To Unite All People On a World Scale - Peace Environment Health Empowerment
Time: November 24, 2013 at 9am to December 31, 2013 at 11pm
Location: Meet at the entrance to the RBG parking lot Old Guelph Road
Street: RBG Parking lot
City/Town: Hamilton/Burlington
Website or Map: http://See Green Arrow http:…
Phone: 289-239-7649
Event Type: environmental, clean, up
Organized By: Stewards of Cootes Watershed
Latest Activity: Nov 22, 2013
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Sunday May 5th - Princess Point/Desjardins Trail Meet at Green Arrow http://goo.gl/maps/PU6E5
Saturday May 11th - Desjardins Canal at Olympic Drive in Dundas Meet at Green Arrow http://goo.gl/maps/zu3UF
Sunday May 26th - Location in Dundas to be Decided
All Cleanups run form 1 - 4 pm
April 14 Meeting spot is parking lot up the long driveway as shown by the green arrow on the map.
Fix Our World Volunteers
Looking forward .... Sunshine, fresh air and the best group of people you’ll ever meet. Throw in the satisfaction of doing good work in one of the most biodiverse sites in all of Canada and you have our next clean up Sunday April 14th from 1 to 4pm.
Meet at the Desjardins Trailhead at Princess Point – see the green arrow ( not the red pin) at this map link. http://goo.gl/maps/6UGrW
Give me a heads up if you think you’re coming – but walk ups are welcome.
Stewards of Cootes Watershed Great Job Columbia College Students led by the Fix Our World Street Team. Thanks for all your hard work. - Alan
I'm very proud of our Street Team Youth- 40 youth came out to help! Many International Students from Columbia College! They rescued 1529 Items and countless bits of plastic, from getting into the Princess Point area Watershed! Great Job! Thank you for all your hard work The Winners from our Teams competition are Team Dead Fish! Congratulations Team you rescued 526 Items!https://plus.google.com/u/0/photos/109139821660216958175/albums/585...
Our Street Team was proud to participate in the Princess Point area. We had 40 Students participate! 4 teams of 10 Students many International from Columbia College who did a fabulous job of cleaning up and documenting our findings. Thank you to our Team Leaders Jesse -Team Wh eel, Mike -Team Garbage Busters, Dakota -Team Dead Fish and Rachel Team- Bravo who were tremendous helpers in coordinating their teams. You can guess how they came up with their names. We had a competition which team picked up the most garbage would win a prize. Results soon to be completed we have photos too. Thank you Alan for coordinating this great initiative.
Links:
Southern Ontario Bald Eagle Monitoring Project(external)
Eagles in the News:
Even for Eagles it's all about Location(external)
Bald Eagles Return to Lake Ontario Shore(external)
They're Big They're Bald and They're Back(external)
RBG Tries to Attract Pair of Bald Eagles(external)
RBG Protects Endangered Species(external)
The story of bald eagles at RBG (PDF)
What are eagles looking for?
A large body of water, usually a marsh larger than 30 hectares, to supply them with fish, birds and other small mammals to eat.
A relatively large patch of undisturbed mature forest (large trees) in which to nest within 0.5 km of the hunting area and at least 0.5 km from people.
A large patch of woodland in which to rest and shelter during the non nesting season. A minimum of 260 hectares of woodland is suggested as a base by the experts.
What is RBG doing?
Continuing with our wetland restoration program Project Paradise to ensure suitable hunting grounds exist in this 250 hectare marsh.
Strike a better balance between visitor access and wild spaces. This means modifying our trail network (Hopkins Loop and Grey Doe Trails) to ensure that adequate undisturbed forest exist while ensuring visitors the opportunity to experience wildlife in adjacent areas.
Erect the beginnings of a bald eagle nest in very large White Pine tree in an isolated area on the north shore of Cootes Paradise.
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