Little St-Pierre River


    This is the last above-ground remnant of the Little St. Pierre River, which once flowed some 15 kilometres downstream to Pointe à Callière and the open waters of the St. Lawrence. The course of the Little St-Pierre has been altered and built over numerous times since Samuel de Champlain first spotted its waves in 1611, but even as late as the 1950s, visitors to Meadowbrook could still navigate this segment of the river with watercraft.

    What does the future hold for the Little St-Pierre River?

    Want to read more?

    Photo by Jo Ann Goldwater.

    Imagine Meadowbrook by Avrom Shtern

    Imagine sparkling vernal ponds,
    shimmering autumnal pools, serpentine streams,
    freshwater marsh.
    Imagine trill of toad, call of Woodpecker,
    howl of red fox.
    Imagine woodland flowers and wispy ferns.
    Imagine trees like
    shagbark hickory, hackberry, cork elm,
    black cherry, black willow, bitternut hickory and green ash.
    Imagine meadows, hillocks.
    Imagine cross-country skiing, snowshoeing,
    tobogganing, walking, jogging, biking,
    talks about nature.
    Imagine breathing in tranquility minutes from the urban core.
    Imagine Meadowbrook!

    Photo of Sensitive Fern by Dave Fletcher.

    Shagbark hickory tree

    *Photo by Dave Fletcher, Meadowbrook, June 2005

    Meet the shagbark hickory tree. The presence of this rare species indicates that there may have been a North American Indian settlement in the Meadowbrook area. Read more in an article by Bronwyn Chester.