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Travel Log...
Point Pelee National Park
Leamington,
Ontario, Canada
Bon Voyage, Migratory Birds!
Point Pelee National Park, Ontario, slices into
Lake Erie like a knife blade, its peninsula tapering to a tip nearly six
miles into the water. For migratory birds, butterflies, and other wildlife,
this park focuses these travelers like sand passing through a narrow
hourglass.
Southbound
migrants work their way down the peninsula in the fall, aggregating at its
tip before launching out over the Lake to continue their journey. Spring
migrants moving north see this landmass before the mainland and drop down to
feed and rest after the long overwater flight. It’s important habitat for
birds and wildlife, and some of the best birding on the continent.
Although this park and its landscape have
changed dramatically over the past several hundred years, visitors can now
see what the original Carolinian Forest looked like, thanks to a $25,000
grant from the Wild Birds Unlimited Pathways To Nature Conservation Fund.
Thanks to this funding, a 10 square meter
diorama was constructed and filled with examples of the trees, plants, and
wildlife that one might have encountered hundreds of years ago. After
viewing the diorama, venture outside and see for yourself how the landscape
has changed. The birding is still fantastic, but what must it have been like
before mankind so altered the habitats?
http://www.parkscanada.gc.ca/pn-np/on/pelee/index_E.asp
The
Pathways To Nature Conservation
Fund is a partnership between Wild Birds Unlimited stores and the
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to
fund environmental education and wildlife viewing projects. We encourage all
of our customers to visit these incredible places. Your patronage helped
make these projects possible!
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