The Spotted Turtle - Beaver Creek Wetlands Association
Transcription
The Spotted Turtle - Beaver Creek Wetlands Association
Beaver Creek Wetlands Association The Spotted Turtle Volume 24, No. 1 Winter 2009-2010 Member’s bequest helps grow BCWA endowment A generous bequest of $23,000 is helping to grow the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association Endowment Fund. The fund, only two years old, has now grown to over $80,000, an auspicious start in challenging economic times. The BCWA Endowment Fund, established in partnership with The Dayton Foundation, is a permanent nest egg to help us be good stewards of the wetlands as well as good stewards of our donors’ gifts. Income from the fund is currently being reinvested for continued growth. Our plan is to grow the fund until it can become a self-sustaining source of income to support maintenance of the BCWA. Invasive species are seen as the greatest threat, and control of invasive species is expected to become one of the most costly future maintenance needs. A healthy endowment will help maintain healthy wetlands. The recent bequest from a loyal and long-term BCWA member was left in the form of a life annuity, an investment that can provide income for life, after which the remaining principal of the annuity becomes a charitable donation. For information on a variety of planned giving options, you may call or write to us for more information, or contact The Dayton Foundation directly. 2010 Events Spring Soul of the Woods film, February 21 Birdathon, April 30 5pm – May 1 5pm BCWA Annual Meeting, May 18 Knollwood Garden Party, April 17 Summer Greene County Fair, August 1-7 Fairborn Sweet Corn Festival, August Beavercreek Popcorn Festival, September 11 & 12 Autumn Combined Federal Campaign Kickoff, October TBA In this Issue President’s Message.....................2 Upcoming Events.........................3 Shaw 5th Graders.........................4 Winter Observations....................6 Science Corner.............................7 2009 Volunteers............................8 Footprints...................................10 Trustee Nominations..................11 www.beavercreekwetlands.org Siebenthaler Fen in winter still attracts many visitors, human and otherwise. Photo by Richard Swigart Richard Swigart President’s Message Conservation as a Way of Life “There are some people who do more than live on the land. There are some who shape it, mold it to conform to some ideal in their minds. This ideal can be a perfectly clipped greensward with trimmed shrubs and cement edgings, devoid of all but the occasional June bug or robin, or it can be a riotous patchwork of water and weed, spicebush and chinquapin, aflutter with insects and ringing with the call of Canada geese and common yellowthroats. Ora Anderson preferred woodcocks to lawnmowers. He liked water and marsh; he liked edges and coves and small private nooks; he liked vistas and forests and the smell of sassafras leaves. And what he liked, he created. He was an artist of habitats, a planter of trees, a maker of places for the winged and scaled, the jointed and furred.” So states Julie Zickefoose in the forward to a new book of essays and poems that accompanies a new video featuring Ora on his beloved farm in Athens County, Ohio. This video, The Soul of the Woods, is really a conversation about conservation in Ohio over the past 50 years as Ora participated in and pushed for a healthier natural habitat. Created from previously unused video filmed prior to Ora’s death in 2006, The Spotted Turtle Name and Logo: Noted area wildlife artist Charley Harper generously donated the art for our logo in 1988. His work has been adopted by the National Park Service and is appreciated worldwide. Our newsletter recognizes the Spotted Turtle as an icon for the many rare animals and plants protected in the Beaver Creek Wetlands. Submissions, Questions, or Comments: We rely on members like you to make this newsletter the product of 2 Soul of the Woods will encourage and delight you with its message, its art, and its original music. For many, life growing up as a “city kid” in Columbus, Ohio might inhibit much awareness of the natural world. But for myself such a lack of awareness was impossible. I had the advantage of having Ora Anderson as my father. Many of you heard him speak at one of our annual meetings a number of years ago. And then in 2007 you viewed the award winning documentary video, A Forest Returns, in which Ora narrated the story of Ohio’s only National Forest, the Wayne National Forest. Dad passed away in August of 2006 at the age of 94 but his passion for conservation and the beauty of our natural world lives on in the form of a book of his essays on nature, Out of the Woods: