Blue Mountain - Birch Cove Lakes

A wilderness legacy for a growing city

A Wilderness Legacy for a Growing City credit C Miller.JPGPhoto Credit: Chris Miller

Located only minutes from downtown Halifax, the Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes wilderness boasts a wild and rugged landscape covered with magnificent forests, inter-connected lakes, and wetlands.  It’s an outdoor enthusiast’s dream, with incredible hiking opportunities and the only canoe loop near the city where multiple lakes can be paddled in a single day without back-tracking.

Under increasing threat from uncontrolled suburban sprawl, backroom deals to swap and dispose Crown land, and a proposed 4-lane highway, the future of the Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes wilderness was, until very recently, quite bleak.  It was destined to become just another wild place near the city to be devoured by more and more development and poor urban planning.  That is, until the citizens of Halifax and beyond woke up to the problem and, one-by-one, began to stand up and demand that this ecological gem be protected forever, for everyone.

This groundswell of support has helped bring Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes back from the brink of destruction and has resulted in two major commitments to protect the area by two levels of government:

DSCF0117.JPG"A group of outdoor enthusiasts at the top of Blue Mountain Hill, September 2004".  (Photo credit: Raymond Plourde)

 

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Province commits 1350 hectares of public land for protection

In October 2007, the Provincial government committed to protecting 1,350 hectares of public land in the Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes wilderness as a legally-designated protected wilderness area under the Wilderness Areas Protection Act.  This will become one of Canada’s largest near-urban wilderness protected areas and will be twenty times larger than Halifax’s Point Pleasant Park. 

Provincial Commitment

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Halifax Regional Municipality pledges new Regional Park

The Halifax Regional Municipality has committed to acquiring lands adjacent to the Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area for the creation of a new regional park.  This commitment is contained in the policies and bylaws of the comprehensive 25-year Regional Municipal Planning Strategy, approved by Regional Council in August 2006 after several years of public consultation.

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Learn More

What's Been Accomplished

What's Left to Do

How You Can Help (Action Centre)

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