Street to Trail in the Media: A Retrospective

 

 

Street Wise, Trail Ready / Letter to explore  Magazine, May 2004
This letter is a response to the article which follows it. / Ed.

     The article about Paul Mackle's efforts to establish Street to Trail initiative was both informative and timely (Explorata, March 2004).  For too long, the needs of underprivileged individuals in Ontario, such as those assisted by Mr. Mackle's program, have been let go-to the point that there are few alternatives other than gangs, drugs and loneliness for these people.

     As a board member with the Ontario Trails Council, a charitable organization working to match trails with persons in need of recreation, I would like to remind people in Canada we believe our public space must be accessible to all, regardless of age, gender, disability or financial hardship.  The  OTC works with public institutions to ensure accessible trails are developed and preserved throughout Ontario.  We're organizing workshops in Peterborough, Ontario, on April 30, to explore programs that youth at risk with such trails.  We applaud Mr. Mackle for his efforts, and commend explore for highlighting this program.  We're sure that this exposure for the Street to Trail program will lead other communities, and NGOs such as OTC, to support similar initiatives.                ---- Bev McCarthy, Secretary, Ontario Trails Council

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Out of the woods: Street people discover the wonders of the wild / explore Magazine, March, 2004

     Paul Mackle and his backcountry groups usually practice no-trace camping.  But it's with some pride that the founder of Street to Trail Wilderness Adventures remembers one exception to the rule.  They were on a canoe trip, sitting around the fire, when someone pulled a crack pipe out of his pocket, told the others he didn't need it anymore and hurled it into the lake.  "I'd fill a whole lake with crack pipes if I could," says Mackle.

     Making crack pipes redundant is one objective of Street to Trail, a program Mackle started after a few years as a trip leader for the Bruce Trail Association and a decade volunteering at Sanctuary, a drop-in centre for the homeless in Toronto.  He had witnessed the rewards enjoyed by the hikers and the needs expressed by the street people, and decided to bring the two elements together.  "I see street people as lost hikers," says Mackle. "Maybe they just fell of the trail somewhere."

     In the fall of 2001, he started leading day hikes along Ontario's 800-kilometre Bruce Trail and four-day canoe trips on the Kawartha Lakes, two hours northeast of Toronto.  Trough the padding covers only 21 kilometres, Mackle believes just getting bedrolls out from under bridges and into the wilderness can have a positive effect on the owners' self-esteem.  "A canoe trip is a lot of work, but everyone contributes," he explains, "and when they come back they know they can depend on themselves and each other." 

     Jai Sarin, who has been in and out of Toronto's shelter system, participated in a canoe trip last summer. "I was having a rough time , but when I want on that trip with Paul, it put me back into action mode," he says.

     Sometimes it's about just taking a break. "Inside my head is all noisy and cloudy."  Says Daniel Gray, a four- time trip veteran who struggles with a chronic stress disorder.  "Knowing there's a quiet place where I can go and enjoy the beauty in natural things-it gives me a sense of joy." 

     So far Mackle has taken more than 70 street people on trips, but hopes to increase funding and club activities once Street to Trail gains charitable status this spring.  "I know it's a good start for a lot of people," says Mackle.  "I just hope it can ripple out from here." --Ian Merringer

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 Bruce Trail magazine

The Bruce Trail Association published this article in the Summer 2003 edition of their quarterly publication.

True Inspiration — the Street to Trail program.
An innovative way to use the Bruce Trail

Paul Mackle is a long time volunteer with the Toronto Bruce Trail Club. Paul has been leading hikes for over three years and recently became the Landowner Relations Director in the Toronto Club. These activities might exhaust an average person's volunteer schedule. But not Paul's. volunteering with the Toronto Club is only one way he is trying to make a positive change.

For the past 10 years Paul has been volunteering with homeless people, providing them with food and connections to outreach programs. The people he met at the drop-in centre affected Paul. Lack of self-esteem, inability to make personal connections and a general lack of trust were issues that seemed to affect a lot of people at the centre. Paul reflected on some of the positive elements in his own life: his love of the outdoors, the ability of nature to act as the great equalizer - inspiring awe and allowing greater perspective. Understanding the healing power offered by time with nature, Paul began a program called "Street to Trail". The Street to Trail program brings the experience of communing with nature to those who spend their lives on the street. It offers a way for people who might never have the chance to go camping or hiking to experience it.

It is not just homeless people who go on Paul's trips. Anyone who can afford to pay is also invited. For those who can contribute, there is a $50 charge. The surplus from this fund helps to pay for those who cannot afford to pay any amount. Paul is always looking for more funders and equipment sponsors for his program.

What does Paul enjoy the most? "The friendship and companionship of all the people I have met through the Bruce Trail Club and the hope that is passed on to people who experience the Bruce Trail through the Street to Trail program." Paul has truly found a unique and innovative way to share the Bruce Trail.

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Rosedale United Church  

In November, 2002, Rev. Doug Norris of Rosedale United nominated Paul to sainthood (tongue only slightly in cheek) for his work in pioneering Street to Trail.

