The Agawa Canyon Tour Train rolls through Ontario's scenic wilderness
Ride the AGAWA CANYON Tour Train
for a jaunt through Ontario’s scenic wilderness
that inspired the Group of Seven painters.
By Toby Saltzman
ALL ABOARD! The conductor whistles as the Agawa Canyon Tour Train started to chug north from
Sault Ste. Marie for a scenic ride into
northern Ontario’s Algoma region. The
rush of thrills surprised me, as I’ve experienced some of the world’s greatest
trains, including the Orient Express, the Ghan, various European routes and, in
Canada, the Rocky Mountaineer, Via’s cross-Canada Silver and Blue and Ocean
to the Maritimes.
Seated beside vast windows in the dining car, watching steel
and paper mills whiz by – echoes of the Sault’s industrial past – memories
flashed through my mind of my classrooms – as a child and, later, as a teacher
– invariably graced by images created by the Group of Seven between 1918 and
1923. Years later, I would admire their
original works at the Art Gallery of Ontario, hoping to one day see their
source of inspiration: the Canadian Shield in all its rugged beauty, lush
forests ablaze in green, red, gold and amber hues, and crystalline lakes so
blue you could almost taste their purity.
Now, I was en route, on a 114-mile (183-kilometre) journey,
comfortably ensconced in a refurbished train pulled by Electro-Motive F-40
locomotives mounted with an exterior digital camera that transmitted a
conductor’s view onto interior video screens that offered a GPS-triggered
narration of the scenery in five languages.
As we crossed a trestle bridge and veered toward Lake Superior, the
pristine wilderness started to unfold.
On Board, a video told the history of the region, the French fur
traders, and the Ojibwa Indians who inhabited the rivers and lands. At Mile 48 – where Lake Odijaki is restocked
with fish – some passengers disembarked with fishing gear in tow, planning to
hop on the returning train. The four-hour ride sped by in scenic splendour as
we passed places reminiscent of the painters’ scenes: glassy waters reflecting
quaint cottages tucked into lakeside coves; swaths of forests clad by nature in
brilliant tapestries of colour, interrupted only by birch trees, their white
trunks dazzling in sunshine. At Mile 92 passengers
jumped to snap pictures of the train as it curved along the 472.4 metre-long
(1,550 feet) Montreal River Trestle, shown above, rising 39.6 metres (130 feet)
high above the lake and forests below.
With views of Lake Superior on one side and sheer cliffs of
pre-Cambrian mountains on the other, I felt immersed in a virtual scenario of
the artists’ canvases. Mile 102 brought
a rollercoaster sensation as the train hugged the canyon wall in a steep, 175
metres (575 feet) descent down to the canyon floor, gouged by the Ice Age more
than 1.2 billion years ago. Here, the
Agawa River sparkled, its wine-coloured hue caused by tannin leaching from the
roots of cedar trees.
Passing the Bridal Veil Falls on the right and Black Beaver
Falls on the left, we rolled to a stop at Mile 114. Passengers disembarked for
the one-and-one-half hour stop with diverse interests in mind. Some took box
lunches from the dining car for a picnic by the river. Adventurous types like me endured the 300-step
climb up a pine-scented trail to a lookout perch. Along that 40-minute return
hike, I heard nothing but the primal sounds of nature – leaves crunching
under-foot, the whoosh of ruffed grouse scooting through trees, birds chirping
on lofty branches – and reached the top just in time to see a crane spread his
wings, dive into the water and emerge with a fish. Awesome.
The return trip reminded me of how train travel harkens to simpler
times, when people would cultivate conversations with like-minded strangers. Kicking back, relaxed and chatting with
foreign passengers, I learned that most had included the Agawa Canyon Train as
an essential part of their tour of Canada.
Rolling along, they ranked it worth every minute.
IF YOU GO
GETTING THERE:
Porter Airlines offers several flights daily from Toronto to
Sault Ste. Marie. flyporter.com
The Agawa Canyon Tour Train runs daily in summer and
fall. In winter, it is dubbed the Snow
Train and runs once a week. If you plan
to disembark at Mile 112 for a hike to the lookout point, wear sturdy shoes and
take bug spray.
INTERESTING TO NOTE:
The train’s tour attendants are trained as first responders
for health security. ontariotravel.net
; agawacanyontourtrain.com
WHERE TO STAY IN SAULT STE. MARIE:
Algoma’s Water Tower Inn and Suites watertowerinn.com
Sault Ste. Marie Comfort Suites & Conference Centre comfortsuites.com
Delta Waterfront Hotel deltahotels.com
Copyright 2017 Travelterrific
Inc. Toby Saltzman
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