Jobs available in June – Carp Hills turtle protection

APPLICATIONS CLOSED – WE ARE NO LONGER ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS.

Want to help save the turtles? Friends of the Carp Hills have paid positions open in the month of June for people who enjoy engaging with nature and learning about wildlife.

Turtle populations are under threat across Ontario. Turtles and their eggs are highly vulnerable during the egg laying season, which occurs mainly in June. The Carp Hills turtle populations – particularly the threatened Blanding’s turtle and the Common Snapping turtle – are at risk due to high road mortality and nest predation. If we can find the nests and protect them until the eggs hatch, then we improve the chances for sustaining the populations at a healthy level.

Blanding's turtle on Thomas Dolan Parkway in the Carp Hills. (Photo by Kasia Majewski.)
Blanding’s turtle on Thomas Dolan Parkway. (Photo by Kasia Majewski.)

We need people to walk the Carp Barrens Trail and a short section of Thomas A. Dolan Parkway to look for egg laying turtles and recently laid nests.

  • Morning walk: about 3 hours within the range of 6am to 10am (earlier is better).
  • Evening walk: about 3 hours from 6pm to 9pm.
  • Occurs only during the month of June, every day, rain or shine, from June 1st to June 30th.

This would be ideal for mature, reliable senior high school students, for college/university students, and for retired people. 

We are open to flexible work arrangements where we schedule different people on different days and times. It may make sense to have two people go together. If you’d like to donate your time, we’re open to that arrangement too!

We will involve the Canadian Wildlife Federation (CWF) for nests on the roadway and for nests difficult to protect on the Carp Barrens. CWF collects eggs, incubates them, and then releases the young turtles back to their nesting location in the fall.

Snapping turtle laying eggs. Photo by Kasia Majewski.
Snapping turtle laying eggs on the roadway. (Photo by Kasia Majewski.)

Qualifications and Requirements

  • You must be 18 years of age or older.
  • You must be fit enough to walk the full 3 kilometer trail on a daily basis.  You may also need to carry a turtle nest protector some distance.
  • You will need your own transportation to get to the site.
  • You will need a GPS enabled phone or device to record your track and nest locations. 
  • You will need to understand how to record your track and nest locations, and send us your data in a report.
  • You will need a camera to photograph your findings.
  • Screened applicants will need to provide references and participate in an interview.

What We Provide

  • On-site training and an information sheet on filing reports and what to do when you find a nest.
  • We will lend you a parking pass if you are using a car.  The pass must be returned at the end of the month.
  • We will lend you a yellow safety vest and provide you with a volunteer badge.
  • We will be available to offer help if you need it while out on the trail.

Terms

  • We pay Ontario minimum wage of $15 an hour.  We anticipate that you will need 3 hours to walk the trail area.  If you find a nest that needs protecting, more time will be needed.
  • We pay an additional $20 for each new turtle nest found and documented.
  • This is a contract position paid on an hourly basis.  You will not be an employee.  We pay no benefits and offer no insurance.
  • You must sign a waiver indicating that you understand the risks and release Friends of the Carp Hills from any issues that may occur.

We thank the Bell family for their donation that makes this project possible.

Download the Job Description (PDF).

Lichens of the Carp Barrens

By Colin Freebury

Out for a walk on New Year’s Day, 2006, I happened to notice some tiny mushrooms on the side of a tree along Riverside Drive. 

Lichens on tree on Riverside Drive by Colin Freebury.
Lichens and mushrooms on tree on Riverside Drive by Colin Freebury.

Curious as to what they were, I called the mushroom identification number at Agriculture Canada. There I learned that they were probably a species known as Mycena meliigena. Anticipating my next question, I was quickly advised that if I wanted to know about the lichens in the picture, I had best contact Ernie Brodo at the Museum of Nature. And that was the start of my involvement with the fascinating world of lichens.

So, for the uninitiated, what are lichens? Lichens are fungi that include a photosynthetic partner, which can be a green alga or a cyanobacterium, or both, depending on the species. Basically, the fungal partner (mycobiont) provides the structure of the organism, while the photosynthetic partner (photobiont) provides the nutritional energy necessary for life. The mycobiont also provides protection from the harmful effects of ultra-violet rays on the photobiont. 

