines that Ramsay-Brown believes are most rewarding to visitors, including Gates Gully in Scarboroug­h, where you might spot an eastern red-backed salamander, or the Charles Sauriol conservati­on lands near the Don Valley Parkway, where citizens have helped grow native plants such as goldenrods and Michigan lilies.

“The book was an attempt to bring together the story of our ravines in a way that would make it meaningful to people for whom their exposure to ravines was seeing them passing by their car window, or looking out from the subway.”

“We used rivers and creeks for sewers. We’ve filled in wetlands because they were inconvenie­nt to build on. For example, the Portlands industrial district used to be one of the biggest wetlands on Lake Ontario. We dredged it and filled it in. But we’re starting to sober up.” JASON RAMSAY-BROWN AUTHOR OF TORONTO’S RAVINES AND URBAN FORESTS: THEIR NATURAL HERITAGE AND LOCAL HISTORY

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 ??  ?? Ravine guru Jason Ramsay-Brown speaks about invasive plants that have been growing along the Vista Trail in the Rouge Valley.
Ravine guru Jason Ramsay-Brown speaks about invasive plants that have been growing along the Vista Trail in the Rouge Valley.
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 ?? CITY OF TORONTO ?? A mountain biker in Seton Park near the Ontario Science Centre.
CITY OF TORONTO A mountain biker in Seton Park near the Ontario Science Centre.
 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Residents wash cars in the Humber River circa August 1927.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Residents wash cars in the Humber River circa August 1927.
 ?? ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J/TORONTO STAR ??
ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J/TORONTO STAR
 ?? ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J/TORONTO STAR ?? One of the many different species that call Rouge Valley home.
ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J/TORONTO STAR One of the many different species that call Rouge Valley home.

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