T'Railway closures hamper island-wide snowmobile travel - Action News
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T'Railway closures hamper island-wide snowmobile travel

The provincial government has closed a popular 180-kilometre section of the T'Railway Provincial Park between Badger and Gander, as well as a portion near Port Blandford.

Damage from Thanksgiving storm closes 180-km section of T'Railway

A local tourism operator says the closure of a 180 kilometre section of the T'railway Provincial Park from Badger to Gander and an area near Port Blandford will impact cross-province snowmobilng this winter. (CBC)

Even with all the snow that has fallen in the province over the last week, snowmobilers are being told to stayoff a popular trail in central Newfoundland.

A 180-kilometre section of the T'Railway Provincial Park between Badger and Gander, and another portion of the trail near Port Blandford, are closed for the rest of the winter.

The Department of Environment and Climate Change announced the closure earlier this week due todamage from heavy rains over the Thanksgiving weekend that caused washouts along the route.

Phil Lingard is one of the owner/operators of Brookdale Adventures in Bishop's Falls.He says this news is not good for his business.

"It isolates the central region for anyone doing cross-island travel," he said. "It makes it very hard for anyone to connect to the backcountry that the T'Railway itself links you to."

Culverts damaged

Lingard said he has seen much of the damage on the trail, including an area west of Grand Falls-Windsor where several culvertswashed out.

"There are five pipes and four of them are out," he said. "That is a narrow section near the highway and it will take quite a bit of repair to fix that."

"To close a major section right in the centre of the province it just isolates the ends of the province."

Lingardsaid in order to bypass that area, riders have toaccess the backcountry, which is not always safe, especially when crossing bodies of water.

He said the closure may also affect the sale of trail passes, sinceriders in those areas aren't going to buy a pass for a trail they can't use.

"Most of the snowmobiling people will do is going to be away from the groomed trail and the railway bed because ifyou are not able to get from one point to the other on the railbed, people will stick to woods roads and the backcountry they'll have no choice."











with files from the Central Morning Show