jaborandi
Active Member
Taffy, depending on how far out you get on that highway, if you find yourself in Burlington and headed for Hamilton, peel off of Plains Rd W at Spring Gardens Rd where the Royal Botanical Gardens Centre is. You will find an old still-family-run Hot Dog stand called Easterbrooks on the left hand side that's a rather amusing local favourite. Continue along Spring Gardens Rd to the west and you will find yourself descending to lake level to cross the mouth of the Grindstone Creek and the original outlet of Cootes Paradise. The one lane bridge there is the original connecting link between Hamilton and Toronto. A plaque west of the bridge notes the former location of an inn at the crossroads here - the original road to Guelph also used to meet at this spot.
Happy Exploring!
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I'm not quite understanding how the original outlet to Cootes Paradise was near Grindstone Creek unless it once wrapped itself around north side of the Rock Gardens. I'm trying to remember what it was like before the 403 was built - I grew up around there near the crossroads of the Old Guelph Road (from Hamilton to Guelph) and the Old York Road (from Dundas to Toronto). I guess the development of the railways must have involved a lot of landfill and I'm not quite old enough to remember that far back. While the bridge you mentioned (which one can view on YouTube) is on the east side of the sandstone ridge, the Old Guelph road is on the western side of the ridge and I am having difficulty making them meet in my mind even if I remove the railway embankment which cut off the Mud Hole as we called it from the rest of Burlington Bay.
By the way, on the west side of Plains Road past the RGB headquarters and just before you cross the bridge is a drive-in restaurant which was the first KFC franchise in Canada in the very early 50's. Across the bridge was Wolfe's Island which was not an island in the traditional sense of a body of land surrounded by water but rather a stately Romanesque Esso station sitting in a triangle of land where Highways 2 and 6 met. Overlooking the whole scene was the Neilson sign, a local landmark featuring a giant neon chocolate bar which sadly was lost to the 403.




