Nature & Discovery.
Owen Point's narrow sand spit projects out into Lake Ontario at the southern tip of Presqu'ile Provincial Park, and through August and early September it pulls in concentrating shorebirds — the August–September peak window of the IBA-designated stopover. Birds funnel along the Lake Ontario north shore on fall migration; Presqu'ile is one of the major stopover points where they pause, feed, and rest before continuing south.
The brief.
The peninsula is divided across four distinct birding habitats: the Marsh Boardwalk through cattail and emergent marsh (waterfowl, marsh birds, accessible 1.2 km loop); the Owen Point sand spit (shorebird concentration August–September; 1.6 km return walk to the viewing area); Presqu'ile Bay itself (waterfowl staging in spring March–April and again October–early December); and the gull-and-tern islands offshore (nesting colony, seasonally restricted access during May–August nesting). Daily vehicle permits apply at Ontario Parks; the park is open year-round but the campground and full programming run roughly mid-May through mid-October.
Friends of Presqu'ile Park run interpretive programming through the Lighthouse Interpretive Centre alongside the bird story.
4. places.
- 01
Presqu'ile Provincial Park — Owen Point
Sand-spit shorebird viewing area at the southern tip of the peninsula; August–September peak for migrating shorebirds; 1.6 km return on the Owen Point Trail.
- 02
Presqu'ile Provincial Park — Marsh Boardwalk
1.2 km accessible boardwalk through cattail marsh; waterfowl and marsh-bird viewing.
- 03
Presqu'ile Bay
Waterfowl staging area in spring (March–April) and late fall (October–early December); part of the IBA designation.
- 04
Presqu'ile gull-and-tern islands
Nesting colony offshore from the peninsula; access seasonally restricted.
Today's read.
Cool but comfortable for layered effort · light winds · clean air.