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Skead Road BARK LAKE $16900000.00 +HST
® Skead Road BARK LAKE $16,900,000.00 +HST [email protected] MLS® K19007540 ACREAGE WATERFRONT TAXES PROPERTY TYPE ≈ 1644.46 ACRES ≈ 3.4 km ≈ $19,000 / 2019 MULTI-LOT SUBDIVISION MUNICIPALITY ZONING ACCESS SITE IMPROVEMENTS BARRY’S BAY RU / RT-E20 / MUNICIPAL ROAD VACANT LAND MADAWASKA VALLEY FLOODED AREA Bark Lake, Barry's Bay, Ontario 3.4 kilometers of quality shoreline and 1600 acres of wilderness which abut several thousand acres of crown land. Big western views across this large lake. The lake is 2.5 kilometers wide, 14 kilometers long and is 90 % crown land. Exquisite waterfront estate property to be owned by a group or become the Developer with an incredible opportunity. The subject property consists of 24 individually titled parcels located on and near Bark Lake in Madawaska Valley in Eastern Ontario. The lands form part of a multi-phase, multi-use recreational subdivision. Phase 2 is a draft plan approved with 23 interior lots. Concept plan available for remaining phases or develop your dream! Contact brokerage for further details. Separate offerings are available. East on Hwy 401 from Toronto, North on Hwy 115, east on Highway 7, North on 28 to DIRECTIONS Bancroft, North on 62 to Barry's Bay, Left on 60, left on Skead Rd. Approx. 3.5 hours from Toronto LEGAL DESCRIPTION Contact Brokerage for Detailed Legal Description LISTING BROKERAGE Lake District Realty Corporation, Brokerage - THE WATERFRONT COMPANY™ SALESPERSON Joel Gray, Broker of Record SB COMM 0.5 % Lake District Realty Corporation gathers data from Vendors Disclosure Forms and other public sources for your information. -
Algonquins of Ontario
Algonquins of Ontario Friday, October 11, 2019 Changes to the 2019 – 2020 Algonquin Park Harvest Area Pembroke, ON – For many years, the annual Algonquins of Ontario harvest of moose, deer and elk has been managed pursuant to management plans developed by the Algonquin Negotiation Representatives (ANRs). These management plans establish the process of issuing tags to eligible Algonquin harvesters, the species that can be harvested, the season during which harvesting shall occur and the Harvest Area within which harvesting may take place. They also provide for reporting and monitoring of harvesting activities. These management plans have resulted in responsible and well-managed Algonquin harvesting for many years. In the past, Algonquin harvesting of moose and deer as well as the harvesting of other species of game normally taken for food in Algonquin Park has been restricted to the area within Wildlife Management Unit (WMU) 51 and to the east of Shirley Lake Road. For the 2019-2020 harvest season, the Algonquins of Ontario have decided that this area is now expanded to include that portion of Algonquin Park that lies within WMU 51, both east and west of Shirley Lake Road, north of the Hwy 60 Corridor Development Zone and within the Algonquin of Ontario Settlement Area. This decision has been taken after a great deal of consideration and is the result of anticipated increased harvesting by members of the Métis Nation of Ontario pursuant to arrangements made with the government of Ontario that have been challenged in court by the Algonquins of Ontario. In recent years moose populations in certain Wildlife Management Units have declined significantly, coinciding with increased harvesting by self-identified Métis harvesters. -
An Assessment of the Groundwater Resources of Northern Ontario
