Full extent
Zoom to 200%
Zoom in
Show link list
Print
NW
N
NE
W
The Map
E
SW
S
SE

James F. McCarty & Jo Ellen Corrigan, The Plain Dealer
jcorrigan@plaind.com
April, 2007. Created with HTML ImageMapper 9.2 by alta4
Caley Reservation: Look for long-eared owls roosting in the pines by the parking lot, and for ducks, heron and rails in the marshes in spring and summer. Wellington Creek divides this 507-acre area of wetlands, forest- and field-habitats. Carlisle Reservation: Barred and long-eared owls can be found in the pines, and sparrows and wrens are thick in the grasslands along the riding trails at the far west end of the park. The west branch of the Black River flows through this park. Hinckley: There’s more to Hinckley than buzzards. The ledges host nesting waterthrush, and the woodland trails come alive with singing hooded and cerulean warblers in June. Also look for the variety of waterfowl that frequent the 90-acre Hinckley Lake. Wellington Reservoir/Wellington Reservation: Ducks, geese and swans fill the reservoir when it’s not iced over. The trails around the wetlands at the 550-acre reservation hold promise for shorebirds when water conditions are right.