Exploring Ontario Rural Ruins

77

By That Grrl

2006 - There could be no finer house to be my first.

My first rural exploration. This house in Bradford, Ontario is gone now.
See all 12 photos
My first rural exploration. This house in Bradford, Ontario is gone now.

Once Upon a Time...

In 2006 I bought my first digital camera and began using it to take urban exploration photos of abandoned, derelict or just very old places. Most of my photos are farm houses taken in rural Ontario areas. While I was living in Toronto I would take the street car along whatever street I picked and photograph the old, tall buildings. Some of those places are probably gone now. That is the sad part of being an urban explorer, knowing the places I'm admiring may be gone the next time I visit them.

I've been living in rural areas longer than urban places so it wasn't too surprising when I began using my camera to photograph old farm houses, rural exploration. I've been asked to pinpoint what it is I like about the old ruins and I can't come up with a single, simple answer. It's something about history and heritage, something about the mystery of their past. Something about watching how they weather, how they show their age and how much of the original workmanship with wood, glass, iron can survive the elements and the plants steadily taking over. My favourite abandoned places are those which are obviously not lived in, they are too far gone to be livable. I think they are lonely looking and that has some appeal to me as well.

I like taking the photographs, to document that the house existed and even to show how it has stood up to the neglect of years. There should be a feeling of pride in them, if you can imagine an inanimate object having feelings surely a house (a place that was once a home) would have them. Maybe what I'm doing is amateur photojournalism, but I don't so much feel that way about it.

I don't look into the history of the houses I photograph. If I were truly documenting them I would have the documentation, records of when I was there and what had changed since my last visit. I'd look up the history, the people who owned it and find out how or why it was abandoned. I don't do this, however.

The odd time someone stops me while taking photos and asks me what I'm doing. Some of them are suspicious but most are just curious. My standard answer is that I love the old buildings and like to take pictures of them. People are satisfied with that answer. Often they tell me whatever they happen to know about the place and the people who once lived there. I've been invited to come back and pick apples on an abandoned apple farm. I've had an old man spend almost an hour telling me the history of an abandoned church.

A lot of people like the old ruins but they don't stop to take photographs. It's a shame because they don't last forever. Three of my favourite places are gone. It always comes as an unpleasant surprise. No one puts up a notice that they are going to demolish the derelict houses and the places themselves can hardly give you a timeline for when they will finally give up the ghost and just collapse. I have also missed ever getting a photograph of a few places because I didn't stop to get the photograph at the time. I thought I could just come back later... when it was better lit, when it wasn't so wet out, when the grass might not be quite so long and tangled, when I had the energy to get out and walk around... etc. But, there is no next time when time has passed you by.

You may look at photos of old houses like these and expect to see something creepy, ghostly and haunted. I can say I have never felt that way. Not while taking the photos or looking at them later. I have had experience with attacking birds, a few beehives, animal holes and a toad I still hope I did not actually step on in the long grass on a very wet day. I may disappoint the ghost hunters and other paranormal seekers, but I have never found anything paranormal or had a creepy feeling at any location I have visited (and I've been to a lot).

2006 - Taken from a distance and out of focus.

Do you see the face? Not a ghost, the house itself has a personality I think. This house is also gone now. I visited this house about twice more before it was gone. I have better quality photos of this house, but this is my favourite.
Do you see the face? Not a ghost, the house itself has a personality I think. This house is also gone now. I visited this house about twice more before it was gone. I have better quality photos of this house, but this is my favourite.

2007 - I know one of these is gone.

I haven't been to the area again but I want to go in Spring so I can dig up and save at least one of the peonies in the old garden here.
I haven't been to the area again but I want to go in Spring so I can dig up and save at least one of the peonies in the old garden here.
This house is gone. The machinery to demolish it was parked behind the house when I was there.
This house is gone. The machinery to demolish it was parked behind the house when I was there.

