Réserve Faunistique des Laurentides, Québec, Canada

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Réserve Faunistique des Laurentides, Québec, Canada
Un hiver au chalet dans les Laurentides.
Janvier 2026.
Grand héron
Saint-Eustache
Juin 2025
Sablage de plancher à Mirabel, St-Jérome, Laval, Montréal, Prévost, Blainville, St-Sauveur, St-Eustache, Rosemère, Boisbriand, Ste-Sophie, S
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Mariage à l’Estérel Resort : Une célébration au bord du lac
Un mariage à l’Estérel Resort, au cœur des Laurentides Un mariage à l’Estérel Resort offre une expérience unique. Situé dans les Laurentides, ce lieu mystique est célèbre pour sa splendeur naturelle. Ce mariage, malgré une météo capricieuse, a montré à quel point ce site est parfait pour une célébration empreinte d’élégance et d’émotion. Continue reading Mariage à l’Estérel Resort : Une…
Mariage à Val-David : Un charme rustique au cœur des Laurentides
Un mariage à Val-David marqué par l’authenticité et la convivialité Un mariage à Val-David est synonyme de simplicité et de charme naturel. Ce petit mariage décomplexé, célébré entre amis et famille, a transformé cette journée en un moment unique et chaleureux. Entourés par la beauté des Laurentides, Annabelle et Éric ont vécu une expérience inoubliable, où chaque détail reflétait leur…
Did you know the “ice age” never completely finished?
By that I mean… you know the ice sheet that grinded Canada down to bedrock? The one that sat a mile high over Boston? The one that dug out the Great Lake basins? The one that pushed deep into North America, forming massive proglacial lakes and changing the courses of river systems?
That ice sheet still exists.
Sort of.
In Inuit territory, on the great island known as Qikiqtaaluk, you can lick the last, ancient icepop left from that continent-sized ice sheet that once smothered North America like a blanket.
Known as the Barnes Ice Cap, it’s the last fragment left of the mighty Laurentide Ice Sheet. And it’s melting FAST.
It will likely outlive me- but not by much. It’s like a 20,000-year-old ice cream cone, and we’ve dropped it on the hot pavement. In our rapidly warming world, it will likely be completely gone within a century or two.
Its contribution to global sea level rise won’t be particularly significant- it’s a rounding error compared to the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets.
But to me, it’s like some kind of impossibly ancient alabaster tortoise;
a witness of unknown epochs of history;
critically endangered;
the last living of its kind;
doomed to perch up high on its mountain, drooling, panting, feverish, baked by the sun in a carbon blanket;
until it finally expires, leaving only bare rock and gravel for a grave:
no trace left of an ice age that covered a continent.
Found here on Facebook.