Haliburton Forest’s vast 80,000 acres offers all sorts of variety for visitors – from different habitats to levels of privacy, elevation and especially species.
One species in particular has not been observed by staff for a few years but has returned this year to the northern part of the property! This is the gray jay (Perisoreus canadensis), one of the few birds which does not migrate south in the winter. The northern part of Haliburton Forest represents the southern edge of this cheeky, tough little bird’s range today. Historically, however, fossil evidence places gray jays and other boreal species in Tennessee about 18,000 years ago, indicating a much cooler climate than we experience today. Gray jays are built to sustain cold winters with thick, fluffy plumage that covers their entire body, even their nostrils! They incubate eggs in temperatures as low as -28 degrees C and the chicks are then born in early April.