2008 - Photographed on rainy days.

The mansion. It really was gorgeous to visit. I've seen photos taken from inside but it was freshly boarded up (and they had cut down all the trees) when I got there.
The mansion. It really was gorgeous to visit. I've seen photos taken from inside but it was freshly boarded up (and they had cut down all the trees) when I got there.
That's a raindrop on the lens. This house was demolished about a week after I took the photos.
That's a raindrop on the lens. This house was demolished about a week after I took the photos.

2009 - Beware the attack bees!

Bees live in this house.
Bees live in this house.
There were several beehives around this house. A bee flew in my hair and I could not get it out. One more reason it's nice to explore with a buddy.
There were several beehives around this house. A bee flew in my hair and I could not get it out. One more reason it's nice to explore with a buddy.

2010 - By land and by sea... lake.

Taken in the tall hills of Ontario.
Taken in the tall hills of Ontario.
An artist friend gave me directions to find this house on a lake.
An artist friend gave me directions to find this house on a lake.

2011 - It's not all houses.

These were all parked together, rust buddies.
These were all parked together, rust buddies.
Church... schoolhouse... kind of tippy and neglected now.
Church... schoolhouse... kind of tippy and neglected now.

Comments

leroy64 profile image

leroy64 Level 6 Commenter 4 months ago

Great Hub. I will be checking out the flickr links.

Genesis profile image

Genesis 4 months ago

Your photographs are beautiful and interesting. It's great that you were able to capture these shots before the buildings were demolished because you never know how important they can become in the future. Great Hub, and thank you for sharing!

That Grrl profile image

That Grrl Hub Author 4 months ago

Thanks for leaving a note. I think we need to have something kept of our past. Not each and every old house can be kept standing but it is good to have something to show what the others were like.

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Level 8 Commenter 4 months ago

Wonderful hub. I love exploring old places myself. I especially loved that mansion and that lake house. If I lived in Canada wouldn't mind looking into buying that lake house if it was left standing. Voted up!

That Grrl profile image

That Grrl Hub Author 4 months ago

From what I remember the lake house was owned by the family still but there was some problem with who exactly owned it. It was a really nice spot. It was on the side of the lake, pretty remote and yet within walking distance from a small town if you didn't mind a longish walk. The house was half surrounded by the lake water. When I saw it I felt the same way, wished I could live there. :)

Dave Mathews profile image

Dave Mathews Level 7 Commenter 4 months ago

I have been a Torontonian and an Ontarian all 64 years of my life. Thanks to my dad I have seen first hand some of the most beautiful homesteads throughout the Lindsay, Peterborough, Brighton, Kingston, Trenton areas.

Thanks to my love of driving the back roads of Ontario, I have met people who have enriched my life and my family's too.

That Grrl profile image

That Grrl Hub Author 4 months ago

I keep a backroads map in my purse/ backpack all summer. I don't get out as much in the winter, snow makes the smaller roads risky. The best days are times I photograph a house my other explorers in the Flickr group haven't already seen. Does not happen often and you really need to try seldom used roads to find them.

Marie-Grace profile image

Marie-Grace Level 1 Commenter 3 months ago

So lovely, and such a shame that some of these houses couldn't be saved. If houses can have feelings, I bet they'd like to be fixed up and lived in again. :)

That Grrl profile image

That Grrl Hub Author 3 months ago

They can't all be kept but it is nice when the odd house gets a second chance.

Keri Summers profile image

Keri Summers Level 4 Commenter 3 months ago

Great photos - I love a ruin for the atmosphere of them, but it's sad to see such lovely buildings falling apart. Good that your photos have them on record.

That Grrl profile image

That Grrl Hub Author 3 months ago

The saddest thing is to go back to see the same place again and find it gone. It's especially a shock when I've been visiting the same location for years and then find it abruptly demolished or fallen the next time I go there. I almost feel like the house should have left me a note. :)

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