Lichens are not plants, although some species might be seen to resemble leafy plants, and were consequently once referred to as plants. 

Being able to produce their own food, as long as they can access sunlight and some form of moisture, enables lichens to grow in almost every part of the world, from tropics to polar regions, from deserts to mountains. Few species are found in urban or industrial areas, however, as lichens are very sensitive to air pollution. In this regard, the presence and abundance of lichens have been used as indicators of the effects of measures to improve air quality.

For more on lichen biology, see What is a Lichen? at the British Lichen Society web page, or Lichen at Wikipedia.

Lichens Found on the Carp Barrens

I first became aware of the Carp Hills in 2011 when I was invited to participate in a local bioblitz. I soon discovered an impressive assortment of lichens within an area just 100 m or so on either side of Thomas A. Dolan Parkway near what is now the western entrance to the Carp Barrens Trail. During the bioblitz and several subsequent visits, I’ve managed to develop a list of 84 species. Photos of several of these are available for viewing at the Carp Hills BioInventory project on iNaturalist at Carp Barrens Trail lichen photos, Freebury.

For a complete set of lichen photos from the Carp Hills, see Lichens in Carp Hills BioInventory.

The abundance of lichens on the Barrens is likely due to the amount of open space and sunlight; the number of beaver ponds, streams and swamps in the area; and the wide variety of micro-habitats, including both exposed and shaded rocks, various species of trees, and soil and plant detritus. And, to top it off, relatively clean air! Lichen heaven, one might say.

Winter hikers might have noticed certain lichens on tree bark or exposed rocks and wondered how they survive. The answer has to do with the fact that lichens are quick to dehydrate and, thus, once the cold weather arrives, they don’t contain water that would turn into destructive ice crystals. They are just as quick to rehydrate and get growing again once the immediate air temperature rises above freezing. This cycle can occur over the course of a day, say in the spring.

Mealy pixie-cup lichen (Cladonia chlorophaea), Bowesville Road by Colin Freebury.
Mealy pixie-cup lichen, Bowesville Road.
Powdered trumpet lichen (Cladonia fimbriata), Stoney Swamp by Colin Freebury.
Powdered trumpet lichen, Stoney Swamp.

Photosynthesis (making sugars) is highest at cool temperatures, and respiration (using up sugars) is highest at warm temperatures, so lichens actually grow faster in early spring and late fall than they do in summer.

In our area most lichens grow only a few millimeters a year. This leads to the question of how to protect lichens from damage due to foot or wheeled traffic? We’ve all seen how certain erect, pale species of Cladonia that grow over rock and soil along parts of the Trail have been trampled into fragments. And while these species can regenerate from fragments, they won’t if the fragments are continually disturbed and then blown or washed away. Eventually such areas become widened into bare rock and patches of bare, packed soil, after which there is likely no possibility of regeneration of the lichens or, for that matter, plants like the Pink lady’s slipper in the photo below.

Green reindeer lichen (Cladonia arbuscula ssp. mitis) and Pink lady’s slipper (Cypripedium acaule), Carp Barren by Colin Freebury.

Cypripedium acaule
Green reindeer lichen and Pink lady’s slipper, Carp Barrens.

Visiting the Barrens this fall after an absence of several years, I’ve been impressed with the work that the volunteers with the Friends of the Carp Hills have done to establish well-marked trails and put-up cautionary signage. And I’ve been pleased to see that hikers and bikers appear to follow the rules. I even had one biker remind me to stay on the trail! (I had wandered a bit to examine a lichen.) So that’s promising.

I haven’t found any lichens on the Barrens that one wouldn’t expect to find elsewhere in similar environments, for instance in parts of Gatineau Park and Algonquin Park. For me, what stands out about the lichen population on the Barrens is the diversity of species in a relatively small area, which, I remind you, is now within the boundaries of the nation’s capital city!

My favorite lichen on the Barrens? That would be the Star-tipped reindeer lichen. I love the way it forms rounded tufts and then mats and mounds of delicate, pale branches, as you can see in the following photo.

Star-tipped reindeer lichen (Cladonia stellaris), Carp Barrens by Colin Freebury.
Star-tipped reindeer lichen, Carp Barrens.

