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Old Nipissing
Road |
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Location
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This trail runs through
various towns and villages |
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Ownership |
Crown Land |
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Management |
Crown Land |
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Length
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70 km / 44
miles
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Difficulty
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moderate
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Activities
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hiking,
mountain biking, cross-country skiing, snowmobiling, ATVing
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Amenities
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parking, rest area
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Surface
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gravel, paved
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Rules for Use:
- much of the land around
the Old Nipissing Road is private, so users must be respectful of
landowners adjacent to the trail
Visit the Old Nipissing
Road website for detailed
information about what you'll find along the trail!
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Description:
Additional Information:
Leave Magnetawan
north on Hwy. 520 and turn right onto Hwy 510.
Cross Hwy 124 past the Chapman cemetery. Here,
the road is as the pioneer travelers might have
known it. The forest is tall and dark, and the
dirt ruts bend and twist around each obstacle.
Despite its pioneer condition, the road may
be passable by bicycle or 4 wheel drive,
although slow. After 18 km, there appears a
clearing and a white frame house. This is the
site of a famous hotel with the colourful name
of 'Bummer’s Roost'. For the next 2 km the
Nipissing Road is impassable, except maybe by
foot or bike. If driving, take the road right
for 1.5 km and then the first road left, which
again has no number. After 2 km you will rejoin
the original alignment at the abandoned hamlet
of Rye. Gone now are the store, post office,
and log hotels - some sources say as many as
four - and Rye today consists of a brick school
(now residence) and 1.5 km north of that, an
intersection full of old foundations. Four bush
farms still guard the next km of road, until
once more the route becomes deserted and
unusable. The road in this area is passable by
bike only. Watch for the "Forgotten Trail"
signs. Follow a one-time concession road "the
Jerusalem Road" for 6 km to a T-intersection
with the Mandeville Road. Then turn left for 3
km to another T-intersection. Here you pass
through an abandoned rural settlement, which was
called Mandeville. The land is low and swampy,
and a young forest closes In overhead. Bush
barns, long abandoned, are collapsed, and their
overgrown clearings are indiscernible from the
road. At the second intersection again turn
left. Once more, you emerge onto a rocky upland
- the hills however are steeper. After winding
through a mature forest and past a pair of
marginal farms, you will suddenly come to the
crest of a knoll. Below lies the Commanda
Valley. As you descend the valley to Commanda
village, the road merges imperceptibly with the
Nipissing Road. Words of caution - some of the
bridges in this part of the route are closed and
may necessitate a detour. Following Rye Road,
you will emerge at Hwy 522. Make a turn to the
right for 2.0 km to Commanda.
Pictures: Click
here to check out pictures
of Old Nipissing Road in our photo gallery.
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1375
Seymour Street, North Bay, ON P1B 9V6 ~ T: (705)
472-8480 ~ F: (705)
472-8027 ~ discoveryroutes@sympatico.ca
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