Bruce Trail Guidebook?
The Bruce Trail is a recreational hiking trail that generally follows the Niagara Escarpment. There are associated side trails. They ahve a good web site to browse.
In the Niagara region there is Balls Fall, and not too far away, the 20 valley adacent to Jordan Station. Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority looks after a lot of the publically accessable Escarpment sites. Regional Road 81, which runs parallel to the QEW freeway, sits at the base of the Escarpment, and runs though a number of nice smaller towns that service the adjacent fruit farms throughout the area. Lots of colourful roadside fruit stands
Further along, around Hamilton/Ancaster/ Dundas there are a number of nice watefalls, that while low in water in the fall, look great with the leaves turning colour. Hamilton Conservation looks after a number of these sites. Nearby is the industrial Hamilton - steel plants on the harbour, and the Burlington Bay Skyway, a big bridge that I like to snap at different ties of the year. Burlington holds my favourite camera shop - Burlington Camera.
Halton Region Conservation also manage a number of sites along the escarpment. Keslo, Hilton Falls, Mt Nemo and Rattlesnake Point are a few that come to mind. Arond here the escarpment start heading north to northwest.
Sites I am familiar with not too far from my home of Misssissuaga are:
Scotts Farm, located north of Georgetown, which has wonderful old twin barns, and sits on the edge of the Escarpment with a nice stream, and fields too bordered by hardwoods that are a greta shoot any time of the year. It is deeded to the Ontario Hertitage Foundation, and managed by Credit Valley Conservation. Credit Valley Conservation also has other conservation areas along the escarpment
Another nice area is the Forks of the Credit Road, near Belfountain, a hamlet not far from the town of Erin.
There are also provincial parks and nature reserves - check out non-operating parks at ontarioparks.com Mono Mills, near the hamlet of Mono Centre is just such a park that has quite tall cliffs of exposed rock that are accessable from below and above via walking trails, or visible from the road.
Spots further up the escarpment towards Tobermory I am less familiar with; they are a bit beyond a day trip to visit, and when we holiday we tend to travel much further afield. Those areas will have to wait another twenty years or so when retirement might present some days that need filling.