The Star-tipped reindeer lichen is not only pretty to look at; it is known as an “ecologically important species that forms continuous mats over large areas of the ground in boreal regions around the circumpolar north. The species is a preferred food source of reindeer and caribou during the winter months, and it has an important role in regulating nutrient cycling and soil microbiological communities.”(Wikipedia). The last part of that statement is a good start to a reply to a question I am sometimes asked: ‘very interesting about mutualism and all that, but what are lichens good for?’

Identifying Lichens

Lichens can be identified by their appearance (e.g., morphology, attachment structures; colour); reproductive means (e.g., spores, granules or pieces comprised of fungal hyphae and a photobiont); obligate substrates (e.g., types of tree bark, acidic or calcareous rock, soil); chemistry; and phylogenetics. Four common grouping of lichens based on growth form are as follows:

Foliose lichens have a discernable upper and lower surface. They adhere to their substrate loosely.

Blue jellyskin lichen (Leptogium cyanescens), Carp Barrens – damp by Colin Freebury.
Blue jellyskin lichen, Carp Barrens – damp.
Blue jellyskin lichen (Leptogium cyanescens), Carp Barrens – dry by Colin Freebury.
Blue jellyskin lichen, Carp Barrens – dry.

Note the bluish or grayish colour, which indicates that the photobiont in this species is a cyanobacterium.

Here’s an example of a green-alga species from the foliose group.

Common greenshield lichen (Flavoparmelia caperata), Faircrest Heights Park by Colin Freebury.
Common greenshield lichen, Faircrest Heights Park.
Big map lichen (Rhizocarpon grande), Carp Barrens by Colin Freebury.
Big map lichen, Carp Barrens.

Crustose lichens, obviously, form a crust. The lower surface is attached to or even within upper surface of the substrate.

Note the round, black fruiting bodies from which spores are ejected.

A squamulose lichen is composed entirely of small, often overlapping “scales” called squamules. The only example I have seen of a squamulose lichen in the Barrens is the Common clam lichen. It was growing on an old fence post in a forested area. Unfortunately, I didn’t take a photo, but here’s one from Gatineau Park to give you an idea of the growth form.

Common clam lichen (Hypocenomyce scalaris), Gatineau Park by Colin Freebury.
Common clam lichen, Gatineau Park.
Boreal oakmoss lichen (Evernia mesomorpha), Carp Barrens by Colin Freebury.
Boreal oakmoss lichen, Carp Barrens.

Fruticose lichens are erect, shrubby or pendulous.

The larger species such as the Star-tipped reindeer lichen are relatively easy to identify in the field using a mobile application such as iNaturalist. A hand lens is useful for observing characteristics of a particular specimen that might not show clearly in a photograph. 

The same is true for some smaller, inconspicuous lichens such as the crust-like species that can be seen adhering to rock and bark. But for the large part, to identify them with confidence it is necessary to take samples of these for dissection and study them under a microscope. Guidance and techniques for this can be found in Lichens of North America (I.M. Brodo, 2001) or Lichens of the Ottawa Region (I. M. Brodo, 1988), both of which are available at the Ottawa Public Library.

If I were just getting started, I think I would take pictures with my phone to post on iNaturalist and see what participants in the program suggest for a name. Then I would consult Lichens of North America to check the identification, and perhaps just as interesting, to learn about the species in question: What chemicals does it contain and what function do they perform? Where else is the species found in Canada and throughout the world? What might explain that? Who first named the species? If it now has a different name, why is that and how was that decided? 

In my case, what began as a little question about a tiny mushroom that I happened to see growing on a tree one wintery day, led to something of a second career as an amateur lichenologist (sometimes referred to as an ‘enthusiast’), adventures collecting specimens, particularly in Grasslands National Park, and many new friends. I can’t say that I satisfied my curiosity about lichens, however; instead, as these things do, it keeps growing!

So, keep your eye out for lichens next time you’re on the Carp Barrens Trail. You never know where that might lead.

Lichens, sky and prairie. Grasslands National Park by Colin Freebury.
Lichens, prairie and sky. Grasslands National Park.

Another thing about lichens is that they can be fun and challenging to photograph. I enjoyed taking the photos in this article, and they now bring back fond memories of field trips.

