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Kejimkujik National Park was conventional in 1967 and covers 381 sq kms in the western interior of Nova Scotia. The park is an inland wilderness with forest streams, lakes and islands. The wildlife and flora are plentiful due to the high rainfall in the area, often flooding the streams and lakes in the spring. Glaciers once occupied this area. As they retreated they left behind big granite boulders, shoal soil, and craters where the lakes have formed today. The park makes a wondrous home to beaver (the Canadian National Animal).They build their lodges on the side of the deep waterways. Muskrats live in holes in the riverbank and Otters and Mink are close by, but seldom seen. Other animals regularly seen in the park are Moose, white-tailed deer, hare, black bear, bobcat, fox and porcupine. There are two species of flying squirrels and dozens of mouse, mole and shrew species that are seldom seen. The coyote is a recent arrival, original being seen in the park in 1994. There are increasing numbers of Raccoons that have become a menace to the campgrounds. Turtles nest on the nearby beaches. There are a heap of plants in the Park including 23 species of ferns,15 orchids, approximately 37 aquatic and 90 woody plants. Due to the high rainfall, the forests, bogs and meadows are rich in plant life. In Spring, due to fires and logging, old Bogs are covered with rhodora, bog rosemary, pale laurel and cranberry. About 1/5th of the forest is mixed stands of softwood and hardwood – results of disturbances from fires and logging. This opened up old growth stands, giving white birch and balsam fir a foot hold. Mixed woods host a good deal of wildflower species. Softwood forests are found in the high, drier areas that make up 20% of the park. On the forest floor, ground cover comprises of bracken ferns, blueberry, sheep’s laurel and bunchberry. The earliest inhabitants of the park were Maritime Archaic Indians moving through the area with regards to 4,500 years ago. These nomadic, woodland Indians traveled the inland waterways among the Bay of Fundy and the Atlantic coast, using seasonal campsites along the shores of Kejimkujik’s rivers and lakes. The Park was a natural resource for their descendants, the Micmac, who lived in the area for more than 2,000 years, hunting, fishing and camping along the canoe routes. The Micmac closely disappeared when the Europeans arrived around the 1820′s. Petroglyphs, images inscribed in soft slate, depict the dress, family life and hunting and fishing activenesses of the Micmac culture in the 18th and 19th centuries. They were followed by trappers, loggers and prospectors who employed the area before the innovative day conservationists, who now work to preserve the park and it natural beauty for future generations. The European settlers cultivated the richer soils and farmed closely half the land in the Park. All the parklands were logged at one time. The lakes and rivers provided access to the coastal sawmills. Pits, iron boilers and miners’ cabins now mark where three little gold mines were located in the Park On 22 sq kms of the Port Mouton Peninsula, in regards to 25 kms southwest of Liverpool and 100 kms south of the Kejimkujik inland Park, is the Kejimkujik Seaside Adjunct. This Adjunct is a rocky piece of land along the coast where birds, reptiles and amphibians are abundant. Harbor Seals bask offshore and on the rocks along the coast. The Adjunct was added to the Inland Park in 1988, and represents the least bothered shoreline, coastal constituents of the south coast on Nova Scotia. It features ponds, tidal flats, salt lagoons, secluded coves, salt marsh and two spectacular white sandy beaches. Dense scrub and laurel dominate the coastal tundra-like vegetation. The inland terrain of the Adjunct is rugged with spruce and fir, granite boulders and exposed bedrock carved by glaciation. Boardwalks have been built over the marshy areas. There are approximately 205 bird species including the barred owl, with regards to 20 species of woodland warblers, 6 species of woodpecker, including the big pileated woodpecker and the rare black-backed woodpecker. About ten pairs of piping plovers, considered endangered species since1985, nest within a fenced off area on the beaches among late April and early August. Just one of the some protected species that make up the wealth of birdlife. The fencing protects them, more or less successfully, from raccoons, foxes and other predators that steal their exposed eggs. Kejimkujik is the most primary National Park for reptiles in Atlantic Canada. Five snakes, three turtles, five salamanders, one toad and seven frog species populate the Park. Warm summers and moderate winters account for the abundance and diversity of these species. The Blanding’s turtle was encountered in the park in 1953 and by 1993 it was declared a threatened species in Nova Scotia. The Parks’ ongoing research, monitoring, conservation and shelter attempts are portion of the program to safeguard rare species once widespread in eastern Canada, but now restricted to this area. Both the Kejimkujik Inland Park and the Kejimkujik Seaside Adjunct are outstanding destinations for Tourists. Both offer an abundance of wildlife and flora, along with interpretive centers, canoeing, cycling, picnic areas and campsites. |
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