ECO-PARK COMING TO LIFE
Two properties recently bought for $1.7M in east Dundas helping park come to life
THE COOTES to Escarpment EcoPark is starting to live up to its name.
Conservationists have worked for a decade on the dream of linking thousands of hectares of protected green space between the Niagara Escarpment and Cootes Paradise’s recovering wetlands into a massive urban “eco-park.”
But the ambitious effort started with a big “hole in the doughnut” bordered by the curving limestone spine of the escarpment and the forested fringe of Cootes owned by the Royal Botanical Gardens, acknowledged natural lands head Tys Theysmeyer.
For decades developers wanted to build in that doughnut — known by locals and builders as Pleasant View — spurring environmental protests and a pivotal Ontario Municipal Board battle that ended in 1995 with the OMB ruling one home could be built per 10 hectares. Pleasant View became part of the Greenbelt in 2005.
Now, the hole is starting to visibly fill in with green space — on the map and in person — after the December purchase of two critical properties in Dundas. This past weekend, volunteers started renaturalizing a half-kilometre section of two brooks, Mink and Hickory, that get their start on one of the properties near York and Valley roads.
That included seeding grasses and wildflowers and planting some 2,500 or so shrubs on a farm that will eventually revert to naturalized meadow. In the short term, the doughnut-filling 20-hectare property helps directly connect Cootes Paradise marsh to the Cartwright Nature Sanctuary on the escarpment.
“The linkages are exciting be--
cause we’re immediately improving the prospects for wildlife and threatened species as well as the creeks that run through to Cootes or the harbour,” said Theysmeyer.
“You may never visit one of (the properties) but they will be working from now on to clean the water that ends up in the harbour.”
The $1.7-million purchase of the two properties, originally listed for millions more, took two years to negotiate and involved a laundry list of partners including municipalities, conservation authorities, the RBG, the Hamilton Naturalists’ Club, Friends of the Greenbelt and the Hamilton Community Foundation. While the deal is done, the fundraising is not.
“We’re actively seeking donations, and not just for this property,” said land securement co-ordinator Jen Baker, who estimates almost half of the purchase price still needs to be raised. “This is a long-term project for everyone.”
Interested residents can donate money or even land to the cause, and more than a few have in the last few years, including the namesakes for the new Eileen and John Holland Nature Sanctuary on Old York Road in Burlington.
Both Hamilton and Halton Region have officially asked the province to pursue “special purpose” legislation to recognize and protect the park. But the plan is not to acquire every scrap of land under the Mountain between Cootes and Burlington, emphasized David Galbraith, the RBG’s head of science. He pointed out the area is filled with homes and businesses. “People live here, more people will come here in the future — we don’t want to stop that,” he said. “But we are hoping to work with those folks where possible to ensure the ecology is respected.”
The project has a “stewardship technician” who will offer workshops and visit homeowners interested in habitat restoration and financial incentives.
“The linkages are exciting because we’re immediately improving the prospects for wildlife and threatened species.” TYS THEYSMEYER RBG, HEAD, NATURAL LANDS