Field Guides/Peterborough/Nature & Discovery
Strong
Best WindowSpring (May) and fall (September–October) for migration and old-growth colour
Variantsbirding · nature-interpretation
RegionPeterborough, Ontario

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.

Nature & Discovery in Peterborough
01 — What to know

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.

02 — Locations

4. places.

  1. 01

    Trent Nature Areas

    1,500 acres of managed nature reserves on the Trent University Symons Campus, both sides of the Otonabee.

  2. 02

    Harold Town Conservation Area

    10 km of multi-use trails on the city's north edge; ORCA-managed.

  3. 03

    Mark S. Burnham Provincial Park

    Day-use park east of Peterborough preserving old-growth hardwood.

  4. 04

    Beavermead Park

    City park on Little Lake; small frontcountry campground; ORCA-related access.

03 — Conditions

Today's read.

Air Quality
18
eu-aqi · low
UV Index
1.6
scale 0–11
Humidity
58%
relative
Visibility
27.2 km
clear
Temp
+4.7°
H 14° · L -2°
Sun
05:49 / 20:30
14h 41m daylight
A+
Prime conditions for nature & discovery

Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.