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Parts of Community Foundation Preserve
at Eagle Point, which is home to American Bald Eagles, will be open to visitors
during this winter’s eagle nesting season (January 2-July 1*). This MetroPark is
located off of SR 6 (Cleveland Road) between Sandusky and Huron.
The
accessible areas are near Cleveland Road, including the South Meadow, Stockdale
Arboretum and nearby trails, drives and parking lots. All of these areas
will be open from 8 am to dark daily. Gates located at the entrances on
Cleveland Road are open during these times.
Erie
MetroParks and the Eagle Protection Task Force jointly devised a plan to expand
public access to during the nesting season while continuing to protect the
breeding habitat of the eagles by following state and federal land use
guidelines.
Similar to past access plans, this year's schedule is effective through July 1, 2008. For more information,
contact Erie MetroParks at (419) 625-7783 or
DiscoverIt@eriemetroparks.org.
*Subject to change
By regulating
public access during the nesting season, Erie MetroParks is helping protect the
breeding habitat of the eagles by following state and federal land use
guidelines. During that sensitive time, the eagles don’t seem to mind the
nearby trains, planes and automobiles, but they are often easily disturbed by
humans simply walking near their nest.
When the Preserve is open to public use,
visitors are requested to stay on marked trails and avoid producing loud sounds
which might disturb newly fledged eaglets.
Very little of the
original North Coast of Ohio remains in an undeveloped state today. As the once
expansive coastal wetlands continue to disappear in the face of encroaching
development the preservation of these natural features becomes more critical. In
a collaborative effort to preserve the largest remaining unprotected naturally
functioning freshwater coastal marsh in Ohio, private landowners, the
Sandusky/Erie County Community Foundation, Trust for Public Land, and other
private foundations assisted Erie MetroParks in acquiring Community Foundation
Preserve at Eagle Point in 2003, the first of 1,200 acres of Lake Erie
coastlands that is now collectively known as the East Sandusky Bay Preserve MetroPark. |