Saturday, May 14, 2011

Enjoy A Guided Nature Walk

Enjoy A Guided Nature Walk

The Natural Heritage and Biodiversity Committee of Oakvillegreen is sponsoring a biodiversity walk is this Sunday, May 15th from 10 a.m. to noon along Neyagawa in the Natural Heritage System in North Oakville. Learn about the plants and animals and the unique ecosystem that exists at this site and learn about the impact he widening of Neyagawa will have on the area. People can park in the parking lot of the Sixteen Mile Creek Sports Complex (Neyagawa just north of Dundas), and meet near the complexes front doors. A car pool will be formed from there. Dress for the weather and wear sturdy shoes. Learn more about Halton's natural heritage and biodiversity by getting into the thick of it! No small children please, the terrain is rough. For more info contact Karen at kkachra@cogeco.ca


Spring in Glenorchy - May 7

A beautiful morning in Glenorchy.   Most of the following pictures were taken in the Sixteen Mile Creek Valley in the vicinity of the proposed James Snow Parkway.

A picture is worth a thousand words.....

























Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Halton Master Transportation Plan


Halton Master Transportation Plan -
proposed road network

Halton Region proposes a grid style plan for 2031 that will dissect Oakville's last remaining green spaces.

The proposed road network will cut across Sixteen Mile Creek twice (James Snow Parkway and Burnhamthorpe) as well as Bronte Creek.

Link to view: Transportation Master Plan to 2031 - The Road to Change

Send your comments to the consultants preparing the study:  Alvaro Almuina, P. Eng at GHD  alvaro.almuina AT ghd.com 


Sixteen Mile Creek at Glenorchy

Burnhamthorpe Road extension across Sixteen Mile Creek

Help us stop the extension of Burnhamthorpe across Sixteen Mile Creek, through the most intact portion of Oakville’s Natural Heritage System and through the wetlands of Glenorchy Conservation Area

Plans by Halton Region to extend Burnhamthorpe Road will cause great damage to our natural areas in north Oakville. Please let politicians know this is NOT acceptable.

Friends of Glenorchy and OakvilleGreen have been trying to convince politicians to kill this planned new Regional Road but we need your help.

Unless citizens speak up in numbers, politicians will rubber stamp this new four lane road that will destroy large areas of intact forest in Oakville’s Natural Heritage System, cause severe damage to the banks and bed of Sixteen Mile Creek as another crossing is built over it and decimate significant wetlands in the new Glenorchy Conservation Area near Bronte Road.

Please take a moment to send a letter like the one below to the listed politicians.



Dear Chair Carr, Mayors and Councillors:

I'm writing today to express my objection to the planned extension of Burnhamthorpe Road through Glenorchy Conservation Area and the surrounding ANSI (Area of Natural and Scientific Interest).

Another crossing of Sixteen Mile Creek, a 4-lane road through intact forest in Oakville’s NHS and the destruction of a significant portion of Glenorchy Conservation Area is simply unacceptable to the citizens of this community.

It is easy to say we are for protecting the environment and much harder to put it into practice. We expect you to put the environment first in this case and say NO to the Burnhamthorpe extension.

Sincerely,

(Your name and address here)

Send to the Regional Chair and Oakville Mayors and Councillors at these email addys:

gary.carr@halton.ca, mayor@oakville.ca , ward1@oakville.ca, ward1@oakville.ca, ward1@oakville.ca, ward2@oakville.ca, ward3@oakville.ca, ward4@oakville.ca, ward5@oakville.ca, ward6@oakville.ca

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Friends of Glenorchy needs support

Friends of Glenorchy needs support

Do you know where Glenorchy is? Close to the great bends in the Sixteen Mile Creek valley as the waters flow from Milton to Oakville is the site of the historic hamlet of Glenorchy.

The recently-formed Glenorchy Conservation Area embraces 400 hectares of environmentally-sensitive lands in this vicinity, stretching roughly from Neyagawa Blvd. to Bronte Rd. The Oakville Natural Heritage System and the Halton NHS afford additional protection here and nearby. We appreciate the efforts of the council members who worked to establish this protection for nature.

Environmental groups fought hard for years to secure connected areas of forest, field and stream so that nature can have a place to prosper in Oakville. Unfortunately the Region of Halton is disregarding these essential connections and planning to slash both Burnhamthorpe Road and the James Snow Parkway through the valley and the conservation area.

We believe in protecting these lands as an intact sanctuary for nature rather than breaking them into fragments with costly and unnecessary roads. We call on council candidates to support nature close to home by opposing the extension of these roads through the majestic Sixteen Mile Creek valley. We call on voters to consider the candidates’ environmental records and platforms carefully and check their responses to the VoteSmart survey (http://environmentaldefence.ca/campaigns/vote-smart) before casting a vote.

– Friends of Glenorchy
http://fog-friendsofglenorchy.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Bird sightings for Sunday, October 1, 2010







The following birds were sighted in Glenorchy Conservation Area on 10/10/2010:

Pileated Woodpecker
White-breasted Nuthatch
White-throated Sparrow (in large numbers)
Ruby-crowned Kinglets
Northern Cardinals
Great Blue Herons (2)
Unidentified Hawk
Hermit Thrush
American Robins
Black-capped Chickadees
Downy Woodpecker
Unidentified Warbler
Chipping Sparrows
American Crows
Blue Jays
Canada Goose
Dark-eyed Juncos