Manitoba hiking trails, canoe routes and backcountry campsites feel the pandemic effect - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba hiking trails, canoe routes and backcountry campsites feel the pandemic effect

While outdoor recreation has been growing in popularity for years, the pandemic has brought Manitobans into the wilderness in numbers that appear to be unprecedented.

Heavy use leads Manitoba Parks to draw up new trails strategy, make some immediate changes

A sunrise over Mantario Lake in late September. The Mantario Trail has seen heavy use this fall, with reports of hundreds of through-hikers on the September long weekend alone. (Bartley Kives/CBC)

During the May long weekend, so many people hiked the Spirit Sands in Spruce Woods Provincial Park, parks staff scrambled to expand the parking lot on Highway 5 to prevent long lines of vehicles from snaking down the road.

At the height of the summer, hundreds of paddlers at a time descended on the Caddy Lakes area of Whiteshell Provincial Park, where there are fewer than a dozen backcountry campsites.

DuringSeptember, hikers reported congestion onthe heavily usedHunt Lake day-use trail and unusual numbers of backpackersalongthe 63-kilometreMantario Trail.

While outdoor recreation has been growing in popularity for years, the pandemic has brought Manitobans into the wilderness in numbers that appear to be unprecedented.

"That trend has been growing year after year, but the pandemic has definitely exacerbated it," said Sloan Cathcart, the head of interpretation for Manitoba Parks.

The heavy use ofprovincial day-hiking trails, backcountry campsites and canoe routes bodes well for the health of Manitobans as well as the engagement with nature.

But it's also revealed inadequacies of backcountry infrastructure in provincial parks and the need to improve it.

More campgrounds, more trails

"We don't have as many parksas we need, we don't have as many services like campgrounds or backcountry trails," said Eric Reder, a campaigner for the Wilderness Committee.

"Going forward, we need backcountry trails, we need more campgrounds and we need more protected areas."

Most of Manitoba's trails, canoe routes and backcountry campsites were established in the 1970s and and 1980s, when the provincial parks system was expanded significantly.

Since then, trail construction has largely fallen to volunteer organizations, while the province has struggledto maintain existing infrastructure.

Manitoba is now about to create a new trails strategy with an eye to creating some new outdoor recreation routes and managing areas that heavily used right now.

"Knowing that alot of our trail systems were built long ago, we're looking at how they're being used andhow changes have occurred over the years," Cathcart said,

"As an example, in the wintertime, we see way more hikers now than we ever had. Decades ago, it used to be only skiers, so we only have ski trails. But now we see hikers everywhere [in the winter]."

Review will find funding for improvements

Cathcart said the review will look at how the province can create new trails and backcountry campsites, maintain existing infrastructure and find thefunding required for all of it.

Under successive NDP and Progressive Conservative governments, the province provided parks with relatively flat funding over the past two decades.

One solution, Cathcart said, would involve reducingregulatory barriers for trail groups that want to helpdevelop and maintain trails.

The south trailhead parking lot on the Mantario Trail on Sept. 6. Trail users estimate more than 200 people used the 63-kilometre trail over the September long weekend. (Cindy Reynolds/Facebook)

The new strategy won't be complete until 2021, he said. In the mean time, Manitoba Parks are planning some immediate improvements for heavily used areas of Whiteshell Provincial Park.

The parking lot at the Hunt Lake trail should be expanded this fall, he said, while the province is looking at closing down some overused campsites in the Caddy Lakes area to allow the forest to regenerate and replacing them with new campsites, ideally with new signage and amenities.

"We need better signage on the [Whiteshell] River,putup a proper trailhead andmapping and add some online resources, so people can plan better," Cathcart said.

Backcountry infrastructure boost

Looking farther into the future, Cathcart said the province is looking at improving the backcountry infrastructure in central and northern Manitoba, which also saw more visitors this summer.

One priority is creating proper campsites with bear-proof food-storageboxes, backcountry toilets and picnic tables along the KwasitchewanFalls hiking loop north of Wabowden, Cathcart said.

He also said he'd like to see new trails established in the underutilized north sideof Duck Mountain Provincial Park and better establish canoe campsites along the entire Grass River corridor, from the Cranberry Lakes near Flin Flon to Paint Lake closer to Thompson.

Cathcart also said the province may expand the backcountry campsite reservation system already in use along hiking and paddling routes in Nopiming Provincial Park.

Expect critters and company

In the mean time, Manitobans who use provincial trails and paddling routes can expect more company outdoors, from people as well as rodents.

Manitoba Parks havethus far been spared the worst of a pandemicphenomenon that'semerged in Alberta and Minnesota,where novice backcountryusershave been blamed for trashingcampsites by leaving behind garbage or chopping down trees.

Nonetheless, there were widespread reports of campsite field mouse infestationsin the Whiteshell this fall.

"We always emphasize:leave no trace. It's one of the most important messages this summer with the sheer volume of users," Cathcart said.

"It's great to see people picking up litter and stuff as they go along. Even though we do have increased garbage and in some issues in some areas, we also see more people caring for parks as well."