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Manitoba Nature Notebook

Welcome to our Manitoba Nature Notebook Blog, where conservation meets curiosity.

Explore stories, insights, and updates focused on protecting Manitoba's lands and waters. Through campaign updates, hike highlights, and inspiring nature fun, we aim to deepen your connection to Manitoba and empower you to take action.

Whether you’re a student, educator, or nature enthusiast, join us in learning, protecting, and celebrating the places we call home—one blog post at a time.

Visit every Friday for a new story. 

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    Featured image for “Environmentalists attack Hydro line route”
    March 19th, 2010

    Environmentalists attack Hydro line route

    WINNIPEG – Environmental groups counter-attacked Wednesday in the growing war of words over Manitoba Hydro’s plan to build a $1.1-billion power transmission line down the west side of the province. Manitoban, Canadian and U.S. groups launched an education blitz to urge the Manitoba government to keep its commitment and not
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    Featured image for “Stand Firm Manitoba: Protect the Heart of the Boreal and Say No to an Industrial Transmission Line”
    March 18th, 2010

    Stand Firm Manitoba: Protect the Heart of the Boreal and Say No to an Industrial Transmission Line

    The political opposition in Manitoba, Canada has revived a proposal to run a major hydropower transmission line directly through the boreal forest on the east side of Lake Winnipeg. It’s an odd choice for an election issue. The current government had already made a decision to work with local communities
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    Featured image for “Government gets a C for environment stewardship”
    March 18th, 2010

    Government gets a C for environment stewardship

    WINNIPEG — The Selinger government gets a C for environment stewardship and that’s a good grade, according to Manitoba Wildlands. The 2009 grade reflects steps taken late in 2009 to establish some new protected areas, two of which are of moderate size, the environment lobby group says. Those areas work
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    Featured image for “Geology students to trek 1,800 miles by canoe”
    March 17th, 2010

    Geology students to trek 1,800 miles by canoe

      Juniors Luke Olson and Lindsey Lee’s journey will stretch from the Boundary Waters to Hudson Bay. (Aaron Hays/TommieMedia) Two students will hit the road, or the river, when summer arrives, to embark on a 1,800-mile canoe journey northward. In May, juniors Luke Olson and Lindsey Lee will leave from
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    Featured image for “Fisher Bay bats potential provincial park tourist attraction”
    March 17th, 2010

    Fisher Bay bats potential provincial park tourist attraction

    While Fisher River Chief David Crate and Ron Thiessen, executive director of the Manitoba chapter of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS), are pleased the province will designate the Ochiwasahow (Fisher Bay) Park Reserve a provincial park by this October, they fear the province won’t expand the park’s boundaries.
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    Featured image for “Save the little bats”
    March 15th, 2010

    Save the little bats

    The article Tiny bats give hope to proposal for park (March 4) highlights another species dependent on Manitoba’s boreal forests for its survival. As Craig Willis describes, Fisher Bay’s large population of little brown bats could not survive without the boreal forest that provides insects for food as well as
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    Featured image for “Local film fest is reely green”
    March 14th, 2010

    Local film fest is reely green

    LOCAL and international films with environmental themes will get showcased this weekend in Winnipeg’s first Reel Green Film Festival, March 12-13 at the Red River College Princess Street Campus downtown. Screenings begin Friday at 7 p.m. with a program of films including local animator Cordell Barker’s short Runaway and the
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    Featured image for “First Nations demanding enviro audit before Bipole proceeds”
    March 14th, 2010

    First Nations demanding enviro audit before Bipole proceeds

    WINNIPEG — First Nations in western Manitoba say they are determined not to allow a proposed Manitoba Hydro transmission line to cross their territories until Ottawa and the province complete an environmental audit of “past impacts and effects” of hydro operations on southern First Nations. The First Nations made the
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    Featured image for “MINISTER WELCOMES U.S. FEDERAL COURT RULING IN MANITOBA’S FAVOUR ON NORTHWEST AREA WATER SUPPLY PROJ”
    March 8th, 2010

    MINISTER WELCOMES U.S. FEDERAL COURT RULING IN MANITOBA’S FAVOUR ON NORTHWEST AREA WATER SUPPLY PROJ

    The U.S. District Court has again ruled in favour of Manitoba in its case against the Northwest Area Water Supply (NAWS) project, Water Stewardship Minister Christine Melnick announced today. Judge Rosemary Collyer, in her decision issued Friday, March 5, ordered the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to take a “hard look” at
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    Featured image for “Environment Canada Recognizes Local Bird Enthusiast”
    March 8th, 2010

    Environment Canada Recognizes Local Bird Enthusiast

    WINNIPEG, MANITOBA—(Marketwire – March 1, 2010) – Environment Canada recognized Manitoba resident Peter Taylor for his long-term contributions over the years as a volunteer for the Breeding Bird Survey (BBS). Mr. Taylor has been rising in the wee hours of the morning every June to run his BBS routes since
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    Featured image for “First Nations people pack courtroom”
    March 8th, 2010

    First Nations people pack courtroom

    More than 50 First Nations people, many of them elders, are packing a downtown federal courtroom this morning, hoping to persuade a judge to make public more than 250 documents that could prove Ottawa culpable for the hydro-dam flooding that devastated three northern reserves. The elders, from Grand Rapids, Chemawawin
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    Featured image for “Hydro plan irks cottagers, First Nation”
    March 8th, 2010

    Hydro plan irks cottagers, First Nation

    Some Manitoba cottage owners have joined forces with a First Nation to try stopping a power line project in Nopiming Provincial       Park. The 19-kilometre hydro line project, which received provincial approval in November following an environmental assessment       report, is set to start in the
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