A Bird Watcher’s Year, published in 2007. Now I’d like to personally invite you to the first local screening of this new film, The Soul of the Woods, on Sunday, Feb. 21st at 2:00 pm at Peace Lutheran Church, 3530 Dayton-Xenia Rd. in Beavercreek. We’ll serve refreshments and you’ll get to hear and speak with filmmaker Jean Andrews. Proceeds from The Soul of the Woods will benefit the Ora Anderson Conservation Fund. Mark your calendar and come have a conversation about conservation! And meanwhile you can visit the filmmakers’ website at www. ohiolandscape.org to learn more. several diverse voices. If you have an idea for an article or a picture to include, please send them to admin@beavercreekwetland s.org. Also, we welcome any comments or questions. For submissions, questions, or comments, please include “newsletter” in the subject line of your e-mail. We reserve the right to edit for content or clarity. don’t hesitate to call the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association at (937) 320-9042. Donations of Land/Easements: If you are interested in donating land, placing an easement on property, or remembering the BCWA in your will, please Spotted Turtle—Winter 2009-10 Susie Scott BCWA President BCWA Annual Report: Copies are available by request. E-mail the office at admin@beavercreekwetlands.org or call (937) 320-9042. Founded in 1988, the Mission of the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association is to protect the wetland ecosystem in the Beaver Creek watershed through partnerships, community networks, and public education. Local Nature Film Premiere BCWA invites you to attend a special showing of the new video, The Soul of the Woods, featuring Ora Anderson. The half-hour film will be shown Sunday, Feb. 21st at 2:00 pm at Peace Lutheran Church, 3530 Dayton-Xenia Rd. in Beavercreek. Refreshments will be served. Filmmaker Jean Andrews will be present to introduce the film, answer questions and discuss the importance of practicing an active conservation ethic. The film literally paints pictures of conservation and nature through original art and music. Noted Ohio conservationist Ora Anderson serves as the narrator, and From Pete Bales, CPRP, Parks and Recreation Superintendent, City of Fairborn: “ ER D On Tuesday, May 18, look forward to an engaging speaker at the BCWA Annual Meeting. Jim McCormac is president of the Ohio Ornithological Society, and served for seven years as secretary of the Ohio Bird Records Committee. He authored Birds of Ohio (Lone Pine 2004); Wild Ohio: The Best of Our Natural Heritage (Kent State University Press 2009); and The Great Lakes Nature Guide (Lone Pine 2009). He has written a column entitled “Biodiversity” for the Columbus Dispatch since 2005. Jim was the 2009 recipient of the Ludlow Griscom award, given annually by the American Birding Association to individuals who have made significant regional contributions to ornithology. In his “real” job, Jim works for the Ohio Division of Wildlife, specializing in birds, education, and wildlife diversity issues. Prior to that, he was a botanist with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ Division of Natural Areas. Ohio’s Largest Honeysuckle Removal IN EM Annual meeting speaker: Jim McCormac R Upcoming Events Ohio’s Largest Honeysuckle Removal Project is being planned for April 2010. I need your help. The area that is being targeted for removal is along the Beaver Creek corridor at Community Park on the area that borders the Meadowlands neighborhood and Cemex Reserve. I would like to break last year’s record for volunteers of 160 people. ” Contact Pete for details at pete.bales@ci.fairborn.oh.us and watch for notices of meeting times on www.beavercreekwetlands.org. Jim says he is “ Really looking forward to this program” and wants to talk about “Fabulous Fens: Wetlands Extraordinaire!” Fens are perhaps the most interesting type of wetland in Ohio, since these cold water systems support an astonishing array of life. The richest plant diversity in the state occurs in fens, and some of this flora is among the rarest of the rare. The animal life is incredible as well—everything from tiny elfin skimmers to outrageously speckled spotted turtles. This program will be a pictorial romp through the flora and fauna of fens, with an underlying message of the importance of conserving one of our rarest habitats. his writings are featured in an illustrated booklet accompanying the DVD. Proceeds from The Soul of the Woods will benefit the Ora Anderson Conservation Fund. Come celebrate our natural heritage with this inspirational film. Please set aside Feb. 21st to have some popcorn, watch the film and get to know your fellow members of the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association. To