Nina Newington was guiding her pickup truck down a gravel logging road in southwestern Nova Scotia in October, a half an hour from any paved roadway, when she saw it: a 900-acre-sized wasteland where old-growth trees used to be.
“The forest, it was just gone,” she recalled. “It was like driving into the largest parking lot you’ve ever seen.”
This land, in the wooded heart of Digby County, is one of the last few remaining patches of untouched Acadian forest left in the province. And it’s home to an endangered moose population, those solitary giants of the woods that once roamed widely but are now believed to number fewer than 100 on mainland Nova Scotia.
https://www-theglobeandmail-com.cdn...ght-to-protect-mainland-moose-in-nova-scotia/
“The forest, it was just gone,” she recalled. “It was like driving into the largest parking lot you’ve ever seen.”
This land, in the wooded heart of Digby County, is one of the last few remaining patches of untouched Acadian forest left in the province. And it’s home to an endangered moose population, those solitary giants of the woods that once roamed widely but are now believed to number fewer than 100 on mainland Nova Scotia.
https://www-theglobeandmail-com.cdn...ght-to-protect-mainland-moose-in-nova-scotia/