About the Names

Here is a list of the scientific equivalents for the vernacular names that appear in the text:

Big map lichen

Blue jellyskin lichen

Boreal oakmoss lichen

Common clam lichen

Common green shield lichen

Green reindeer lichen

Mealy pixie-cup lichen

Park shield lichen

Pink lady’s-slipper

Powdered trumpet lichen

Star-tipped reindeer lichen

Rhizocarpon grande

 Leptogium cyanescens

Evernia mesomorpha

Hypocenomyce scalaris

Flavoparmelia caperata

Cladonia arbuscula ssp. mitis

Cladonia chlorophaea

Vahliella leucophaea

Cypripedium acaule

Cladonia fimbriata

Cladonia stellaris

Acknowledgements

I’d like to thank Janet Mason for inviting me to write this article. And I am grateful to Fenja and Ernie Brodo for reviewing the manuscript.

About the author

Colin Freebury was a Research Associate at the Canadian Museum of Nature where he worked on lichens and helped in the herbarium. He contributed to research on the lichens of the Ottawa region, especially Gatineau Park, and of Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan.

A Turtle Story – by Kasia Majewski

Carp area biologist Kasia Majewski posted this story on our Friends of the Carp Hills Facebook page in June of this year.

13 June 2021 – I’ve been struggling with my decision to post about this, because I wish every conservation story was a happy one. But ultimately, the reason for conservation efforts is because of the threats that the plants and animals we share a home with, are facing at our hands, and the whole story deserves to be told.

Two nights ago we found a female Blanding’s turtle on Dolan, right near the entrance to the Carp Barrens trail, which had been struck by a car. She was far over on the shoulder of the road, and disturbingly, the tire marks on the shoulder indicated that the driver of the vehicle who hit her had swerved off the road, hit her, and swerved back onto the road. We will never know if this was accidental, or intentional. She was full of eggs, likely looking for a place to nest. 

Kasia uploaded her observation of the dead turtle to iNaturalist. This citizen science action helps scientists track turtle deaths. You can view her observation here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/82490403.

Two dead Blanding’s turtle females were recorded this year on Carp Hills’ roads.

Blanding’s turtles take a long time to reach reproductive age (about 20 years on average), and even once they reach maturity, it takes them a long time to get really good at finding appropriate nesting sites, properly covering their nests, and laying larger clutches. Even so, their clutch sizes are only about 10-16 eggs. So the loss of a seasoned female  Blanding’s can really affect a local population. There is also the intrinsic value of these animals. To think she could have been twice my age is staggering. And as they have a life span similar to humans, that would have only made her middle aged. 

I have worked with rare and endangered species for the last ten years. It’s always difficult to encounter needless deaths. In Borneo, it was jarring to hear about elephant poaching, as elephants are sentient animals, so dedicated elephant conservationists often argue that their destruction is akin to murder. I could however understand that much of elephant/human conflict is dangerous to humans. I met people who lost their huts to elephants, or lost their crops due to elephant grazing, or had a relative killed by elephants. So I could find ways to understand the complexity of our relationship with animals that are dangerous to us. Similarly, accidents happen, and I understand wildlife can be killed on roadways if they jump out at the wrong moment.

I’m only a turtle enthusiast, I do not work with them professionally, and my experience with them is limited. But what affects me most about their needless deaths on roads here in our backyard in the Carp Hills is that, they can’t leap out onto the road. The don’t harm humans. They don’t thieve from our crops. They don’t storm our houses, or spread disease. Their existence, as far as our daily lives are concerned, is completely benign. It’s what makes me so happy when I see a community come together to care for their turtle population – because they need our help and protection. And it’s what devastates me so, when I see one that may have been intentionally destroyed – they have never harmed us, and they will never mean us any harm. 

I am often asked about what we can do to engage further in environmental conservation, and I think people often expect the answer to be grand and life altering. In the case of turtles, the answer is fairly simple. Support your local conservation groups financially and with your time, learn how to properly and safely assist turtles who are crossing the road, and please drive carefully – for your sake, and for the sake of our wildlife. 

Blanding's turtle in the Carp Hills.  Photo by Kasia Majewski.
An unharmed Blanding’s turtle on Thomas A. Dolan Parkway. Photo by Kasia Majewski. All rights reserved.

