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Fall update from the Lake of Bays Heritage Foundation
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Newsletter - October 2023
Photo by Rob Stimpson

What's Happening

  • Annual General Meeting - highlights
  • Marsh's Falls Nature Reserve - update
  • Summer events - highlights
  • Thank you to our donors
  • Why are native trees so important?
  • Muskoka Watershed Report Card 2023
  • Heritage News - Foundation picks


Annual General Meeting - Highlights
It was wonderful to see everyone at the Foundation AGM at the Dwight Community Centre on August 12. Judith Mills presented the President’s report and reviewed our financials. Fiscal 2023, which ended on April 30, was another good year.

Harriet T. Weaver Trust
The Trust funds two annual bursaries of $1000 each. They are awarded to students from Bracebridge and Muskoka Lakes Secondary School and Huntsville High School who are entering post-secondary programs related to the Foundation mandate.
Featured Community - Ronville Road
Each year we document the history of a Lake of Bays community with a video and booklet. This year featured Ronville Road.  Gloria Woodside and Paul Shoniker presented the video and the Built Heritage awards recognizing the current owners of:

  • Chedoke (built 1897), James & Sherry Bullard
  • Hill House / Alberta House (1922), Jo Ann & Dr. James Pfaff, Brandon & Joanna Marrelli
  • Happy Thought Cottage (1900), Doug & Beth Conway
  • Evans/Mills (1945), Judith Mills
  • Rock Island (Ashibik) (1918), Dr. James Ingles

A cottage walking tour was planned but unfortunately it was rained out.

Marsh's Falls Nature Reserve - update
The Nature Reserve was busy through summer 2023. Many visitors took in the falls and walking trails. Foundation events were well attended. Several local groups used the Education Centre for meetings and workshops. And Irwin Memorial Public School grade 5/6 students visited in September.  

Volunteers completed several projects:
  • A new boardwalk was constructed on the Riverview Loop trail with lumber donated by Dwight Lumber.
  • The Education Centre front deck and back door railing were repaired and re-stained.
  • New nature posters were donated and hung in the Education Centre.
  • The trails were monitored and the grass cut around the Education Centre.

Thank you to all the volunteers who contributed their time, skills, and hard work!

Reminder
If you wish to visit the Nature Reserve please register first. Upon registering you will receive an email with access and parking information, and a trail map.  Registrations help us monitor the amount of trail use and inform our grant applications.
 
Photo by Kelly Stronks
Butterfly Count
Despite the threat of thunderstorms, we had a very good morning for our annual Marsh’s Falls Nature Reserve Butterfly Count on July 1. Thanks to the twelve volunteers that participated we managed to tally 11 species. Here are the results:

Monarch
White Admiral
Mourning Cloak
Northern Crescent
Long Dash Skipper
Peck’s Skipper
Least Skipper
Dun Skipper
Tawny-edged Skipper
Hobomok Skipper
European Skipper

Silent Boat Rally
Thirty-one enthusiastic paddlers braved the gray and cool weather for our July 29 Silent Boat Rally.  We started at Dwight Beach, paddled 1 km along the Dwight Bay shore to the mouth of the lower Oxtongue, then 4.5 km up the winding river to Marsh’s Falls.  Each boat had a list of 36 plants and animals to seek out, hoping to win a prize for the most species found.  We landed at the Marsh’s Falls Nature Reserve for a delicious lunch in the Education Centre, followed by trail walking.  


Thank you to Gary Best for driving the safety boat and Dwight Market, Lake of Bays Garden Centre and Langford Canoe for donating the fabulous prizes.

Mushroom Forays
We hosted two forays this summer: August 26 on the Bondi Resort trails in Port Cunnington, and September 2 on Sherborne Lake Road south of Dorset. Conditions were perfect – lots of mushrooms and eager participants!

Thank you to our donors
Donors make the Foundation's work possible. We have received several donations since our last report in June. We wish to thank our new and renewing members and recognize significant donations from Katharine Harvey and Clemens Sels (new Life Members), the Estate of Marianne Girling, and the Lake of Bays Marine Museum & Navigation Society.  
Photo by Kelly Stronks
Why are native trees so important?
It might be easy to think that there are enough native trees and shrubs in Ontario so planting a few non-native species on our properties should be fine.  But recent research has shown that although birds may land on those non-native plants, they don’t get much benefit from them.