learn about the film, visit www.ohiolandscape.org. See this newsletter in full color online at www.beavercreekwetlands.org 3 All photos by Mrs. Heinkel or Mr. Stewart Wetland Classroom for Shaw Elementary 5th Graders Contributed by Christina Simmons L-R: Eli, Michael, Christian (red shirt), Mrs. Simmons, Tyler, Lance, Tyler (orange shirt) Michael shows tadpoles found along the boardwalk Kelsey, Jordyn, Jacey, Drew and Angelo using dip net to find small aquatic animals. Mr Zimmerman is answering questions 4 Mrs. Simmons’s and Mrs. Heinkel’s Fifth grade classes had been learning about the diversity and interdependence of life. Our standards included summarizing that organisms can survive only in ecosystems in which their needs can be met and to understand that the world has different ecosystems and those distinct ecosystems support the lives of different types of organisms. We learned how to classify different organisms by their characteristics, used dichotomous keys to identify trees, studied food chains and food webs then decided to visit our local wetlands for a hands-on experience in an ecosystem that met the needs of the variety of organisms we studied. The wetlands also provided an opportunity to see first-hand how all organisms, including humans, cause changes in their ecosystems and how these changes can be beneficial, neutral or detrimental. We had read how beaver dams could cause changes in ecosystems and were able to view a textbook photo. As we sloshed through the parts of the boardwalk that were underwater as a result of the beaver dams, it was an excellent hands-on experience proving what we had read about in our science text. Definitely more impressive than looking at a textbook photo. Visiting the wetlands made what we had read in our science text come to life. After our visit to the wetlands, we stopped for lunch at the Narrows where our classes took a hike to the woods and were introduced to several literature books that had the wetlands or outdoor exploration theme. Helpers included many parents and Mr. Mike Zimmerman a BCWA Trustee who works at Ohio EPA. Spotted Turtle—Winter 2009-10 Shaw’s Fifth graders truly enjoyed their experience at the Beavercreek Wetlands. They highly recommend that others visit. Here are some reasons why: I loved going to the wetlands. As soon as I got there, all I could say was “wow!” And “awesome!” The wetlands were beautiful. I know some kids think it would be boring and I am not going to lie, I thought it would be boring too. But, I was wrong. The wetlands teach you that it is not only saving the animals by protecting it, but us humans too. At the wetlands you can see animals’ homes and their tracks. My group and I even saw beaver chew on a tree! Even though we didn’t see the beaver do it, it was really fun looking at it and predicting how it chewed the tree. The wetlands are so open. I hear animals all over. I could smell the water too. I got a little wet there. Some animals that I have heard there, I never even knew about! Everybody could learn a lesson when they go to the wetlands. When I looked from the top of a high platform, I felt like I was really lucky to be there, to see those wonderful things, and to witness fun, and nature. You can play games and laugh, and search at the wetlands. What’s there not to like? I promise, if you go to the wetlands, you will enjoy it as much as I did! —Destiny Mr Zimmerman helps Shaw 5th graders find wetland animals. To me the wetlands are amazing. If you go to the wetlands, you can see many creatures and animals such as, tadpoles, frogs, snakes, beaver dams, animal tracks, and much more! Wetlands are very helpful, wetlands are nature’s water filters and great animal habitats. If you go to the wetlands, you would see many plants and water. As you would walk on the boardwalk at the wetlands you can see many different insects. If you see someone that loves to explore, I highly encourage you to go visit the Beavercreek Wetlands. —Michael I really recommend people to go to the wetlands. When I first went to the wetlands, it was amazing!!! I saw caterpillar and a slug the first time in my life!! It was fresh air, but it was winter there wasn’t as much animals. I saw a snake, tadpole, frogs and fish. But all you workers out there PLEASE DO NOT DESTROY ANIMAL HABITAT!!! That’s their only home they have. What if someone destroyed your habitat, your home? You would feel angry and sad. That’s how animals feel when you destroy their habitat. So I recommend you to go to the wetland because it’s awesome!!! —Titus Photos by Mrs. Heinkel and parent chaperone Mr. Stewart Nate, Brian, Daniel, a couple others and a parent volunteer dip for wetland creatures. See this newsletter in full color