The Story Continued . . .

Kasia contacted Canadian Wildlife Federation biologist Dave Seburn, who collected the dead turtle and was able to save the eggs for incubation. The hatchlings will be released near the same location in late summer.


Watch Kasia’s webinar Turtle Tales from 25 March 2021.

Carp Barrens Trailhead Signs Installed

Volunteers Bernard and Marc installed trailhead signs this morning on the Carp Barrens Trail. The signs will be there to welcome hikers and bikers when the trail reopens on 16 August.

Carp Barrens Trailhead signs in the Carp Hills.
Volunteers installing Carp Barrens Trailhead signs in the Carp Hills.
Carp Barrens Trailhead signs in the Carp Hills.
Volunteers at work in the Carp Hills.

Mounting brackets were made by Carp-based Custom Welding and Fabrication. Signs were made by Stittsville Glass and Sign. Thank you to City of Ottawa staff Amy MacPherson and Jeff Deloyde for sign graphics and content and mounting the brackets on granite.

The Rural Community-Building Grant Program provided the funding for the signs. Thank you to Councillor El-Chantiry for his support.

Pink Lady’s Slipper Orchids in the Carp Hills

The Carp Hills provide ideal conditions for the Pink Lady’s Slipper orchid (Cypripedium acaule) to thrive. Also known as Moccasin Flower and Whip-poor-will Shoes, they prefer acid soil under pines. Read more in this article by Anne Wong and watch a 6 minute video about lady’s slipper pollination.


By Anne Wong.

Spring is well under way with the trout lilies, Dutchman’s breeches, bloodroot, and trilliums all finished their blooming cycle.  The elegant Solomon’s seal and the delicate columbine always catch my eye, but my definite favourite of all the May flowers is the lady’s slipper orchid.

Pink Lady's Slipper in the Carp Hills. Photo by Anne Wong.
Pink Lady’s Slipper orchid in the Carp Hills. (Photo by Anne Wong.)

The Carp Hills are filled with flowers throughout the blooming seasons and catching sight of those we love best is always a treat.  Faithfully, wild ginger grows each summer in the same spot; so too does the native beauty – the Pink Lady’s Slipper orchid (Cypripedium acaule).  Found in wooded or semi-wooded areas, they require acidic soil, but tolerate a range of sun/shade conditions. Their range goes from Newfoundland to the southern boundary of the Northwest Territories with flowering occurring from April to July.  In the Carp Hills, late May is the prime time to view these ethereal and elusive beauties. 

The Pink Lady’s Slipper relies on bees, like most flowers, in order to be pollinated and produce seeds.  As the lady’s slipper does not produce nectar to induce bees to enter the “slipper”, pollination is  not guaranteed. Therefore, fruit and the seeds contained within are rare. When seeds do develop, once mature they fall to the ground and are broken open and fed by thin strands of fungi that are found in the soil.  Over a period of several years, the orchid will grow a root system from the initial corm.  Once roots are established, the plant will grow a bud, followed by leaves.  Once the plant is able to obtain nutrition through its roots, it then supplies the fungi with nutrients.  Definitely a symbiotic relationship that is years in the making.

Failing in the above relationship is not the end of the plant however.  It can also grow Rhizomes that spread beneath the ground, forming new plants. The vital connection between lady’s slipper orchids and the forest fungi are the reasons why lady’s slippers orchids do not transplant well – less than 5% success rate.  The conditions have to be select, undisturbed, and perfect for propagation. 

While the Pink Lady’s Slipper is secure in Ontario, it is listed as “special concern” in some US states. Threats to its existence include habitat loss and disturbance from urbanization; and that includes those innocent and harmless new trails that hikers create in order to bypass wet areas on trails.  In September, 2020 I discovered an unofficial trail around a flooded path.  This seemingly harmless diversion went straight through a small area that the previous spring had displayed eight Pink Lady’s Slipper orchid plants. Despite blocking the trail with all manner of brush, this week only four plants are in evidence. There is generally a very good reason why hikers and walkers are asked to “stay on the trail”.


Watch this 6 minute video by Kasia Majewski about the Pink Lady’s Slipper. The video is an excerpt from her plant webinar in March 2021.

