Size: 107-acres

Status: Open to the Public, with trails.

Protected: Oct 22, 2012

Donors: Bill & Molly Starr in honour of their late son Kris


Background:

All on this one property, the ecological transition known as The Land Between is fully on display.


Landscape and Species:

    • A small piece of Carden Alvar at the south end;
    • Steep limestone slope created by glaciers;
    • Head River with a mixed forest of oak, line and birch;
    • Mourning Warbler, Red-eyed Vireo and many more;
    • Moose, Black Bear and White-tailed Deer;
    • All on this one property, the ecological transition known as The Land Between is fully on display.
Photo: Dorthea Hangaard
Photo: Ginny Moore
Photo: David J. Hawke
Photo: Joelle Burnie
Photo: Gerry Church
Photo: David J. Hawke

    Photos: David J. Hawke, Gerry Church, Joelle Burnie, Ginny Moore, Dorthea Hangaard

    Visit this Nature Reserve:

    Location & Parking: 17 Turner Road, Sebright. Along County Road 45, also known as Monck Road, between Sebright and Uphill. A management plan has been developed and public access to this reserve is permitted.

    Trail Length: 1.3km
    Trail Type: Out and back
    Estimated time to complete: 20 minutes
    Description: Views of the Head River, mixed forest and wetlands. Please check yourself for ticks.

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    NOTE: hunting can occur at this reserve and the trailheads will be posted with a “No entry” sign when a hunt is in progress.


    Best time to visit: any time. Be prepared for seasonal conditions (mosquitoes in the spring-summer, damp in the spring and fall, etc).



    History

    One of the remarkable aspects of creating nature reserves is how often the people involved are motivated by a desire to remember and honour members of their family. The Kris Starr Sanctuary on Monck Road near Sebright is no exception; for Bill and Molly Starr, this 100-acre reserve is a fitting way to remember their late son Kris, who was only in his twenties when cancer tragically carried him away.

    By all accounts, Kris was a remarkable young man – a wilderness guide in Algonquin, a rising star in lumberjack competitions, a person of a wide diversity of interests and enthusiasms. So, how fitting that the Kris Starr Sanctuary is a property of great natural diversity and fine ecological qualities; acre for acre, likely the most diverse of any Conservancy reserve.

    At its south end, the Sanctuary takes in a small piece of the Carden Alvar, and the steep limestone slope created by the rough caress of the glaciers. At the foot of this slope, the Head River meanders across the reserve, its spring floods nourishing a rich floodplain forest. Beyond that is a band of mixed forest of oak, pine and birch on pockets of drier soils. But the northern half of the Sanctuary, north of Monck Road, is classic granite barrens with scattered trees and a mosaic of beaver ponds and wetlands. All on this one property, the ecological transition known as The Land Between is fully on display.

    As might be expected, such diverse habitats shelter a great diversity of species – moose and bear, otters and weasels, even uncommon insects such as the Clear-winged Sphinx Moth that is often mistaken for a hummingbird. At the landscape level, this property provides a vital link between Queen Elizabeth II Provincial Park just to the north, and the Carden Alvar to the south. The Couchiching Conservancy helps protect more than 6,000 acres of significant land within the Carden area.

    The purchase of this property by the Couchiching Conservancy was made possible by a generous partial donation of its value by the Starr family, and through the support of the federal government’s Natural Areas Conservation Program and Lou and Judy Probst’s Carden Alvar Acquisition Fund. We would also like to thank the Nature Conservancy of Canada for their contribution.