Leeds-Grenville Stewardship Council
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    • Sustainable Forestry >
      • Conservation Lands Partnership
      • Tree Planting
      • Butternut Recovery
      • Butternut Compensation Project
      • Burnbrae Farms Naturalization
    • Healthy Aquatic Ecosystems >
      • Charleston Lake Watershed Stream Restoration Projects
      • Hutton Creek Wetland
      • Partnership with DU to Monitor Marshes
    • Species at Risk >
      • Partnering with Frontenac Arch Biosphere – Family of Nature Camps
      • Species Sightings
      • Gray Ratsnake >
        • Roundtable on Recovery Efforts in the Frontenac Arch
        • Helping meet Species at Risk permit requirements
        • Nesting Box Plans
        • Gray Ratsnake - A Landowner's Guide to Helping it Recover
        • Gray Ratsnake Nesting Box Program Protocol
      • At Risk Turtles >
        • Partnering with Thousand Islands National Park and the Frontenac Arch Biosphere Network
      • Bats
    • Awareness and Education >
      • Wood Working for Wildlife
      • Children's Water Festival
      • Student Bursary
      • Envirothon 2019
      • Partnering with Frontenac Arch Biosphere – Family of Nature Camps
      • 2019Youth Summit for Biodiversity and Environmental Leadership
  • Past Projects
    • Croskery Woodlot – 2007 - Revisited – 2018
    • Leeds Community Pasture - West Pasture
    • Leeds Community Pasture
    • Leeds Community Pasture - East Pasture
    • Bald Eagles
    • Duck Box Construction for Friends of Limerick Forest
    • Water Monitoring on Chippenhook Creek
    • Bellamy To Irish Lake Connectivity Project (Lake to Lake)
    • Managed Forest Tax Incentive
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    • 2011 Canoe Trip
    • 2013 Canoe Trip
    • 2014 Canoe Trip
    • 2016 Canoe Trip
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Partnering with Thousand Islands National Park and the Frontenac Arch Biosphere Network

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In 2019 LGSC partnered with Thousand Islands National Park and Frontenac Arch Biosphere to host a workshop for the public to build nest protection boxes to protect turtle eggs. 

The event was a great success  and received so much public interest that we had to cap our registration early. Members of the public had lots of fun making 45 nest boxes that will be used to protect the eggs of turtles from hyper-abundant nest predators in our area.
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