The Conservancy assisted and provided legal support to the Kawartha Field Naturalists and Ontario Nature in 2000 when they added a 456-acre property to the Altberg Nature Reserve.
The Conservancy helped to facilitate the donation of a heritage agreement to the Township of North Kawartha in 1999 that protects the historic 1870s Captain John Clague paintings.
An environmentally significant property that will have limited public access in the future for educational and research purposes. The previous owners continue to live on the property.
A conservation agreement with the landowner ensures the continuing protection of the largest undeveloped island left in Stoney Lake. This private land provides an important habitat stepping stone for wildlife.
A conservation agreement with the landowner ensures the protection in perpetuity of this 100 acre property which includes significant wetland, natural shoreline, forest and meadow.
The owners and the Conservancy are negotiating a conservation agreement to ensure the ongoing preservation of this 240 acre property on the Oak Ridges Moraine.
Extending from the Niagara Escarpment to the Trent River, the Moraine consists of diverse habitats and glacial sand and gravel that filters and recharges much of southern Ontario’s water.
The Conservancy assisted the City of Peterborough in negotiating a conservation agreement to ensure the ongoing preservation of this natural area within the city.
The rich ecological region straddling the Canadian Shield to the north and the St. Lawrence Lowlands to the south, stretching from Georgian Bay to Kingston.
The Conservancy helped local agencies to arrange federal Ecological Gift designation and tax benefits for the private donors of this significant wetland.
In 2002, the Conservancy assisted in the transfer of a forest and wetland property to the Ontario Heritage Foundation, which now jointly manages it with Kawartha Conservation.