online at www.beavercreekwetlands.org 5 Winter observations A tabolism. This slow living insures that they do not expend the energy gathered from the sun that is now in sugars and similar compounds. I marvel at the twisted purplish miniature plant I can dig out of the ice when I am looking for the Square Stemmed Monkey Flower, Mimulus ringens. It is almost in a knot, hunched, only a centimeter or so under the surface and encased in solid ice. If that was one of us we would be goners. Not so for Mimulus ringens. In spring it will explode out of the ground as soon as the longer days of spring and warmer temperature trigger its reliable alarm clock. The beaver are busy in winter, too. They have, during the fall, put aside green twigs under the ice in those deeper pools of Beaver Creek. Watch for them on warmer days swimming to and fro patching their dam and nibbling on those stored morsels. Many birds have left but many others have come to replace them. The variety of ducks increases in winter and I occasionally find a flock of bluebirds scratching in the snow for a few tidbits to eat. By February, the slowly lengthening days will have made the Skunk cabbage awake and by month’s end you will see it beginning to bloom. Another oft-recognized sign of life is the oily scum that forms on the water, too often mistaken for the work of some mindless polluter - but no, its the natural release of oils from plants and animals that have died and been recycled by bacteria. Those oils are hard to digest in the oxygen-less soils of the wetland and are the last to go. But, go they will, because as they float to the surface the rich oxygen there will help bacteria complete their job. Ah yes, then they will be eaten by protozoa and protozoa will be grazed by tiny aquatic invertebrates, who will be eaten by yet larger ones and maybe even fish and then the fish are eaten, too. I wonder, do you know—who eats the fish? It would really be fun to find out—wouldn’t it! —Jim Amon Richard Swigart s I look out the door onto my backyard and into the woods the absence of green casts a silent numbness over the landscape. It is funny how we crave the green. Green is good, live green, the grass is greener on the other side, green with envy.... The green comes from chlorophyll, a special chemical located in plants. Chlorophyll is sensitive to light and when sunlight hits it, the energy of that light is converted into an energy that does important work. That work in plants is at the very beginning of the food chain and in our deepest psyche we understand that that is good. Winter seems to be the antithesis of that comforting greenness. That idea needs to be changed. Under the ice and occasional snow there is still much activity. Wetland plants we usually see in our fens are perennials and they are certainly not dead. Their juices protect them from ice crystals that would otherwise rip them to shreds and they stay just below the surface, probably in a very slow me- Speakers Available Do you need a program for your organization, church, neighborhood association or other group? Education is one of the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association’s main missions, and we’d be glad to raise public awareness of the many reasons why wetlands are important to our lives. Contact our office to request a speaker. 6 Workshop on Wetlands On November 12 & 13 Wright State University and the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association hosted over 80 participants in a workshop on wetland delineation and mitigation of wetland loss. Field trips and talks informed a wide variety of people from many different fields of interest. Since much of the information was based on state and national regulations we had instructors/ speakers from key agencies making the presentations. Spotted Turtle—Winter 2009-10 Science Corner and winter habitats each has to run a different gauntlet of potential problems to make it back to the breeding grounds of summer. That means that if a species is missing or present we can get a sense of whether things have been bad or Many years ago at the University of Cincinnati I visited my good for these delicate wonders. Sure, there will be variachemistry professor’s lab and was surprised to find a canary tions from year to year, but when we look at the reports in a cage singing away. I thought that strange until he told from many locations over a string of years trends emerge. me that he worked with odorless but Loss of summer or winter habitat is very poisonous gasses and that if the an obvious problem, but more subtle canary was feeling unwell (ostensithings like loss of a favored insect bly due to the escape of these gases) or seed plant upon which to feed it would stop singing. I immediately