Panoramic view above Halton Region forests © Smera Sukumar
About
Preserving the beauty and ecology of the Niagara Escarpment has always been a priority for Ontario Nature. The Wilfrid G. Crozier Nature Reserve has played an important role in these efforts. The four-hectare (ten-acre) nature reserve straddles a section of the escarpment near Milton.
The property is part of the Halton Forest North a provincially significant, Area of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI) and is crossed by the Bruce Trail. The Halton/North Peel Field Naturalists are the official stewards of the nature reserve.
We are looking for stewards of this nature reserve. Please email us if you’d like to learn more.
Plants and Animals
Above and below the short cliffs that divide the property in half are old fields that have been tilled. In the recent past, these fields were used mostly for grazing and hay mowing. Now they are good examples of old-field succession communities.
Characteristic of talus slopes on the escarpment, you’ll find mature white cedars, a diversity of ferns, fungi and mosses along the rocky cliff.
Visiting
The escarpment face, except for the top five metres or so, is mostly buried behind a talus slope. The escarpment rim is dominated by eastern hemlock with a scattering of sugar maple, paper birch, eastern white cedar and red oak. The cliff-edge forest extends about 12 metres back from the face and then opens into old field again.
We do not charge a fee for entrance and there are no operating hours on any of our nature reserves. Properties are monitored by volunteer stewards. We rely on visitors to be safe, minimize their impact on nature and be respectful of others. For more information about visiting the nature reserves, please read our Permitted Activities Policy.
We welcome donations to support this nature reserve and our system of 26 nature reserves.
Directions
The property is six and a half kilometres north of Highway 401 on Regional Road 25 from Milton, south of Speyside. To access the property, turn west onto St. Helena Road from Regional Road 25. Please park on the side of St. Helena Road before the turn-around. Follow the signs to the Bruce Trail, which runs through the nature reserve.
View Wilfrid G. Crozier Nature Reserve in a larger map