Pink Lady’s Slipper orchids grow through the Carp Hills, preferring acidic conditions under White Pine Trees.

Article references:


http://www.ontarioparks.com/parksblog/orchids-pink-ladys-slipper/


https://www.natureconservancy.ca/en/what-we-do/resource-centre/featured-species/plants/pink-ladys-slipper.html


https://newengland.com/today/living/gardening/are-lady-slippers-endangered/


http://www.naturenorth.com/spring/flora/pladysl/Fplady2.html


https://extension.umaine.edu/signs-of-the-seasons/indicator-species/pink-lady-slipper-fact-sheet/

Carp Barrens Trail Closed – 25 May to 15 August

Forgoing a hike or bike ride for a few months of the year is a small inconvenience if it allows future generations of turtles, whip-poor-wills, and nighthawks to make the Carp Barrens home.
 
The City of Ottawa seasonally closes the Carp Barrens Trail after Victoria Day to allow Species at Risk turtles (3 species) and ground nesting birds (2 species) to nest without human disturbance.  Under the Province’s definition this is Critical Habitat and these animals require special protection.  In 2019 the Carp Barrens Trail Study found 10 turtle nests on or near the trail and recommended seasonal closure.  In this rocky terrain, the turtles seem attracted to the churned up grit on the trail itself.

Turtles lay eggs in June on and around the Carp Barrens Trail.  The hatchlings typically emerge in August and September.  Blanding’s turtles nest on the ground and prefer sand and gravel, often laying on or near the surface. 
 
Blanding’s turtles are a Species at Risk (Threatened).  It takes 20 to 25 years for a female to reach sexual maturity.  Over her lifetime only a few of her offspring will survive to maturity and carry on the species.  Turtles and birds already face tough odds for successful procreation because of many natural predators.  Adding human perils can tip the balance to the point where they will vanish within a generation. 
 
FCH and the Ottawa Mountain Bike Association are committed to operating a sustainable trail for people and for wildlife.  We have listed other nearby trails where you can go for a hike during trail closure.  For mountain bike trails, visit the OMBA web site.  Please respect the trail closure so future trail users can be thrilled by thriving turtles and birds.

Blanding's turtle in the Carp Hills, copyright Kasia Majewski
A Blanding’s turtle walks beside the Carp Barrens Trail in early April. (Photo by Kasia Majewski.)

Note:

During the Carp Barrens Trail closure period, we will be doing some trail work with our partners the Ottawa Mountain Bike Association (OMBA).  Planned activities include:

    • install the trailhead signs;
    • close side trails to reduce the trail footprint;
    • install City of Ottawa nature reserve signs at critical areas; and
    • address erosion and trail widening.

During trail closure we will also be conducting monitoring activities related to Species at Risk birds and turtles.  Volunteers will be identifiable by their yellow vests and Friends of the Carp Hills badges.

Carp Hills Webinars – Family Series

We are starting our countdown to spring with a webinar series! Learn about the Carp Hills in three fun and interactive webinars with multiple choice questions and gentle guidance by our host, Kasia Majewski. Great for adults and kids 10+. All webinars will be run on Zoom.

Watch the video promo for Night Song: Whip-poor-will Enchantment, streaming on 22 April:

The three webinars are fundraisers for our organization.

  • Members: $5 each or $12 for all three.
  • Non-Members:  $10 each or $25 for all three.

The cost is a small amount for fun and informative entertainment about a unique and local natural area.


Register for the remaining interactive, family-friendly Sustainability Series webinar. Great for kids and adults. Pay online via e-transfer or PayPal.

Pink Lady's Slipper Orchid in the Carp Hills

The Living Barrens: Plant Life & Textile Dye Workshop – COMPLETED

Learn about the amazing flora of the region, and end with a workshop on making your very own natural textile dye from your kitchen!  Following the webinar, a handout will be provided to all participants: Colours in the Kitchen, A Beginners ‘How To’ For Natural Textile Dye Making.

Blanding's turtle in the Carp Hills

Turtle Tales: Life of a Blanding’s Turtle – COMPLETED

Follow this interactive story based on the remarkable journey of Bella the Blanding’s turtle as she makes her way through the challenges of life on the Carp Barrens. Great for reptile and amphibian lovers of all ages!