may be a cause of decline. Water thought of a book I had read much quality and pollutants in the soil or earlier entitled Silent Spring, by water that is consumed as water or Rachel Carson, where Carson painted food can impact the birds. Some a verbal landscape where birds no chemicals can affect the sexual longer sang due to the uncontrolled development of animals and thus and unwise pollution from man-made lead to smaller broods. Environmenchemicals. That was back before tal changes like invasive plants or color TV, before hippies, the Cuban changes in temperature can mean missile crisis, landings on the moon, that certain required elements of bird cell phones and the internet. It was lifecycles cannot be carried out. before we knew how many hormones Our work to restore and protect worked and certainly before birth habitat in the Beaver Creek Wetlands control pills were a right of passage. is a small but important part of preBhopal and Love Canal were not in serving the rich diversity of species our vocabulary but Rachel Carson on a global scale. The next time we had it squarely pegged, nature was are going to check out the birds is able to give us signs when we were Male Belted Kingfisher, note the white spot coming 5 PM April 30 to 5PM May doing something wrong. 1 when we do our annual Birdathon. in front of his eye Each spring BCWA, Dayton Put it on your calendar and start savPhoto by Richard Swigart Audubon and other local organizaing some pennies, nickels and dimes tions take time to check out birds migrating from their to contribute, and by all means join in the effort to find as wintering grounds through Ohio in order to get a sense many bird species as possible during that 24 hour period. of the health of our current environment. By determining Let us know right now if you want to join us. Teams are how many species we find, we get to know how “rich” our forming so we can cover all of the 1700 acres of the Beaver environment is. Since each species has different habits, Creek Wetlands. foods, nesting requirement, natural enemies and diseases —Jim Amon Birds tell us about the health and condition of the wetlands Winter birding Look for these birds this winter in the Beaver Creek Wetlands. They are the ones I usually see. You may find more but these are often there. Use the field guide Birds of Ohio by James McCormac and Gregory Kennedy to find these birds by habitat, location and season in Ohio. —Jim Amon American Wigeon Northern Pintail Hooded Merganser Great Blue Heron Northern Harrier Cooper’s Hawk Red-shouldered Hawk Red-tailed Hawk Kestrel Screech Owl Great Horned Owl Barred Owl Belted Kingfisher Red Bellied Woodpecker Downy Woodpecker Hairy Woodpecker Blue Jay Crow Carolina Chickadee Tufted Titmouse White Breasted Nutharch Carolina Wren Eastern Bluebird American Robin Cedar Waxwing Song Sparrow Swamp Sparrow White Throated Sparrow White Crowned Sparrow Dark Eyed Junco Northern Cardinal Cowbird Starling Grackle Purple Finch American Goldfinch See this newsletter in full color online at www.beavercreekwetlands.org 7 2009 BCWA Volunteer Activity Debbie Karr and Rob Evans I n 2009, 64 different volunteers invested over 950 hours into habitat restoration and trail building projects at various sites in the Beaver Creek Wetlands. The three project leaders, Jim Amon, Rob Evans, and Don Geiger have all invested additional time into planning, preparation, and clean up for each work session. Fairborn Marsh With guidance provided by Jim Amon, twenty volunteers invested 149 hours into the continued restoration efforts at Fairborn Marsh. In the spring, volunteers planted bare root sugar maple, redbud, white dogwood, black walnut, and sweet gum saplings in the nursery of this invasive shrub continued with foliar spraying of the remaining small plants, and the few large shrubs that had been previously overlooked finally fell victim to the chainsaw. Other tasks included harvesting grass and flower seed from the prairie and sowing it in areas with sparse coverage, clearing weeds around the young trees and shrubs in the two nurseries, and clearing the tall vegetation around the young burr oaks scattered throughout the prairie in preparation for a future burn to be conducted by the Fairborn Fire Department. Hunters Pointe Purple Loosestrife Party As reported in the fall 2009 edition of this newsletter, 35 volunteers answered Jim Amon’s call for help and spent approximately 170 hours sloshing through water nearly knee-deep to remove the seed heads of towering purple loosestrife plants in a 5-acre area, preventing an estimated 6 billion seeds of this wetland invader from being dispersed downstream. Creekside and Hershner Reserves Looking from the trail out to the south entrance Photo by