Flora and faunaSnowy Owls are frequently seen on the island during winter. It is also an important stopover location for migrating waterfowl in spring. Wolfe Island is also home to a growing population of wild turkeys, and well as deer and other fauna. It is designated an Important Bird Area.[1] The Big Sandy Bay Management Area on Wolfe Island is a 404-hectare property, classified as a provincially-significant life sciences Area of Natural and Scientific Interest[2]. Sand dunes and wetlands allow rare plant species to flourish here. Rare trees and birds deemed to be significant either regionally or provincially are also found here. The environmental area is protected and no motorized vehicles are allowed, though there is ample free parking provided at the entrance. A well-marked and level walking trail leads to a large, secluded sand beach with shallows reaching out well into Lake Ontario. The beach is safe and family-friendly, but there are no services, so visitors are encouraged to bring their own refreshments. RecreationThere are two golf courses on Wolfe Island, a corn maze and three marked bicycle routes and country roads. The town of Marysville includes a famous local bakery, an art gallery, restaurants and various other shops and services, as well as the largest church in the Thousand Islands (Sacred Heart of Mary Church, pastor Fr. Raymond J. de Souza). DevelopmentWolfe Island is the site of most Kingston radio and television transmitters; CKWS, CKLC and CFRC transmit from the island. It also had historically been the site of various cheese factories, including one once operated by Kraft Foods. Wolfe Island has recently seen controversy over the planned establishment of a commercial wind power generation facility. An experienced wind industry firm, which operates smaller plants elsewhere in Ontario, proposes in the first phase to install 86 commercial wind turbines, concentrated on the western part of the Island. Proponents of the project point to thousands of dollars in revenues for those landowners who host the turbines or substations, a regular revenue stream for the municipality, and 'green' energy production for the provincial power grid. Some residents have raised questions about audible and inaudible noise, ice-shear, shadow-flicker, bird and bat kills, diminished quality of life, reduced residential property values and damaged tourism potential. An agreement was reached during an Ontario Municipal Board hearing in the summer of 2007 that saw the removal of formal objection to the legal process enabling the project. Some opponents remain active in their determination to stop the project. Notable residentsReferences
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