my-server
← Wiki

FortWhyte Alive

FortWhyte Alive is a reclaimed wildlife preserve, recreation area, and environmental education centre in southwest Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

The park is located along the migratory path of Canadian geese, and is named after the surrounding community of Fort Whyte. , it represents 20% of Winnipeg’s urban green space.

History

The area that now encompasses the present-day space was given the name of Fort Whyte in 1888 by a top official of the Canadian Pacific Railway.

Starting between 1907 and 1912, the Canada Cement Company (later Lafarge) fenced the area off to mine the area for materials. By the 1950s, however, the site became obsolete.

Around this time, the principals of six schools in the Winnipeg Metropolitan Region asked the director of the Science Center of the Winnipeg School Division for assistance in creating a nature trail for children. The Chief of the Manitoba government’s conservation education section reviewed possibilities, then selected Fort Whyte due to its proximity to Winnipeg, comparatively intact woodlands, protection from vandalism, and the presence of lakes that attracted water birds.

In 1955, employees of Canada Cement formed the Lucky 13 Rod & Gun Club to develop a nature trail. The Fort Whyte Waterfowl Sanctuary opened in 1966 and introduced Canada geese and mallards to the site.

The Province of Manitoba would incorporate the Wildlife Foundation of Manitoba that year to operate the facility and "provide facilities and financing for education in the science and art of conservation of wildlife and its habitat." Seeing potential in the old industrial site, they began reclamation work.

In 1974, the Wildlife Foundation developed the site’s first building: the Fort Whyte Nature Centre. This included the Kiwanis Reception Building, as well as a building for waterfowl.

By the 1980s, the organization was replaced by the Fort Whyte Foundation as they shifted their focus from wildlife conservation to environmental education. In the following years, they added new trails, the Fort Whyte Centre for Environmental Education (1983), floating boardwalks (1984), the Kiwanis Touch Museum (1986), beehive interpretive exhibits (1986), and an interpretive aquarium exhibit (1989).

In 2000, Fort Whyte's land base was expanded from to .

Natural features

FortWhyte's of prairie, lakes, forest and wetlands include a bison prairie and related heritage exhibits; more than of interpretive nature trails; a family treehouse, floating boardwalks, and songbirds, deer and waterfowl in their natural habitat.

Activities and amenities

Year-round fishing is available or visitors can enjoy more contemplative pursuits such as canoeing, hiking or bird-watching. Winter offers unique opportunities to enjoy ice fishing, snowshoeing, skating or tobogganing. FortWhyte's lakes, forest and marsh are well travelled, with over 100,000 visitors benefiting from many programs and exhibits annually.

The Alloway Reception Centre offers a broad range of visitor services including The Nature Shop and Buffalo Stone Café.

The Interpretive Centre features exhibits including the Aquarium of the Prairies (Manitoba's largest indoor aquarium), the Prairie Partners Room, the Touch Museum, the Climate Change Greenhouse and Prairie Soils dioramas among other exhibits relating to the environment and sustainable development.

Education

FortWhyte offers curriculum-based educational programs in both French and English to close to 30,000 school children each year; introducing students to the natural world and raising an awareness of their role in sustaining our planet. The FortWhyte Farms initiative allows disadvantaged youth to engage in urban agriculture-based, social and vocational skills training in FortWhyte's beautiful natural setting.

References

Further reading

  • Acorn, John, Alan Smith, and Nicola Koper. 2018. "Beaudry Provincial Park and FortWhyte Alive." Best Places to Bird in the Prairies. Greystone.
  • Gordon, Patrick. 1967 September 16. "Nature: The teacher." Winnipeg Free Press. p. 70.
  • MacDonald, Jake. 2009. The Fort Whyte Story: Human. Nature. Winnipeg: FortWhyte Alive. ISBN 978-0-9813732-0-1.
  • "Wildlife bill moves." Winnipeg Free Press, 1966 March 26. p. 30.

External links