Richard Swigart on site, and then returned in the fall to transplant them into the wooded area to revegetate areas previously cleared of bush honeysuckle. Control 8 Meeting nearly every Saturday morning from March through November, volunteers under the direction of Don Geiger invested 528 hours into habitat restoration activity at Creekside and Hershner Reserves, both Greene County Parks properties. There have been 24 different participants, but 6 volunteers accounted for 421 hours of that total! Much of the activity this year involved preparations for replanting areas disturbed by the Little Beaver Creek restoration project. Volunteer work at the MEEC nursery included digging and potting root sprouts of native shrubs like bladdernut and gray dogwood, digging and potting swamp roses, planting bare root saplings of swamp oak and bur oak, and propagating willows by taking cuttings, rooting, and then planting in the nursery. At Hershner, invasive bush honeysuckle and autumn olive were Spotted Turtle—Winter 2009-10 removed from the stream banks and fencerows. Other invasive plants targeted were teasel, whose seed heads were collected and destroyed, and the large patch of non-native sweet flag, which was covered with plastic or layers of newspapers and mulch in an attempt to smother it. The rooted willow stakes from the MEEC nursery were planted along the stream running through the property to stabilize its banks. Volunteers planted many other wetland plants at this site, including cardinal flower, turtlehead, bog and Ohio goldenrod, boneset, Joe-Pye weed, mountain mint, porcupine sedge, and the native sweet flag. At Creekside, invasive plant control continued, targeting honeysuckle, autumn olive, Callery pear, reed canary grass, Phragmites, and lesser celandine. Two wetland areas created by the Little Beaver Creek restoration project have been vegetated with native wetland plants including buttonbush, ninebark, swamp rose, shrubby cinquefoil, meadowsweet, boneset, three species of goldenrod (bog, Ohio, & Riddell’s), cardinal flower, skullcap, spike rush, and bulrush. Seeds of other wetland plants have been sown throughout. Thanks go to the Greene County Parks employees who assisted at several work sessions at both Creekside and Hershner in 2009, helping to haul mountains of mulch via wheelbarrows from the piles dumped as close as possible to the work sites, but still much too far away! Project leader Don Geiger advises that plans for Creekside Reserve for spring 2010 will be site preparation for planting over 500 trees at three locations along the restored Little Beaver Creek. Site selection for planting will be done with guidance from a University of Dayton professor whose specialty is forestry. Color-coded bamboo poles will be installed to mark planting sites, and then an auger will be used to loosen the soil, which will be amended with organic material. The 500 trees of various species will then be planted, using the bamboo poles for support, and a 3’x3’ fabric weed guard will be installed to minimize competition from fast growing weeds. The newly planted trees will be watered from the creek with the assistance of a gasoline powered pump. If you would like to assist with the tree planting project at Creekside Reserve next spring, please contact Don Geiger at donald.geiger@notes.udayton.edu to be added to the Creekside volunteer distribution list. Please note: Greene County requires volunteers on its properties to submit a volunteer application and sign a liability release. Both forms will be available on site. Koogler One Year Later About this time last year I (Rob) was approached by our President Susie Scott and Trustee Jim Amon to build a trail into the Koogler Reserve. After all the planning, mapping, flagging, and preparing, the trail is starting to take shape. With the hard work of a bunch of volunteers, the trail extends about 1/2 mile and will provide excellent access to the back areas of the property for the upcoming work season in 2010. The remainder of the trail enters into or traverses some areas that are very wet for most of the year so a boardwalk is planned. Additionally, and most noticeably, was the clearing of the honeysuckle around the overlook that opened the foundation of the barn and views into the fen and is now helping to reduce the vandalism at the overlook itself. The final trail will be an approximate 1 mile loop that enters from either side of the reserve parking lot and goes all way back near where the Beaver Creek crosses the property. To the south, features include mostly mixed woods and an open wet woods. To the north is a large open fen that is abuzz with birds. Soon, there will be approximately 650 feet of boardwalk that will span parts of the meadow to the north