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Set #20 Hemlock Bluff Trail**

Set #20 Hemlock Bluff TrailThis set contains one of each of the following:

HEMLOCK BLUFF TRAIL GUIDE
Research in Algonquin (3.5 km)
Located 27.2 km from the West Gate or 28.8 km from the East Gate along highway 60.
Numbered sections of text in this guide correspond to numbered posts along the trail.
The Hemlock Bluff Trail is a 3.5 km loop trail that takes you through a typical west side Algonquin forest. the trail features fine stands of hemlock and an excellent view of Jack Lake. This trail guide focuses on the important findings gained through the many research programs which have been carried out in Algonquin Provincial Park.

HEMLOCK BLUFF CREST
Take home a souvenir of your Algonquin Park trail visit. Hemlock Bluff Trail represented by an embroidered bird design. Great for your camping jacket or camp blanket. 5.08cm x 5.08cm

J.R. DYMOND
This 61-page softcover book is a biography of John Richardson ("J.R.") Dymond (1887-1965) who had an enormous impact on Algonquin Park.

J.R. Dymond devoted his life to studying the natural world and sharing that knowledge to advance nature protection. Since the early 1930s, he encouraged, initiated, and directed biological studies in Algonquin Park. Motivated by these scientific values, he successfully promoted the idea of nature reserves for ecological research including the founding of the Wildlife Research Station, Ontario Fisheries Research Laboratory (Harkness Laboratory of Fisheries Research), and Swan Lake Forest Research Station. His foresight and determination called for a more protective approach to park management that guided civil servants toward a new back-to-nature policy approach for Algonquin Park in 1954.

Perhaps more importantly, J.R. Dymond founded Algonquin Park's nature interpretation program in 1944. Dymond conducted the first organized nature walks and talks in Algonquin Park and fostered the creation of the first nature museum (a tent at Cache Lake), and later the building of the permanent Algonquin Park Museum (1953-1992). His legacy with the interpretive program in Algonquin Park led to the development of nature interpretation programs in Ontario's other provincial parks, such as Quetico and Rondeau starting in 1946.
J.R. Dymond's impacts on scientific research, nature reserves, and interpretive programming can't be underestimated. For example, Algonquin Park's nature interpretation program started in 1944 with J.R. Dymond as the sole staff member. Today, nature interpretation ("discovery") programs employ 300 staff in more than 70 provincial parks in Ontario.
The Friends of Algonquin Park, a non-profit Canadian registered charity for those passionate about Algonquin Park is pleased to announce the publishing of J.R. Dymond: Scientific Research, Nature Reserves, and the Interpretive Program in Algonquin Provincial Park (1931-1954) by George Warecki to celebrate the 75th anniversary of nature interpretation in Algonquin Park. Warecki. Soft-cover. 61 pages. 2019.

Price: $16.50 $18.68

All prices are in Canadian dollars. All algonquinpark.on.ca prices are applicable to online purchases only.

Please note:
HST (5-15% depending on the Province) will be applied to all orders shipped to addresses in Canada. The exception are items marked with a ** which are only taxed at 5%.