Hiking.
Petticoat Creek Conservation Park is a TRCA-managed lakeshore park with forested creek-ravine trails running to the Lake Ontario bluff edge — the easiest day-hike inside the city, linked to the Great Lakes Waterfront Trail. North in the Seaton lands, the volunteer-maintained Seaton Hiking Trail follows West Duffins Creek for roughly 12 km through forest and meadow on the Oak Ridges Moraine.
The brief.
Pickering carries four hiking substrates inside the city. Petticoat Creek Conservation Park (TRCA-managed) and Greenwood Conservation Area (TRCA, on Duffins Creek along the Pickering/Ajax boundary) are the two conservation areas; both run year-round and may charge day-use parking fees.
The Seaton Hiking Trail along West Duffins Creek through north Pickering is volunteer-maintained at roughly 12 km and links to nearby Whitchurch-Stouffville and Uxbridge trail networks at its north end. Rouge National Urban Park's eastern edge runs along the city's western boundary — the marquee Rouge trails (Mast Trail, Vista Trail, Bob Hunter Memorial Park) sit on the Toronto/Markham side, but the park edge is accessible from Pickering.
May through October is the easiest window for unbroken trail surfaces; the Waterfront Trail and Petticoat Creek bluff loops stay walkable into shoulder season.
4. places.
- 01
Petticoat Creek Conservation Park
TRCA-managed lakeshore park; forested creek-ravine trails running to the Lake Ontario bluff edge; links to the Waterfront Trail.
- 02
Greenwood Conservation Area
TRCA-managed conservation area on Duffins Creek along the Pickering/Ajax boundary; forested ravine trails.
- 03
Seaton Hiking Trail
Volunteer-maintained roughly 12 km hiking trail along West Duffins Creek through north Pickering's Seaton lands.
- 04
Rouge National Urban Park (Pickering edge)
Eastern edge of Canada's first national urban park; the marquee Rouge trails sit in Toronto/Markham, but the park edge is accessible from Pickering.
Today's read.
Cool but comfortable for layered effort · light winds · clean air.