| Hike L38 Boyne to Mulmur Hills | TorontoHiking |
|
|
|
The Site: The Mulmur Hills HikeThe Mulmur Hills Hike takes place in Mulmur which is a beautiful Dufferin township that straddles the famous Niagara Escarpment and contains the Mulmur Hills trails. Renowned for its natural beauty and scenic hills, it is an area of rolling hills, views and vistas, rivers and streams. Provincial parks, including the Pine and Boyne River systems inhabit the area. Mulmur and Mono are dominated by the Nottawasaga river system, which has its headwaters in Melancthon. Two of the Nottawasaga's tributaries, the Pine River and the Boyne River, rise west of the Niagara Escarpment and flow in an easterly direction. Dufferin County is called "Headwaters Country" with good reason - 5 major river systems, the Nottawasaga, Grand, Credit, Humber and Saugeen River Systems all have their headwaters in Dufferin. The Mulmur Hills present a dramatic natural feature, particularly during the time of the fall colours. Dufferin County takes in the central and northern most reaches of Headwaters. The County consists of three towns: Mono, Orangeville and Shelburne, and five rural townships: Amaranth, East Garafraxa, East Luther-Grand Valley, Melancthon and Mulmur. Over half of the County's population lives in Orangeville, the heart of Headwaters. The beautiful Niagara Escarpment forms a dividing ridge through the County. It is easily accessed via the Bruce Trail or the Mono Cliffs Provincial Park. Other highlights of the County's natural heritage are the Grand River, a Canadian Heritage River, Luther Lake and Marsh and the Nottawasaga river system. This is one of the great hikes on TorontoHiking.com. It has everything a good hike could contain: challenging terrain, incredible scenery and super lookouts, along with beautiful open meadows and fun river crossings. It also has some special features like the Mulmur Hut and Rockhill Corner, not to mention the incredible Walker's Woods hardwood forest. The hike has a number of options depending on whether you are doing the hike as a linear hike or the longer loop hike, returning to the start with some quiet road walking where you can contemplate the hike and the day. Hike Comments
Add your comment, anecdote, update, or photos for this hike in the comment box below. Have a good place for food/drink after the hike? Let us know. Please post general & website comments in our blog.Post as a guest or login to this site as a member or use gmail, facebook etc. to post under your social media username. |

L38 Boyne to Mulmur Hills



afrikaans
albanian
arabic
belarusian
bulgarian
catalan
chinese
chinese simplified
chinese traditional
croatian
czech
danish
dutch
english
estonian
finnish
french
galician
german
greek
hebrew
hindi
haitian creole
hungarian
icelandic
indonesian
irish
italian
japanese
korean
latvian
lithuanian
macedonian
malay
maltese
norwegian
persian
polish
portuguese
romanian
russian
serbian
slovak
slovenian
spanish
swahili
swedish
tagalog
thai
turkish
ukrainian
vietnamese
welsh
yiddish