Eastern Whip-poor-will in the Carp Hills copyright Anne Wong

Night Song: Whip-poor-will Enchantment – COMPLETED

Not all creatures on the Barrens sleep at night. The whip-poor-will is a nocturnal bird species, which has long been the subject of myth and lore due to its ties to the lunar cycle. Follow along with this interactive webinar to learn more about this mysterious species!


About Our Webinar Host – Kasia Majewski

Kasia is an Environmental Biologist with a focus on Entomology, Herpetology and public engagement in science. Originally from Saskatoon, her passion for conservation, research, and public outreach has taken her from the Vancouver Aquarium and Science World, to working in rural Japan for the Japanese Government, to research in a tropical rainforest in South East Asia.  

After completing her Masters of Research in Biosciences through Cardiff University in Wales with a project examining the diversity of prey associated with Asian Water Monitor Lizards in Malaysian Borneo, Kasia found her way to Manchester, England. Here she worked as an Assistant Curator at Manchester Museum as part of the University of Manchester, for a living herpetological collection comprising of some of the worlds most rare and endangered frogs.

After spending the past three years in Manchester, Kasia recently returned to Canada in the autumn of 2020, to rejoin her family and take up residence near the beautiful Carp Hills. Kasia has enjoyed exploring the unique connections communities around the world have to their local environment, and how landscapes have ultimately shaped how people live their lives and perceive the world. In her spare time, she enjoys exploring her biology based creative projects, including the development of natural textile dyes using plants and fungi found on her property. Excited to contribute to the conservation efforts in the Carp Hills, she hopes to engage audiences within the local and wider community by connecting them to their beautifully unique and diverse local landscape.

Carp Hills Webinars

Our Carp Hills Sustainability Series:

Learn about the Carp Hills in four upcoming webinars with a sustainability theme. Three are interactive and family-friendly, with multiple choice questions and gentle guidance by our host, Kasia Majewski. Great for kids and adults. All webinars will be run on Zoom.

  1. The Carp Barrens: A Natural History – Free
  2. The Living Barrens: Plant Life & Textile Dye Workshop
  3. Turtle Tales: Life of a Blanding’s Turtle
  4. Night Song: Whip-poor-will Enchantment

The three family webinars are fundraisers for our organization.

  • Members: $5 each or $12 for all three.
  • Non-Members:  $10 each or $25 for all three.

The cost is a small amount for fun and informative entertainment about a unique and local natural area.

The Crazy Horse Trail has been a popular refuge for physical and mental renewal during the pandemic.  It costs money to keep it in good condition.  We’ve added boardwalks to deal with erosion and signs to help direct and inform people who are new the trail.  Ongoing work will be needed.


Carp Barrens in the Carp Hills

The Carp Barrens – A Natural History

  • Date: 23 February, Tuesday, 7pm.
  • Free, but you must register ahead of time.

Discover the special ecology of the Carp Barrens as we bring together information from many sources, including the Carp Barrens Trail Study. You will learn about its Canadian Shield geology and how this shapes the landscape and the plants and animals that call it home. We will also review the conservation measures taken to protect the area and future plans for the trail that promote sustainable use.


Register for one or two of our remaining interactive, family-friendly Sustainability Series. Great for kids and adults. Pay online via e-transfer or PayPal.

Pink Lady's Slipper Orchid in the Carp Hills

The Living Barrens: Plant Life & Textile Dye Workshop – COMPLETED

The plants found in the Carp Hills shape both the wildlife and human community found here, but now many species are threatened by being trampled away. Learn how to tread lightly in this unique environment, and explore uses of modern plants through this first webinar in our family-friendly Sustainability Series. This session will include a guide for how to create your very own environmentally conscious textile dye using only plant parts and ingredients already found in your kitchen! 

Blanding's turtle in the Carp Hills

Turtle Tales: Life of a Blanding’s Turtle

A warm summer’s day on a beaver pond can seem inviting to all who visit here, but for local wildlife residents, life in the wild can be fraught with challenges. Follow the incredible journey of Bella the Blanding’s turtle alongside other reptile and amphibian species, as she fights for the opportunity to lay her eggs and survive in the Carp Barrens. This interactive webinar about this special Species at Risk is our second installment in the Sustainability Series. A perfect session for aspiring herpetologists of all ages!