and the wooded wet areas on the rear parts of the trail. In addition to clearing the trail, the volunteers have been clearing invasive plants such as purple loosestrife, honeysuckle and multiflora rose. The removal of the invasives will continue into next year with the addition of a large area of sweet flag. All is not destruction and clearing though — in the open prairie areas around and to the south of the overlook, the volunteers were able to liberate a nice grove of dogwoods and have planted red bud and sweet gum trees. Prairie grasses such as indian grass, big bluestem, little bluestem and switch grass have been sown. In the wooded areas to the north woodland mix of seeds such as rye, wingstem, white snakeroot, sweet Cicely and tall bellflower have been spread to compete with the garlic mustard that is inevitable with the removal of all that honeysuckle. All this and the upcoming work Thank You! Thanks to the following people for helping with the Gaining Ground fund raising mailing and to those who worked in our booth at the Fairborn Sweet Corn Festival and at Beavercreek Popcorn Festival. We couldn’t function without our volunteers! Bruce Ford; Dane & Priscilla Mutter; Sue & Ted Rytel; Ann Byrd; Susie Scott; Judith Streiff; Rob Evans; Jim Maley; Lynn Reily; Richard Swigart; Doug Hull; Chris Martin; Sally & Jerry Meike: Abby Shroyer; Brian & Sandy Woodruff; Christina Maynard; Jim & Carol Amon; Mark Martel; Steve Blatt; Dorothy Bordewisch; Dorothy Mulhauser; Arthur Bauer; Dave & Mary Townsley; Betty Martel; Pat Hefner; Mike Baumer. How to Volunteer Volunteers clearing honeysuckle in front of overlook. Jim Amon, Bob Louis and Susie Scott Photo by Richard Swigart couldn’t be done without the dedicated volunteers, guidance from the BCWA “experts” and the grant from the Dayton Foundation. In 2009, we had 22 volunteers who put in over 94 hours of work. A special thanks also goes out to the folks with the Beavercreek Township who faithfully removed our mountains of honeysuckle limbs, turned them into mulch and who are graciously allowing us to transform this property into another wonderful place to explore in the Beaver Creek Wetlands. Each field project has a variety of tasks to be accomplished. The specifics are sent via e-mail to the volunteer distribution list prior to the work session, enabling recipients to select projects or even specific tasks by interest or ability, and to be prepared for site conditions. If you would like to be notified of future volunteer opportunities, please contact BCWA’s administrative coordinator at admin@beavercreekwetlands.org to be added to the volunteer distribution list. See this newsletter in full color online at www.beavercreekwetlands.org 9 Boardwalk repairs and Beaver activity Debbie Karr and Jim Amon laid down another layer of boards to raise the level of the boardwalk above the current flooding. Why the flooding? Beavers now have at least four colonies on Beaver Creek. They can be a nuisance and while we like them they do now need to be thinned out a bit. If they flood some areas they will kill endangered species or invite invasion of reed canary grass or purple loosestrife. We have a responsibility to not only protect the wetlands and all its habitats but we also have a responsibility to manage it. Richard Swigart The world is becoming obsessed with the footprints we are leaving on this earth. Carbon footprints, global warming, rising seas, and melting ice caps are the headlines of the day. It is a big world and we all wonder what can “little old me” do about all this? Well, we can start right here at home and support local conservation efforts in our backyard. The Beaver Creek Wetlands offer the perfect opportunity for us to make a difference. We are asking you to take steps, make footprints, big or small, to save a place that is teeming with nature and is in need of protection. Your financial contributions go directly to the preservation work of the BCWA. BCWA’s annual Gaining Ground campaign continues through the winter. Please leave your mark on this world by supporting the effort to protect this beautiful legacy for the next generation to have a wild place in which to leave their footprints! Send your contributions to BCWA, P.O. Box 42, Alpha, OH 45301. Step lightly on the world but leave your mark! Thanks for your support. —Suzie Scott Richard Swigart Footprints Correction In our fall issue a member noticed a mislabeled butterfly. The photo on page 9 was not a black swallowtail butterfly but a red-spotted purple. Preparing for Spring Photo by Richard Swigart Great Blue Heron and unknown tracks Come spring you may see an email letting you know of the many volunteer opportunities we have in BCWA. In late April we go to Lake Erie to collect special beetles that we hope will begin to control the spread of the invading purple loosestrife. Then we will again be at the planting and improvements at Creekside and Fairborn Marsh. Most sessions are on weekends and only take 3-4 hours. We like to see you arrive at the beginning of the work period so we can give instructions but we understand if you need to leave early. (Yes, there is a life beyond wetlands.) Check our website frequently for volunteer activities—even in winter! To join, simply send us an email to admin@beavercreekwetlands.org. Unidentified fungus on a tree trunk at Fairborn Marsh. Our best guess is Velvet Toes (Flammulina velutipes). 