Nature & Discovery.
Trent University's 1,500-acre Nature Areas straddle the Otonabee River on the Symons Campus, threading interpretive trails through forest, wetland, and riparian zones — the largest managed nature-reserve surface inside any Ontario university campus. East of the city, Mark S.
Burnham Provincial Park preserves an old-growth hardwood stand uncommon in south-central Ontario.
The brief.
The Trent Nature Areas, Mark S. Burnham PP, Harold Town CA, and Beavermead form an accessible four-site nature-discovery cluster within or close to the city.
Trent's reserves carry interpretive signage on managed trails — best in spring (May) for migration and fall (September–October) for hardwood colour. Mark S.
Burnham is day-use only and protects mature hardwood — a regional rarity south of the Canadian Shield edge. The Otonabee Region Conservation Authority publishes seasonal access notes for Harold Town and Beavermead.
4. places.
- 01
Trent Nature Areas
1,500 acres of managed nature reserves on the Trent University Symons Campus, both sides of the Otonabee.
- 02
Harold Town Conservation Area
10 km of multi-use trails on the city's north edge; ORCA-managed.
- 03
Mark S. Burnham Provincial Park
Day-use park east of Peterborough preserving old-growth hardwood.
- 04
Beavermead Park
City park on Little Lake; small frontcountry campground; ORCA-related access.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.