Landowner Rights & Trail User Responsibilities

The Waskahegan Trail is a unique resource that exists only because of the generosity of landowners. Before you set foot on the trail:

  1. Know the landowner rights and the trail user responsibilities.
  2. Check the trail conditions

Symphony of Birds

Everyone agrees that when it comes to music, nothing beats a live performance. It’s even more true when it comes to bird sounds.

As the sixteen of us walked the 5 km stretch along Saunders Lake, we listened to the distinctive and familiar calls of red-winged blackbirds, Canada geese, ducks, and gulls. Those were the sounds we knew.  Or as Gail described it, the “vocal conversation.”

There were many more bird calls that were not so familiar.

The first unusual birds we saw were several pairs of black and white ducks. These turned out to be the tufted duck (Aythya fuligula), which are increasing in numbers.Tufted duck, Saunders lake

Next, we watched an American eagle soar and then land in its huge nest across the lake.

While we rested under the still-leafless trees, swallows swooped in overhead. Jerry pointed out the sound of sandhill cranes high above us, but most of us we were too comfortable eating our lunches, or engaged in conversation, to get up and have a look.

A red-tailed hawk screeched at us as we headed back.

The total hike was around 10 km.

View our pictures on Flickr

Saunders Lake Hike group

Up and Down We Worked the Battle River Trails

Three crews went out to work the Battle River trails. Four people went to the end of East Battle from RR 210 to the end of the tableland we chained, clipped, signed and carted wood from a stile we dismantled and redistributed it over wet areas.

We even stopped to smell the crocuses and have lunch!

Adding a boardwalk on the Waskahegan Trail
Two crew met with a nearby landowner and built a new boardwalk near A60.

Three others went from A56 to A57 Battle Gwynee going  one way chaining, signing, clipping, mending stiles and repurposing some old lumber making a bridge over a little creek in the valley between two hills.

A well deserved break; Coffee was in Camrose.