Hydrogeology of Ontario Series (Report 2) AN ASSESSMENT OF THE GROUNDWATER RESOURCES OF NORTHERN ONTARIO AREAS DRAINING INTO HUDSON BAY, JAMES BAY AND UPPER OTTAWA RIVER BY S. N. SINGER AND C. K. CHENG ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND REPORTING BRANCH MINISTRY OF THE ENVIRONMENT TORONTO ONTARIO 2002 KK PREFACE This report provides a regional assessment of the groundwater resources of areas draining into Hudson Bay, James Bay, and the Upper Ottawa River in northern Ontario in terms of the geologic conditions under which the groundwater flow systems operate. A hydrologic budget approach was used to assess precipitation, streamflow, baseflow, and potential and actual evapotranspiration in seven major basins in the study area on a monthly, annual and long-term basis. The report is intended to provide basic information that can be used for the wise management of the groundwater resources in the study area. Toronto, July 2002. DISCLAIMER The Ontario Ministry of the Environment does not make any warranty, expressed or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed in this report. Reference therein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the ministry. KKK TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 2. INTRODUCTION 7 2.1 LOCATION OF THE STUDY AREA 7 2.2 IMPORTANCE OF SCALE IN HYDROGEOLOGIC STUDIES 7 2.3 PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THE STUDY 8 2.4 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE GROUNDWATER RESOURCES 8 2.5 PREVIOUS INVESTIGATIONS 9 2.6 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 13 3. -
Cultural Heritage Evaluation Report
20 April 2012 CULTURAL HERITAGE EVALUATION REPORT Deloro Mine Site Township of Marmora and Lake County of Hastings, Ontario Submitted to: Ms. Patti Doan, Deloro Contract Specialist Ontario Ministry of the Environment Program Services Section 1259 Gardiners Road, Unit 3, PO Box 22032 Kingston, Ontario K7M 8S5 Tel: (613) 540-6827 Fax: (613) 548-6908 REPORT Report Number: 11-1126-0037-4000-R06 Distribution: 6 Copies & 1 PDF - Ontario Ministry of the Environment FINAL 1 Copy & 1 CD - Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport 1 Copy - Era Architects 1 Copy - Ecoplans 1 Copy - Maltby & Associates Inc. 3 copies - Golder Associates Ltd. CULTURAL HERITAGE EVALUATION REPORT DELORO MINE SITE, COUNTY OF HASTINGS Project Personnel Project Director Hugh Daechesel, M.A. Project Manager Helen Moore, B.A. Industrial Archaeologists Christopher Andreae, Ph.D., Bode Morin, Ph.D., Jeff Earl Field Staff Marcus Létourneau, Ph.D., Meaghan Rivard, M.A. Project Researcher Christopher Andreae, Ph.D., Meaghan Rivard, M.A. Report Production Christopher Andreae, Ph.D., Meaghan Rivard, M.A., Stacey Carson Geographic Imaging and Drafting Dave Hoskings Administrative Support Stacey Carson, Candice Butler Senior Review Hugh Daechesel, M.A., Principal, Senior Archaeologist Health and Safety Inspector Mario Gervais Ecoplans: Senior Ecologist William Draper Senior Landscape Architect Shannon Baker, OALA, CAPH 20 April 2012 Report No. 11-1126-0037-4000-R06 i CULTURAL HERITAGE EVALUATION REPORT DELORO MINE SITE, COUNTY OF HASTINGS ERA Architects: Principal, Architect Edwin Rowse Project Architect Lindsay Reed Maltby & Associates Inc.: Conservator Susan Maltby Acknowledgments Ontario Ministry of the Environment Proponent Contacts Heather Hawthorne, Communications Advisor Patti Doan, Contract Specialist Jim Rodgers, Ontario Clean Water Agency Community Archives, City of Sharon White, MISt Belleville, County of Hastings in partnership with the Hastings County Historical Society Marmora & Lake Public Library Tammie Adams Marmora Historical Society Cathie Jones 20 April 2012 Report No. -
Petition to List US Populations of Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser Fulvescens)
Petition to List U.S. Populations of Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) as Endangered or Threatened under the Endangered Species Act May 14, 2018 NOTICE OF PETITION Submitted to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on May 14, 2018: Gary Frazer, USFWS Assistant Director, [email protected] Charles Traxler, Assistant Regional Director, Region 3, [email protected] Georgia Parham, Endangered Species, Region 3, [email protected] Mike Oetker, Deputy Regional Director, Region 4, [email protected] Allan Brown, Assistant Regional Director, Region 4, [email protected] Wendi Weber, Regional Director, Region 5, [email protected] Deborah Rocque, Deputy Regional Director, Region 5, [email protected] Noreen Walsh, Regional Director, Region 6, [email protected] Matt Hogan, Deputy Regional Director, Region 6, [email protected] Petitioner Center for Biological Diversity formally requests