"Paul runs a group called Street to Trail – and what he does is find some of the men and women whose entire universe consists of the grimy streets and sidewalks and crack houses and alleys where things go on that we really cannot imagine and he takes a group at a time to the Bruce Trail, or canoeing on northern lakes, and sees what happens when they breathe open air and see beauty and are loved – and he does this because he has a conviction about God’s love for them – and that working from almost nothing but that love – working from that love and an old bike – God will bring life. That is a saint."

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Toronto Bruce Trail Club

This article appeared on a full page of the Fall 2002 edition of the Toronto Bruce Trail Club's magazine.

To us at the Bruce Trail, Paul Mackle is one of the leaders who leads end-to-ends from the Islington Station.  
But to the street people of downtown Toronto, he's the guy who takes them into nature, and helps them to discover themselves and restore their sense of dignity.
Paul runs and operates Street to Trail, a non-profit organisation that provides outdoor hiking, camping and cycling opportunities for Toronto's disenfranchised. He takes them from the streets of Toronto to the wilderness and lets the silence of God's voice nurture them. It was an idea that came to him from his many years of volunteer work.
He has been volunteering at Sanctuary (a church-sponsored downtown drop-in centre for people who are homeless) for nine years as a cook, and now in any way he can. He often spends his time setting up tables for the three complimentary meals offered each week or helping street people find places to live, offering them guidance and helping them build crucial relationships.
It was at Sanctuary that his idea for Street to Trail began. Paul likes to bring the experience of being in nature to those who spend their lives on the street and who might never have the chance to go on a camping trip or a hiking excursion. He wants to help them come face-to-face with the presence of God, to restore their wounded self-esteem and battered self-respect. "It's amazing the response I have," he says. People have told him they feel good for days after one of his camping trips. Sometimes anger towards God can be resolved. Sometimes in doing the little chores expected of them around camp people have restored their confidence in themselves and have been able to find work again. No matter how he looks at it, helping the disenfranchised in the grandeur of nature is rewarding work.

It's not just people who are homeless who can come on his trips. Anyone who can afford to pay are invited as well. Street to Trail has a three-tiered payment system. In the first level, those with their own equipment pay just $50 a day to cover the cost of food. In the second level, anyone without equipment but who can afford to pay will be supplied equipment by Street to Trail but will still pay $50 a day. The homeless fall into the third category. All food and equipment are provided free of cost, giving them an opportunity they would otherwise not have had. The surplus from the first two levels will accommodate those in the third.

"Everyone's happy," Paul says. "Those who can afford it help those who can't and it's still a better price than a commercial camping trip." He sometimes gets customers from other walks of life, like businessmen who, surprisingly, get along well with the others. Though they're at opposite ends of the social spectrum, the experience of being in nature brings them together. He likes to help people integrate, transcend barriers, build community and grow.

Paul's love of the outdoors began when he was a teenager in Scarborough. His parents wanted to find something interesting for him to do and encouraged him to join the boy scouts. It was there that he trained in all aspects of outdoor activities, including hiking, base camping, canoeing, and wilderness survival. During one practice search-and-rescue mission he was expected to rescue an injured pilot from a simulated plane crash, splint his broken leg, build a stretcher and carry him out. Another time, when part of his lessons in wilderness survival were complete, he was taken to a remote area in the morning, given two matches, a string and a knife and was told to build a shelter, have a fire going and have traps set by the evening. When his instructors picked him up at the scheduled time, Paul had everything done as requested and even handed them back a match.
In addition to his work at Sanctuary and Street to Trail, Paul also manages to lead 12 to 15 hikes a year for the Bruce Trail, preferring end-to-ends. "Leading hikes with the Bruce Trail is easier to organise than those for Street to Trail. There's a lot less work," he says, "but I enjoy both. I like the company of people who share a love of nature with me."

While interviewing him, I couldn't help but think of Paul as a modern-day Tarzan with just a hint of Robin Hood thrown in.

– by Lynn Glover   [To Table of Contents]

City of Refuge: A Voice from the Street

Sanctuary Ministries of Toronto
published the following article in the "Faces of Our Community" section of the Summer 2002 issue of City of Refuge:

It's hard to remember a time when Paul Mackle hasn't been around. For years, he faithfully prepared the food for the weekday drop-ins, stretching the food to feed everyone on a very limited budget. His consistent willingness to be involved in meal preparation has inspired others to share this role which has freed Paul up to pursue other interests. However, he still performs the essential task of making sure the coffee's perking! Paul has a real love and care for the people in the community. He also has a real love of hiking and canoeing. In his new initiative called "Street To Trail" , Paul is seeking to make it possible for people to get away from the City to experience nature. As Paul has seen the growth and changes that have taken place in Sanctuary over the years, so too, we at Sanctuary have witnessed the growth and changes that have taken place in Paul. And that's exciting!
 
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Paul, third from the right,
leads a group on the Bruce Trail.

 

Paul takes a moment to appreciate
the peace and tranquility of nature
during a hike.
 

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P.O. Box 745
31 Adelaide St. E.
Toronto, ON

M5C 2J8

(416) 532-0983

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