Old-Growth Forest Walks leads readers to some of southern Ontario's most amazing places: Visit 800-year-old cedars on the Niagara Escarpment; A 5000-year-old walking trail in Toronto's west en
Old-Growth Forest Walks leads readers to some of southern Ontario's most amazing places:
- Visit 800-year-old cedars on the Niagara Escarpment;
- A 5000-year-old walking trail in Toronto's west end;
- Oak trees with musket balls buried inside from the war of 1812,
- and much more.
Each of the 26 sites in the book includes an old-growth forest that's a short trip by car, bike, or public transit for millions of people in the GTA, including trails along the Don Valley and Humber River.
Detailed maps, beautiful photos and a wealth of information will make you want to take it off the shelf to read. Then you'll be motivated to leave the house and explore, whether it's a day-long hike or a short Sunday stroll. The introduction also contains the clearest, most concise history of Ontario's Greenbelt you're likely to find, and helps answer a question you may not even know you had: what is an old-growth forest?
Michael Henry is the author of Ontario'S Old Growth Forests. He is a botanist and forest ecologist who has spent over two decades studying, writing about, and working to conserve Ontario's old-growth forests. He compiled and maintains the list of Ontario's oldest trees; he designed and constructed the Blueberry Lake Ecology Trails in Temagami; he confirmed that the Jackson Creek forest in Peterborough is an old-growth forest; and he has worked to protect threatened old-growth forests within Algonquin Park, where he and Nate Torenvliet found unprotected forest over 400 years old. He is currently working on a book about old-growth forests in Ontario's Greenbelt.
Michael has also worked as a natural builder and is lead author of the book Essential Natural Plasters: A Guide to Materials, Recipes, and Use.
View Biographical note
Table of Contents
Introduction
The future of Ontario?s Greenbelt
Niagara Peninsula
- Paradise Grove
- Brock?s Monument Old-growth Oak Forest
- Short Hills Provincial Park (12 Mile Creek Headwaters)
- Ball?s Falls Conservation Area (Twenty Valley)
- Grimsby point (Beamer Memorial Conservation Area)
Niagara Escarpment central/north- McMaster Forest
- Rattlesnake Point and Crawford Lake Conservation Areas
- Scotsdale Farm
- Beaver Valley
- Horse Lake Trail in Bruce Peninsula National Park
- Flowerpot Island (Fathom Five National Marine Park)
Greater Toronto river valleys and headwaters- Bronte Creek Provincial Park
- The head of the Carrying Place Trail
- Lambton Park and Lambton Woods
- The Rosedale Ravines
- Crothers Woods and E.T. Seton Park
- West Don Valley (Sunnybrook Park and Wilket Creek)
- Rouge National Urban Park
- The Seaton Trail
Oak Ridges Moraine- Humber Valley Heritage Trail, Bolton tract
- Boyd Conservation Park and the Kortright Centre
- Maple Nature Reserve
- Eaton Hall (Seneca College, King Campus)
- Thornton Bales Conservation Area
- Hollidge Tract
- Peter?s Woods Provincial Nature Reserve
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