Outdoor Report: Trail runners dash over quiet Lethbridge grassland coulees - Action News
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Outdoor Report: Trail runners dash over quiet Lethbridge grassland coulees

Hikers are heading south to the coulees around Lethbridge, Alta., where a burgeoning community of trail runners is enjoying the landscape.

'It's a good way to spend an afternoon, just wondering around,' avid hiker Larry Kundrik says

Trail runners enjoy the views off the natural grassland coulees near Lethbridge, Alta., with Outdoor Report's Paul Karchut. (Paul Karchut/CBC)

For this week's Outdoor Report, we take a looksouthto thecoulees around Lethbridgewhere a burgeoning community of trail runners is enjoying the landscape.

The hilly, hot and quiet area can be surprise to newcomers used to mountain hikes.

Tucked next to a city of 100,000 in southern Alberta, you can start your trek in the city limits and once you get into the coulees, you don't see a soul.

Trail running has become popular in the coulees of Lethbridge, Alta. (Paul Karchut/CBC)

The hardcore trail running community has known about this area for years because of the famed Lost Soul Ultra Marathon,where runners pound their way through a 50-kilometre, 100-kilometreor 160-kilometrerace course. It happens every September down in thecoulees.

There's also the shorter but still challenging Coulee Cactus Crawl held in June.Lethbridge offers an online map that shows all the trail options.

'In the great wild'

Lethbridge local Larry Kundrik has finished the 100 mile Lost Soul an amazing 12 times. Heran three100 milers last summer alone, sohe has logged thousands of kilometres in thecoulees over the years.

He invited the Calgary Eyeopener tocheck them out.

"It's got a beautiful view of the Oldman River and there's coulees all around and in the distance, you can see a few farmhouses," Kundrik saidbetween some pretty stiff climbs.

"Here we are... just off the edges of the City of Lethbridgeand in the great wild. I love it here."

Asparagus, sage and cactus

It's a totally different landscape if you're used to hiking or trail running in the mountains, and muchdrier with asmell of sage brush in the air.

Wild asparagus grows in the river valley andcottonwoods thickly linethe river banks, offering some welcome shade to the normally hot and exposed coulees.

Keep your eyes peels for picnic shelters to rest from the sun and also the cacti waiting to poke you just off the trials.

Some stops explain a bit of southern Alberta historytoo, likeIndian Battle Parkright outside of downtown Lethbridge.It commemorates the last big battle between the Blackfoot and Cree people living in the area in 1870.

Thecoulees would've been brimming with wild buffalo back in those days.

'Beautiful, natural terrain'

There's also Pavan Park, the old Pavan family farm right along the banks of the Oldman River. Back then, there were coal mines tucked into thecoulees so big, flat river barges could haul the fuelaway.

Kundrik grew up on a farm just on the other side of the river,back before the site becamepark land. Even today, the trials over the natural grassland remainedquiet and uncrowded by runners and hikers.

"It's really a way to experience the LethbridgePrairies with some hills," Kundrik said. "It's a good way to spend an afternoon, just wondering around and seeing some beautiful, natural terrain."


Paul Karchut publishes the Outdoor Report throughout the summer. Youcan send in suggestions for new hiking adventures by emailingoutside@cbc.ca or by tweeting him @CBCOutside.


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener