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
Comment
The Bald Eagle Project
It has been decades since bald eagles nested on the Great Lakes. In fact, by the early 1980s, mostly as a result of widespread use of the pesticide DDT, there were only four active nests in all of the Great Lakes. That equals approximately 15 surviving birds. The species was all but locally extinct.
Nowadays, with the effects of DDT behind us — it was banned in the early 1970s — and with serious conservation efforts, the bald eagle has made a comeback. There are now 31 active nests on the Great Lakes, and another 30 on lakes north of 49th parallel. But not a single nest on Lake Ontario. Until now, we hope.
Several bald eagles have overwintered in Cootes Paradise at Royal Botanical Gardens in the last few years. In 2008 a pair stayed for the entire summer — which leads conservation staff to believe that the time is right for a pair to settle in and call Cootes their own. This means they’ll find a nest, lay eggs, raise young and become a highly visible and inspirational symbol of why we need to think green and save the environment for generations to come.
Royal Botanical Gardens has the perfect environment to convince the bald eagles to settle in and become the first pair on Lake Ontario. bald eagles need at least 100 hectares of forest to nest and roost, plus an adjacent 50 hectares of wetlands to allow them to catch fish. We have it all right here.
Hi All,
To promote our big clean up of Cootes on Sunday March 1st, we took all except 50 of the 250 tires that were pulled out of Cootes and Grindstone watersheds last year to make our own tire pyramid.
Barry Gray of the Spectator came down and shot this great video.
Tys Theysmeyer, Head of Natural Lands for RBG was in the thick of it all and provided some insightful commentary. Tys says that about 1000 tires have been pulled out in the last seven years which is a unarguably a great accomplishment.
But putting this number in perspective, this only represents the half-way point as there are still 1,000 out there! Lots of work to be done.
Please share and lets get a great turn out on the 24th!
<iframe width='400' height='380' frameborder='0' scrolling='no' marginwidth='0' marginheight='0' src='http://www.thespec.com/embed/videozone/900999--video-restoring-coot...'></iframe>
Cheers Alan
When I was a kid in the naturalist club, John Miles and company ran a bird banding station on the North shore for the FON. I spent a couple of summers banding with John.Hamilton is blessed having such a beautiful natural area like Cootes lets look after it.I see there is a Cucumber Magnolia planted and dedcated to George North ,Hamilton's Greatest Birder of that Era the good ol'e days.
© 2024 Created by FixOurWorld. Powered by
RSVP for Stewards of Cootes Watershed to add comments!
Join Fix Our World