In the past the
Orillia Naturalists’ Club often visited the road, which
follows the Black River, past Cooper’s Falls, to
Victoria Bridge.
More recently it became an ATV and campers paradise, with all the
attendant garbage and land destruction. However in 2006
it became Queen Elizabeth II Park. People were hired to carry out
truckloads of garbage, and no overnight camping rules
were enforced.
The Queen Elizabeth II Wildlands
Provincial Park is a provincial park, between
Gravenhurst and
Minden.
The park, named for
Elizabeth II,
Queen of Canada, is 33,505 hectares in size, making
it the second largest park south of
Algonquin Park , but it has a fragmented shape as a
result of many private lands within its boundary.
Access is difficult in many areas because of private
land.
It was originally known as Dalton Digby Wildlands
Provincial Park, after the two townships it encompassed.
The park is one of the
largest and least developed natural areas south of Algonquin Park. The
park has a low rolling
topography which includes organic soils,
flat sandy deposits, wetlands, bare bedrock plain and bare bedrock uplands
with shallow soil patches, characterized
by numerous rock ridges, including scenic cliffs and gorges, separating
dozens of small lakes, rivers and streams.
Our club decided to
visit again.
Donald Macdonald
and Ray Kiff made a scouting visit, and found a culvert,
difficult to traverse, but possible, with a high
clearance vehicle.
A second scouting trip, with Gord Michener (the trip
leader), accompanying Donald Macdonald, found the road
washed out and
impassable, and a black bear patrolling the washout.
Donald submitted
these photos of the bear, and a bug free
fall trip is planned.