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Haliburton Forest is the only wholly privately owned snowmobiling operation in the world, holding 80,000 acres (320 km 2) of forest wilderness, 50 lakes, and numerous ponds and creeks across the area. The core of the 300-kilometre (190 mi) trail system is double-tracked and up to 20 feet (6 m) wide, with single-tracked trails that access some ...
Harcourt Park is located in Harcourt Township [6] near the small community of Harcourt, Ontario [3] in Haliburton County.The park is approximately 240 kilometres (150 mi) northeast of Toronto and approximately 250 kilometres (160 mi) west of Ottawa.
The trail surface is stone chip for much of the trailway. Because the trailway runs along former rail lands, it is largely flat and even and is well-suited for a number of uses: hiking, running, cycling, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing. Snowmobiling is permitted certain sections, otherwise no motorized vehicles or horses.
The sculptures are arranged along a series of trails in a maple forest on the shores of Haliburton's Head Lake. [3] The Sculpture Forest is located in Glebe Park, hear Halliburton adjacent to Fleming College's Haliburton School of the Arts. [4] [5] Facilities include tours, parking, picnic tables, ski and snowshoe trails; entrance is free. [6]
Residents of the lake maintain the Kennisis ski trails. Measuring 10 kilometres in length, the ski trails reopened off the west shores of Kennisis Lake (in what is known as the Clear Lake Conservation Area). With access on West Shore Road, the trails map west of Kennisis down to the south of Red Pine Lake.
Of the over 10,500 miles (16,900 km) in the New York State snowmobile trail system, about 8,000 miles (13,000 km) are corridor trails. [2] Corridor trails are high-volume primary routes that provide access to high-use areas and large concentrations of snowmobiles. [4]
A map of Ontario highlighting Haliburton County: Date: 16 October 2007: Source: Crop and trace of Image:Canada (geolocalisation).svg; trace of Image:Ontario ...
Snow grooming is the process of manipulating snow for recreational uses with a tractor, snowmobile, piste caterpillar, truck or snowcat towing specialized equipment. The process is used to maintain ski hills, cross-country ski trails and snowmobile trails by grooming (moving, flattening, rototilling, or compacting) the snow on them. [1]