that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“USFWS”) list the lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) in the United States as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), 16 U.S.C. §§1531-1544. Alternatively, the Center requests that the USFWS define and list distinct population segments of lake sturgeon in the U.S. as threatened or endangered. Lake sturgeon populations in Minnesota, Lake Superior, Missouri River, Ohio River, Arkansas-White River and lower Mississippi River may warrant endangered status. Lake sturgeon populations in Lake Michigan and the upper Mississippi River basin may warrant threatened status. Lake sturgeon in the central and eastern Great Lakes (Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River basin) seem to be part of a larger population that is more widespread. -
2016 Flood Forecasting & Warning Program
2016 Flood Forecasting and Warning Program For more information: www.quinteconservation.ca (613) 968-3434 or (613) 354-3312 RR 2, 2061 Old Highway 2 • Belleville, ON • K8N 4Z2 CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION 3 1.1 Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act 4 2.0 ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF AGENCIES 5 2.1 Municipal Role 5 2.1.1 Sandbags 5 2.2 Conservation Authority Role 6 2.2.1 Data Collection and Assessment 6 2.3 Provincial Role (Surface Water Monitoring Centre) 7 3.0 FLOOD MESSAGES 9 3.1 TYPES OF FLOOD MESSAGES 10 3.1.1 Water Safety Statement 10 3.1.2 Flood Outlook Statement 10 3.1.3 Flood Watch 10 3.1.4 Flood Warning 10 4.0 FLOOD RESPONSE PROCEDURES 11 4.1 ComMunications and Operations Related to Municipal Emergency Operations Centres 11 5.0 WHERE TO ORDER SAND BAGS 12 6.0 QUINTE CONSERVATION CONTACT INFORMATION 13 6.1 Flood Coordinators 13 6.2 McLeod Dam Operator 13 6.3 Flood Communications 14 Page 1 of 26 7.0 DATA COLLECTION SITES 15 7.1 Moira River Watershed 15 7.2 Napanee River Watershed 15 7.3 Prince Edward County Watershed 15 8.0 EXTREME EVENTS IN QUINTE 22 8.1 Moira River 22 8.2 Salmon River 23 8.3 Napanee River 24 9.0 HIGH RISK AREAS FOR MUNICIPALITIES 25 9.1 Moira RIver Watershed 25 9.2 Napanee Region Watershed 25 9.3 Prince Edward Region Watershed 26 There is a map at the back of this booklet showing high risk flood areas. -
Quinte Region Water Budget, and to Initiate Discussions About Drought Management Plans
1 | P a g e Summary Planning for drought in Ontario has become of increasing concern due to the recurrence of droughts, increased development pressure, and anticipated impacts from climate change. Previous work by Quinte Conservation has identified the region to be vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Some of this vulnerability can be attributed to the high percentage of Quinte Region residents (50 percent of the population) that rely on private wells for water supply. These wells are supplied by a shallow fractured bedrock aquifer with low storage capacity requiring regular replenishment from precipitation to maintain adequate levels of supply. In 2016, a widespread historic drought was experienced in the Quinte Conservation watershed and across Eastern Ontario. During this event, groundwater levels and wells experienced historically low levels with many residents’ wells running dry. Farmers struggled to find alternative supplies to sustain crops and livestock, rural fire protection sources dried up, and low river levels resulted in damaged fish habitat. Municipalities that rely 100 percent on private wells had difficulty obtaining alternative sources of water for their residents. Learning from the 2016 experience, Quinte Conservation recognized the need to develop a drought management plan that would help local municipalities mitigate and adapt to drought. With the support of municipalities within its watershed, Quinte Conservation obtained funding through the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM). This funding has been used to improve monitoring to deal with drought, assess the potential impacts of climate change, and prepare the following as a drought management plan. This plan provides an overview of the background information about the Quinte watershed and past impacts from drought. -
2019 Ontario Fishing Regulations Summary
130 18 PPetawawaetawawa ! . HHawkesburyawkesbury !(! R ! PPembrokeembroke wa ta Ot AALGONQUINLGONQUIN :;417 Rockland ! 41 18 Fisheries ManagementZone 17 Ontario Portion of Boundary 89 l a 89 i the Ottawa River c ! n Orléans i v o ! r 60 ! VVanieranier AAlexandrialexandria PProvincial Boundary Eganville ! ! 89 ! 1122 RRenfrewenfrew Arnprior! OOttawattawa Casselman ! B FFITZROYI A TZ ! N R C O KKanataanata BBarry'sarry's it MMCNAB Y ! h eL BBayay 132 BAGOT W . 138 1155 :; 417 ! :; :; Nepean LLancasterancaster! BROUGHAM Calabogie GRIFFITH ! BLITHFIELD PAKENHAM S. Nation R. Lake Saint LLYNDOCH Y !Almonte 401 N Francis D O :; Township C Carleton Winchester CCornwallornwall H ! ! BoundaryDARLING Place ! 28 ! MATAWATCHAN NORTH DENBIGH Slate 7 89 CANONTO Mississippi KKemptvilleemptville!(! Falls Township LAVANT 89 ASHBY Lake R. MILLER SOUTH u a Legend Boundary e MMorrisburgorrisburg MAYO CANONTO id ! BBancroftancroft ABINGER Smiths R 416 ! !(! Settlement EFFINGHAM Falls :; ! ! 28 41 ippi R. !( CASHEL siss PPertherth MNRF District Office 89 62 89 Mis 89 LLIMERICK 1188 I . M R Major Road E e R Big Rideau c WOLLASTON I PPrescottrescott n C BON ! e K Lake r Major Railway GRIMSTHORPE ECHO w ! La CHANDOS t SSharbotharbot 401 in Zone Boundary Township a 7 LLakeake 15 S TUDOR NNewboroewboro :; Boundary 89 ! 89 BBrockvillerockville ! Major Lake LAKE Charleston 46 ! Protected Area Fishing Regulations Summary2019 DE Kaladar Lake METHUEN Ontario Portion of the St. Lawrence PUZZLE V a River and Lake n Cordo LAKE R v 2200 s a d i Madoc . c R ! k TTweedweed Saint Francis l d ! e ! . MMarmoraarmora GGananoqueananoque 7 37 ! ! 89 Kingston ! HHavelocka89velock 14 DE 62 . 89 401 R t CCampbellfordam! pbellford ! :; n ! e ! r Stirling TTrent R. -
LAKE OPEONGO the Ecology of the Fish Community and of Man’S Effects on It
LAKE OPEONGO The Ecology of the Fish Community and of Man’s Effects on It N. V. MARTIN Research Branch Ontario Department of Lands and Forests Maple, Ontario, Canada and F. E. J. FRY Department of Zoology Ramsay Wright Zoological Laboratories University of Toronto Toronto, Ontario, Canada TECHNICAL REPORT No. 24 GREAT LAKES FISHERY COMMISSION 1451 Green Road P. 0. Box 640 Ann Arbor, Michigan March, 1973 FOREWORD This paper is one of seven lake case histories-Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Opeongo, and Lake Kootenay. Concise versions of these papers, together with other lake case histories developed for and by an international symposium on Salmonid Communities in Oligotrophic Lakes (SCOL) appeared in a special issue of the Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (Vol. 29, No. 6, June, 1972). While this and each of the others in this series is complete in itself, it should be remembered that each formed a part of SCOL and is supplemented by the others. Because much detail of interest to fisheries workers in the Great Lakes area would not otherwise be available, this and the other case histories revised and refined in the light of events at the symposium are published here. SCOL symposium was a major exercise in the synthesis of existing knowledge. The objective was to attempt to identify the separate and joint effects of three major stresses imposed by man: cultural eutrophication, exploitation, and species introduction on fish communities. Recently glaciated oligotrophic lakes were chosen as an “experimental set.” Within the set were lakes which have been free of stresses, lakes which have been subjected to one stress, and lakes which have been subjected to various combinations of stresses. -
AOO Settlement Area Harvest
