Cycling.
Port Hope is a documented community on the 2,100+ km Great Lakes Waterfront Trail, with a 16 km local segment running through the heritage downtown and a junction with the Greenbelt Route at Mill Street. The 30 km Glorious Ganaraska Cycling Route — one of five Northumberland Tourism cycling-route maps — combines the Lake Ontario shoreline of the Waterfront Trail with the Ganaraska River corridor inland for a loop centred on Port Hope.
The brief.
The Waterfront Trail Kingston-to-Toronto corridor passes through Port Hope via the heritage downtown along the Ganaraska, then continues east on paved shoulders of County Road 2 toward Cobourg or west toward Newcastle and Bowmanville. The 30 km Glorious Ganaraska loop layers a flat lake-edge segment with rolling inland cycling north and east of the river.
North of town, the Ganaraska Forest is mountain-biking terrain rather than cycle-touring terrain — see the Mountain Biking sub-guide. May through October is the easiest window for road and rail-trail cycling; downtown sections stay accessible into shoulder season.
2. places.
- 01
Great Lakes Waterfront Trail — Port Hope segment
16 km local segment; junction with the Greenbelt Route at Mill Street; passes the heritage downtown.
- 02
Glorious Ganaraska Cycling Route
30 km loop combining the Waterfront Trail along Lake Ontario with the Ganaraska River corridor; one of five Northumberland Tourism cycling-route maps.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.
By the book.
- 01The Waterfront Trail through Port Hope combines off-road segments with paved shoulders on County Road 2 and Lakeshore Road; on-road sections require shared-road riding.Source ↗
- 02Glorious Ganaraska routing is documented through Northumberland Tourism; route maps are available through the County.Source ↗