There's a park in Ontario with a reconstructed Indigenous village and nature trails

Despite it feeling like the first day of winter, it’s still fall! Don’t let a little brisk weather stop you from heading outdoors and exploring your backyard. In need of some outdoor inspiration? Make a trip to Longwoods Road Conservation Area in Ontario. This area is home to an Indigenous village replica, a museum and 10 km of nature trails. Here’s why you should visit this historical land.
You’ll find this gem in the Municipality of Strathroy-Caradoc. Longwoods Road Conservation Area is a must-visit destination for nature lovers and history buffs alike. It spans 63 hectares of forest, ravines, and wetlands in the Carolinian Life Zone, according to the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority.
Travel back in time
For a real treat, visit Longwoods’ Ska-Nah-Doht Village. It’s a recreated Indigenous village that was inhabited by the Haudenosaunee along Antler River almost 1,000 years ago.
“Find your way through the palisade maze. Then enter a longhouse and imagine cooking supper in a clay pot next to a roaring fire. Pretend to grind corn into flour using a wooden mortar and pestle. Explore the lookout and other tools of daily life like fish trap, hide stretching racks, and more,” shares the LTVCA.
Complementing this historical site are three heritage log cabins and a Resource Centre/Museum, which house fascinating artifacts and conservation displays, as well as the Turtle Trail Gift Shop and video presentation theatres.
Exploring the outdoors
But the conservation area isn’t just about history. It offers expansive greenery to explore. You’ll have the chance to wander through 10 km of nature trails. Some of these are even wheelchair accessible.
Get your hiking boots on and explore one of the seven (or all) trails, which wind through lush forested areas and ravines, complete with boardwalks and bridges that offer breathtaking views.
The Carey Carolinian Arboretum & Trail is a wheelchair-friendly trail that encompasses the area around the three cabins. There’s a stairway to a stream along the ravine bottom.
The Millstream Trail is another great trail option. It’s 1 km long with a wheelchair-accessible boardwalk past a “steep-sided gurgling stream valley down to a marsh filled with cattail and other wetland plants.”
Ready to embark on this adventure? The Longwoods Road Conservation Area grounds and Ska-Nah-Doht Village are open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to dusk. Visitors may face closures due to weather or road conditions.
Longwoods Road Conservation Area
When: Open year-round
Time: 9 a.m. to dusk
Where: 8348 Longwoods Rd., Mount Brydges, Ont.
Cost: Parking is $5
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