Wicksteed Lake Lac du Goéland 40 LA SALLE WYSE Lac Smith Marten Lake MCAUSLAN North Spruce Lake Lac du Pin Blanc Poplar LakeHAMMELL GARROWCLARKSON Lac Ramé Lac Bruce Lac Sept Milles Bear Lake OSBORNE POITRAS Lac des Cornes Tilden Lake Map A Lac– Vaucour AOO Settlement Area Harvest Map Lac Saint-Paul Lac des Sables LOCKHART Lac Curières LYMAN NOTMANSTEWART JOCKO EDDY Lac Mosquic Tomiko Lake Lac Nilgaut Lac Barton MERRICK Lac Marin Lac Caugnawana CHARLTONBLYTH Lac Royal Lac des Mocassins MULOCKFRENCHBUTLERANTOINE Lac Maganasipi 41 Lac la Cave Lac Brodtkorb Lac en Croix Lac Gauvin Lac Forbes BEAUCAGE 41 Lac Lamb COMMANDA Lac Resolin Lac Quinn WIDDIFIELD PHELPS Legend OLRIG Lac Murray HWY 17 MATTAWAN Lac à la Tortue Lac McCracken Trout Lake Mattawa Lac Saint-Patrice Lake Talon (lac Talon) Algonquins of Ontario Settlement Area Boundary 42 HWY 17 Lac Dodd Lake Nipissing (lac Nipissing) Rutherglen Lac Duval Lac Wright BONFIELD Lac Schyan FERRIS CALVIN PAPINEAU Deux-Rivières Grand lac des Cèdres Lake Nosbonsing (lac Nosbonsing) Holden Lake Algonquin Park HarvestLac Area Montjoie Stonecliffe Lac Désert Astorville CAMERON CLARA Lac de la Mer Bleue LAUDER Lac Blue Sea Lac Chapleau Wasi Lake (lac Wasi) Rolphton NIPISSING 48 MARIA Harvest Area for Elk BOULTER HEAD CHISHOLM Kiosk BOYD Restoule Lake Lac Galarneau Kioshkokwi Lake ROLPH Deep River Lac Cayamant Lac Marie-Le Franc Commanda Lake PENTLAND FITZGERALD Lac Jim Wildlife Management Unit (WMU) WILKES DEACON Mountain View HIMSWORTH Manitou Lake Carl Wilson Lake Lac McGillivray 47 Cedar Lake BRONSON -
Map 21 Land Use
292,000 312,000 332,000 352,000 372,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 , , 0 0 8 Townships of Tudor & Cashel 8 9 9 , , 4 4 Township of North Frontenac 0 0 0 0 0 0 , , 0 0 6 6 9 9 , , 4 Townships of Tudor & Cashel Township of Addington Highlands 4 TOWNSHIP OF CENTRAL FRONTENAC 38 0 0 0 Municipality of Tweed 0 0 0 , , 0 0 4 Township of Madoc 4 9 9 , , 4 4 7 41 Madoc Township of South Frontenac Tweed Township of Stone Mills 0 0 0 0 0 0 , Municipality of Centre Hastings , 0 0 2 2 9 9 , , 4 4 Township of Stirling-Rawdon 37 14 Township of Tyendinaga Town of Greater Napanee Loyalist Township 0 Napanee 0 0 City of Belleville 0 0 0 , , 0 0 0 0 9 401 9 , , 4 4 Town of Deseronto City of Quinte West Deseronto Belleville 2 Legend 62 0 0 0 Agriculture 0 0 0 , , 0 0 8 8 8 8 , City Business District , 4 4 Commercial County of Prince Edward Flood Picton Bloomfield Community Facility 33 Residential Wellington Industrial Industrial railway allowance Ministry aggriculture 0 Mineral Aggregate 0 0 0 0 0 , , 0 Recreation Commercial 0 6 6 8 8 , 1:375,000 , 4 Lake Ontario 4 Rural 0 2.5 5 10 Kilometers Open Space 292,000 312,000 332,000 352,000 372,000 Legend Highway 401 Rivers County Boundaries Populated Areas d x m . 6 0 V _ e s U d n a L _ 1 Highways Lakes Township Boundaries Quinte Region 2 _ # p a M C Moira River, Napanee Region and Prince Edward Region Watersheds. -
Lake Management Plan (2013)
A Lake and Watershed Management Plan For Koshlong Lake (Commemorating the KLA 50 th Anniversary) KLA Lake Management Plan (2013) Lake Plan Index Chapter 1 Introduction ............................................................................................ 7 1.1 The Purpose and Scope of the Koshlong Lake Management Plan (KLMP) .. 8 1.2 Planning Approach ........................................................................................ 9 1.3 Information Sources and Support ................................................................ 11 1.4 Lake Plan Structure ..................................................................................... 12 1.5 Special Thanks ............................................................................................ 12 Chapter 2 Vision, Principles and Targets .............................................................. 13 2.1 Vision and Mandate .................................................................................... 13 2.2 Objectives and Targets ............................................................................... 14 2.3 Observations – Objectives & Targets .......................................................... 16 Chapter 3 Lake Description .................................................................................. 17 3.1 The Name Koshlong Lake ........................................................................... 17 3.2 Native History of Koshlong Lake ................................................................. 17 3.3 The Early Stages of