The results are in! Friends of the Muskoka Watershed, in collaboration with community, university, and government partners, along with thousands of
PRESS RELEASE: Aitchison uses Friends of the Muskoka Watershed and ASHMuskoka as example
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – Thursday, November 25, 2021 Muskoka, ON – ASHMuskoka, a project of the Friends of the Muskoka Watershed, took centre stage
Calcium deficiencies in landscapes: its effects and its solutions
Calcium is an essential macronutrient and signalling molecule needed by all plants to respond to stress and stimuli. However, in many parts of the
GUIDEBOOK: Your Guide to HATSEO Wood Ash Recyling in Muskoka
How would you like to help fix a serious problem in Muskoka’s forests and lakes at no cost to you, while helping to recycle and re-purpose a waste you
REPORT: Is Residential Wood Ash Safe for Use to Help Solve the Calcium Decline Problem in Muskoka?
The overarching goal of the HATSEO project is to evaluate the use of residential wood ash - a readily available waste product – to help solve the Ca
REPORT: Solving the Calcium Decline Problem – Insights from a Muskoka Wood Burner’s Questionnaire
Over the past several decades, calcium (Ca) concentrations have been declining in Muskoka lakes and forests. In 2014, The Muskoka Watershed Council’s
PUBLICATION: Could a residential wood ash recycling programme be part of the solution to calcium decline in lakes and forests in Muskoka (Ontario, Canada)?
One possible solution to the recent decline of calcium (Ca) concentrations in Canadian Shield forests and lakes in eastern North America is the
From fireplace to pancakes – solving the widespread problem of calcium decline.
Can our enjoyment of morning pancakes really be linked to our fireplaces? Yep. It's about the maple syrup. Today, the health of both our lakes and
The results are in …
Recent research co-authored by our Trent University collaborator, Dr. Shaun Watmaugh and led by his M.Sc. student, Holly Deighton**, has definitively
Norm’s Notes: The first evidence is in, wood ash works!
FMW’s approach to protecting Muskoka watersheds is to work with the local and scientific communities to identify, develop and foster solutions to the