Preserved Properties & Conservation Agreements
Edwards Wetland & Sherwoods Bay
In 2004, the Rideau Waterway Land Trust received a valuable donation of a conservation agreement from a very generous woman, Ms. Elizabeth Edwards. The donation is a conservation agreement on 185 acres of land, wetlands and mature forest including 1,600 feet of shoreline on Big Rideau Lake .
Three parcels of land make up this donation. The larger 122 acre parcel consists of a wetland marsh surrounded by a healthy buffer of deciduous forest. The smaller 20 acre parcel consists of a fairly mature, undisturbed deciduous forest typical of the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Forest Region for this part of eastern Ontario .
The third, Sherwoods Bay , is a 40 acre parcel and is considered to be a valuable deciduous forest tract adjoining Big Rideau Lake in the form of a largely undisturbed natural shoreline landscape.
The larger parcel is 122 acres of land in the Portland area. It consists primarily of deciduous forest and wetland. The wetland, which constitutes approximately 40% of this parcel's land base, is a dense, flooded cattail-dominated marsh surrounded by a transition band of Red-Osier Dogwood, Willow and other shrubs, with a slow-flowing stream running through it.
The second, 20 acre parcel, is a beautiful and largely undisturbed area of primarily deciduous woodland dominated by mature Sugar Maples.
Sherwood's Bay is a 40 acre primarily deciduous woodland adjoining Sherwood's Bay on the south west shore of Big Rideau Lake . It is one of the few remaining, highly visible stretches of undeveloped upland forested landscape left on Big Rideau Lake and is thus deserving of continuing protection. The forest is dominated by Sugar Maples, but you'll also find Ironwoods, American Elm, and Hemlocks.
This conservation agreement was donated under the Ecological Gifts Program, a national program administered by Environment Canada. The Rideau Waterway Land Trust is a qualified recipient of donations of land and conservation agreements under this program. All properties or conservation agreements donated under this program must meet national criteria for ecological importance. Having met these criteria, Ms. Edwards' land is considered to have national ecological significance.


