Get Outside: Guelph Trails Worth Walking This Spring
Spring is peak season on Guelph's trails.

Spring is peak season on Guelph's trails. The rivers are running, the trees are budding, and the city's network of paths, greenways, and conservation land is genuinely one of the best reasons to live here. A few worth getting out on right now:
Smith Property Loop is a local favourite. The 4.5 km loop runs alongside the Eramosa River on GRCA land, with the trailhead and gravel shoulder parking for about 15 cars on Watson Road South. Cedar forest down in the valley, mixed woodland up top, and a side trail to a dam that's a great spot to sit and watch for wildlife. Go early on weekends.
The Speed River Trail and Guelph Radial Line Trail are the backbone of the city's trail network. The Speed River Trail runs through the core from Royal City Park past the historic Covered Bridge out toward Guelph Lake, and the Radial Line picks up from there, following a former electric railway 28 km all the way to Limehouse. Parking for the Speed River corridor is at Royal City Park, and the Radial Line trailhead off Watson Road has roadside parking.
Preservation Park is a very popular trail in the heart of Guelph. A shaded forest loop connecting Hanlon Creek Park to Preservation Park, it works for walking, running, or just getting an hour outside. Parking at both ends of Hanlon Creek Boulevard and Kortright Road West.
Guelph has over 70 km of trails woven through parks, river corridors, and conservation land. It's one of the things that makes this city punch above its weight for quality of life, and it's something buyers notice too.
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