Dr. Eric Davies from the Faculty of Forestry at the University of Toronto led a very important research project in Toronto where he selected four native tree species (Silver Maple, Red Oak, White Ash, American Elm) and compared the insect abundance and diversity to four non-native species (Norway Maple, Manitoba Maple, Scotch Elm, Tree of Heaven).  His results were conclusive – native trees supported a wider variety and abundance of pollinators, moths, beetles, and other invertebrates.  In fact, the non-native trees were almost devoid of insects.  This really shouldn’t come as a surprise as it has been known for centuries that some non-native plants would be “pest free” as no insects would eat the leaves. This is exactly why so many urban landscapes use non-native plants.

But we now know that to maintain and even enhance ecological integrity, we need to minimize forest fragmentation and protect wildlife corridors. And this is the role that Lake of Bays Heritage Foundation, as a land trust, can play with our protected properties.  But we can also do our part on our own properties and restore ecological opportunities by switching to native species.  And the results should be obvious – more birds in your backyards!

Muskoka Watershed Report Card 2023
The Muskoka River Watershed is generally in good shape, but many indicators of watershed health are trending in the wrong direction. This is according to the latest 5-year assessment by the Muskoka Watershed Council. Its report card covers the entire watershed, including these specifics about Lake of Bays (which is in the Baysville Narrows South Branch Muskoka River sub-watershed):
  • Dwight Bay and Rat Bay are vulnerable to reduced levels of calcium carbonate. Calcium is an essential nutrient for freshwater mussels, crayfish and spiny water flea (daphnia).

  • Chloride levels are increasing. The presence of chloride in freshwater lakes is toxic to all aquatic life. All Muskoka lakes have naturally very low levels of calcium which can buffer the increased in chloride levels. So if calcium levels decline, chloride levels are likely to increase.

  • Lake of Bays has historically been a good habitat for cold water species like lake trout. Human impacts like climate change, fishing pressure, and the introduction of invasive species are making a negative impact on this habitat quality.  The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources & Forestry is bringing in changes to provincial fishing regulations as a partial remedy to this problem.

  • The Lake of Bay area is vulnerable to reduced biodiversity due to further fragmentation of forested lands and declining deep interior forest habitat.

  • Climate change impacts over the past twenty years across the Muskoka lakes include twenty fewer days of ice coverage and the doubling of storm event frequency.

Overall, the 2023 Report Card states “Muskoka’s watersheds stand at a crucial turning point. While currently healthy, they are gradually degrading in several ways, and our existing management systems seem incapable of halting or reversing this negative trend. We need an integrated watershed management system capable of dealing with the multiple stresses our iconic environment now faces.”

The Muskoka Watershed Report Card provides a concise, easy to read picture of how human induced actions are impacting our watershed. The report and background documents can be found at www.muskokawatershed.org/2023reportcard.
Heritage News - Foundation Picks

New Plague Commemorates the Settlement of Dwight
The Township of Lake of Bays Heritage Committee unveiled a municipal plaque in Dwight at a community gathering on October 2.  The plaque commemorates the Settlement of Dwight, an historic community that dates to the 1870s when free land grants attracted Edmund J. Gouldie and other pioneers to the area. It highlights the impact of early settlers and their descendants on the Township and the region, as well as the role of the hamlet’s namesake H.P. Dwight, a sportsman and telegraph company president who brought the first telegraph line to the village.  Check out the plaque at Dwight Beach and view photos of the gathering on the Township’s Facebook page.

Craig Macdonald: Muskoka ethno-geographer
Dwight resident Craig Macdonald has spent a lifetime exploring Muskoka’s – and Canada’s – outdoor world and history in ways that few of us can imagine. He’s snowshoed across Algonquin park three times. He’s learned geography and travel routes, canoe and snowshoe design from Indigenous experts. He’s mapped countless lakes and built back country trails. To learn more about Craig and his fascinating story, check out this excellent article in Unique Muskoka.

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Lake of Bays Heritage Foundation, P.O. Box 81, Baysville, ON P0B 1A0, Canada


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