10 Spotted Turtle—Winter 2009-10 Call for Nominations for Beaver Creek Wetlands Association Trustees Want to be even more involved with the BCWA? Would you like to help decide the direction of the organization? Do you know someone who is interested in becoming a BCWA Trustee? The BCWA Trustees are folks just like you, with a variety of occupations, backgrounds and interests, with one thing in common... a concern for our environment that drives us to become involved in preserving a most precious natural resource, right in our own backyard. The Beaver Creek Wetlands Association is now seeking nominations for trustees to be elected at the Annual Meeting in May of 2010 in which there will be four (4) seats elected. The principal responsibilities of a BCWA Trustee are not difficult. A Trustee should simply: • Participate in Board of Trustee meetings once a month. • Serve as a member on selected Board of Trustee committees. • Participate in the functions and activities of the BCWA. • Serve a three (3) year term, which is eligible for 2 terms. Designate up to 1% of your Dorothy Lane Market Purchases to benefit the BCWA. Dorothy Lane Market makes annual contributions to customers’ designated charities. If you are a member of Club DLM (if you have the Dorothy Lane Market shoppers’ card), you can designate the BCWA as your preferred charity. Just fill in the attached form and drop it off at a DLM customer service counter, or mail it to the Dorothy Lane Market. Join the BCWA Today! Help reclaim our local wetlands corridor and restore it’s natural beauty and function. Your member dues fund land acquisition, education programs, habitat restoration and management of our preserve. Please make your check payable to BCWA and mail to: BCWA, P.O. Box 42, Alpha, OH 45301 Name Address A 501(c)(3) land trust organization. Your donation is tax deductible. Phone Email Choose your member level: $5 Student $10 Senior (60+) $15 Individual $25 Family • Perform all duties in accordance the BCWA Bylaws. Please submit the applicable name, address, telephone number and email, along with brief description no later than April 30, 2010 to: webmaster@ beavercreekwetlands.org Club DLM Good Neighbor Program Return to any DLM location or mail to: Dorothy Lane Market 2710 Far Hills Ave. Dayton, Ohio 45419 $35 $50 $100 $1,000 Contributing Supporting Patron Life We are a non-profit 501(c)(3) land trust governed by a volunteer, nonpaid Board of Trustees. The Trustees are elected to three year terms by the membership at our annual public meeting held in May of each year. I understand that up to 1% of my purchases (from this day forward) made with my Club DLM card will be rebated to the Beaver Creek Wetlands Association, once I have spent $250 in one calendar year. NAME PHONE SIGNATURE CLUB DLM NUMBER (located on your DLM card or keychain tag) BCWA/Good Neighbor code number: 671 See this newsletter in full color online at www.beavercreekwetlands.org 11 P.O. BOX 42 ALPHA, OH 45301 Return Service Requested NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID ALPHA, OHIO 45301 PERMIT NUMBER 76 Moving? New e-mail address? Don’t miss an issue! Call 937-320-9042 or email: admin@beavercreekwetlands.org The Spotted Turtle | Volume 24, No. 1 | Winter 2009-10 Officers Susie Scott, President Rob Evans, Vice President Sue Rytel, Secretary Doug Hull, Treasurer Trustees Aja Ash Deborah Karr Ed Phillips Susie Scott Richard Swigart Ed Dressler Sue Rytel Judith Streiff Mike Zimmerman Jim Amon Lorie Burger Rob Evans Kate Hagenbuch Mark Martel Christina Simmons Spotted Turtle Editors Jim and Carol Amon Mark Martel Publisher Oregon Printing www.oregonprinting.com Webmaster Rob Evans Contact Us Administrative Coordinator admin@beavercreekwetlands.org President president@beavercreekwetlands.org Technical Advisor technical@beavercreekwetlands.org Webmaster webmaster@beavercreekwetlands.org Visit us Online www.beavercreekwetlands.org Richard Swigart Label (1” x 2-5/8” ) here. Place carefully to cover bottom line completely but do not touch top line.
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