Watch the webinar video.

Eastern Whip-poor-will in the Carp Hills copyright Anne Wong

Night Song: Whip-poor-will Enchantment

Life on the Carp Barrens continues into the darkness of night, though we may not be around to see, or hear it. Due to their haunting songs and nocturnal nature, which also follows the lunar calendar, whip-poor-wills have long been the subject of myths and legends in all areas of the world where they are found. This interactive webinar, the third and final in our Sustainability Series, follows this fascinating Species at Risk through the eyes of a newly hatched whip-poor-will, fondly named Wendell, as he begins his life, and the challenges that come with it, on the Carp Barrens.


About Our Webinar Host – Kasia Majewski

Kasia is an Environmental Biologist with a focus on Entomology, Herpetology and public engagement in science. Originally from Saskatoon, her passion for conservation, research, and public outreach has taken her from the Vancouver Aquarium and Science World, to working in rural Japan for the Japanese Government, to research in a tropical rainforest in South East Asia.  

After completing her Masters of Research in Biosciences through Cardiff University in Wales with a project examining the diversity of prey associated with Asian Water Monitor Lizards in Malaysian Borneo, Kasia found her way to Manchester, England. Here she worked as an Assistant Curator at Manchester Museum as part of the University of Manchester, for a living herpetological collection comprising of some of the worlds most rare and endangered frogs.

After spending the past three years in Manchester, Kasia recently returned to Canada in the autumn of 2020, to rejoin her family and take up residence near the beautiful Carp Hills. Kasia has enjoyed exploring the unique connections communities around the world have to their local environment, and how landscapes have ultimately shaped how people live their lives and perceive the world. In her spare time, she enjoys exploring her biology based creative projects, including the development of natural textile dyes using plants and fungi found on her property. Excited to contribute to the conservation efforts in the Carp Hills, she hopes to engage audiences within the local and wider community by connecting them to their beautifully unique and diverse local landscape.

Carp Barrens Trail Study Recommendations

The Carp Barrens is beautiful and people are loving it to death.  These recommendations from the Carp Barrens Trail Study, implemented by the City of Ottawa, will help keep the area special for future generations.  It is a small thing to ask people to respect these conservations measures and minimize their impact when enjoying its beauty.
 
  • Close an unauthorized trail on the northern half of the Barrens.
  • Authorize the Carp Barrens Trail on the southern half of the Barrens for pedestrian and mountain bike use only.
  • Reduce the footprint of the Carp Barrens Trail to a single loop with no side trails.
  • Close the trail to all human use from the Tuesday after Victoria Day weekend in May to 15 August to allow ground nesting birds and turtles to reproduce.
  • Better delineate the trail to keep people on the trail and stop wandering off-trail.
  • Prohibit dogs.
  • Limit parking for safety reasons.

In addition, the Friends of the Carp Hills will establish a monitoring plan and program to evaluate the ongoing impact of human use.

To review the options considered and understand the evidence and reasons for the recommendations, please read the Carp Barrens Trail Study.  For a summary of the study, read the final article published in Trail and Landscape magazine:  Environmental Impact Assessment of Trail on the Carp Barrens.  Part 3 of 3.

Decommissioning of Carp Barrens Trail

On October 24 and 25, the Ottawa Mountain Bike Association closed an unauthorized trail constructed on the Carp Barrens and posted signs and information provided by the City of Ottawa. The Carp Barrens Trail Study recommended closure of this trail.

Notice of Trail Closure by the City of Ottawa:

Carp Barrens, Friends of the Carp Hills“The unauthorized trail beyond this sign was constructed on conservation land owned by the City of Ottawa and is hereby closed.
 
The trail has been decommissioned to allow the area to return to a natural state.
 
Closure is required to preserve the high ecological integrity of the area, which is critical habitat for several Species at Risk that are easily disturbed by human activity.  Trail use has already introduced non-native plant species.  The prevalence of black-legged ticks in this area also increases the risk of Lyme disease transmission.
 
Hunting continues to be a permitted activity in accordance with the City’s Discharge of Firearms By-law No. 2002-344 and Provincial regulations.”