the forest preserves of will county, illinois
Transcription
the forest preserves of will county, illinois
THE FOREST PRESERVES OF WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS 2009 Edition Values, Vision, and Mission Our Mission The Forest Preserve District is dedicated to protecting, conserving, enhancing, and promoting Will County’s natural heritage for the educational, recreational, and environmental benefit of present and future generations. Our Values Six distinctive values guide the District in fulfilling its mission. Quality We commit to excellence by providing quality products and services. Employee Wellness We respect, value, and mentor our employees. Customer Service We are responsive to the needs of a diverse community. Cooperation We work together to achieve the District’s mission. Leadership We lead in the community and the workplace by inspiration and example. Environmental Awareness We promote and practice environmental stewardship. Our Vision The people of Will County will view the Forest Preserve District as vital to enriching their quality of life. Our Motto Bringing people and nature together. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS District One John Anderson, Monee Katrina L. Deutsche, Monee Cory S. Singer, Frankfort [President] District Four Edward Kusta, Jr., Bolingbrook Charles E. Maher, Naperville Jacqueline Traynere, Bolingbrook District Seven Jim Bilotta, Lockport Kathleen Konicki, Homer Glen Diane H. Seiler, Lockport District Two Laurie Smith, New Lenox James G. Moustis, Frankfort Thomas Weigel, New Lenox District Five Jim Blackburn, Joliet [Vice President] John E. Gerl, Joliet Lee Ann Goodson, Plainfield District Eight Frank D. Stewart, Joliet Herbert Brooks, Jr., Joliet Dave Evans, Joliet District Three Ann Dralle, Lemont Susan C. Riley, Naperville Michael F. Wisniewski, Naperville [Treasurer] District Six Donald Gould, Shorewood Deborah A. Rozak, Wilmington [Secretary] Sharon May, Channahon District Nine Walter G. Adamic, Joliet Joseph M. Babich, Joliet Stephen M. Wilhelmi, Joliet Table of Contents Introduction........................................................................................................1 Blac k Walnut C reek Watershed..................................................................2 Black Walnut Creek Preserve Clow Creek and Wolf Creek Watersheds............................................................3 Clow Creek: Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve Wolf Creek Preserve Deer Creek Watershed......................................................................................5 Deer Creek Preserve Des Plaines River Watershed...........................................................................6 Des Plaines River Greenway: Keepataw Preserve, Veterans Woods, Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve, Isle a la Cache, Centennial Trail, Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail/Heritage Trail Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve, Prairie Bluff, Lockport Prairie East Preserve, Teale Woods, and Joliet Iron Works Historic Site Des Plaines/DuPage Rivers Confluence Preserves: Briscoe Mounds, and McKinley Woods DuPage River Watershed................................................................................14 DuPage River Greenway: Whalon Lake, DuPage River Confluence Preserve, Riverview Farmstead, Caton Farm Preserve, Hammel Woods, and Lake Chaminwood Other Holdings: Lake of the Woods, Hastert-Bechstein Preserve, and Bird’s Junction Marsh. Fiddyment Creek Watershed..........................................................................20 Runyon Preserve Fiddyment Creek Preserve Forked Creek Watershed................................................................................21 Wayne Lehnert Preserve, Laughton Preserve, and Huyck’s Grove Preserve Forked Creek Greenway: Forked Creek Preserve, John Wesley Preserve, and Donohue Grove Preserve Fraction Run Watershed.................................................................................26 Lambs Woods Hickory Creek Watershed...............................................................................27 Sauk Trail Reservoir, Hunters Woods, Hickory Creek Preserve, and Potawatomi Woods Jackson Creek Watershed..............................................................................31 Jackson Creek Preserve Joliet Junction Trail.........................................................................................32 Kankakee River Watershed.............................................................................34 Evans-Judge Preserve Kankakee Sands..............................................................................................34 Braidwood Dunes and Savanna Nature Preserve, Sand Ridge Savanna Preserve, and Kankakee Sands Preserve Lily Cache Creek Watershed..........................................................................37 Lake Renwick Preserve, O’Hara Woods, and Lily Cache Wetlands Old Plank Road Trail .......................................................................................41 Plum Creek Watershed...................................................................................43 Plum Creek Greenway: Plum Valley Ravines, Moeller Woods, Plum Valley Preserve, Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve, and Vincennes Trail Prairie Creek Watershed.................................................................................46 Prairie Creek Preserve Rock Creek Watershed...................................................................................47 Monee Reservoir, and Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve Rock Run Watershed......................................................................................49 Rock Run Greenway: Theodore Marsh, Rock Run Preserve, Colvin Grove, Lower Rock Run Preserve - I&M Canal Access, and Rock Run Rookery Other Holdings: Kraske Preserve, and Alessio Prairie Spring Creek Watershed................................................................................52 Spring Creek Greenway: Messenger Marsh, Messenger Woods Nature Preserve, Hadley Valley, and Walnut Hollow Sugar Creek Watershed..................................................................................56 Sugar Creek Preserve, and Operations and Law Enforcement Facility Thorn Creek Watershed..................................................................................58 Thorn Creek Greenway: Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve, and Thorn Grove Preserve Thorn Creek Headwaters Wauponsee Glacial Trail.................................................................................60 Other Preser vation Projects...........................................................................62 DuPage River: Shady Nook Park - Naperville Park District, McDonald Farm - The Conservation Foundation, and Hidden Lakes Park - Bolingbrook Park District Jackson Creek: Round Barn Farm - Manhattan Park District Mink Creek: Mistwood - Mistwood Golf Course Appendices.......................................................................................................63 Preserve Map, Preserve Features and Amenities Chart, Preserve Access Locations, Preserve and Preserve Map Index, and Visitor Facility Information INTRODUCTION Since its creation by the progressive and far-sighted citizens of Will County in 1928, the Forest Preserve District of Will County (District) has grown to nearly 21,000 acres of land owned, leased, managed, or otherwise protected. The District’s first acquisition was a portion of Messenger Woods in 1930; by 1973, there had been 25 tracts of land acquired. The rate of preservation has dramatically increased since then: 1930s = 728 acres protected 1940s = 190 acres protected 1950s = 12 acres protected 1960s = 79 acres protected 1970s = 2,130 acres protected 1980s = 2,907 acres protected 1990s = 6,727 acres protected 2000s = approximately 8,000 acres are protected or are pending so far this decade The state law that permits the creation of County Forest Preserve Districts (70 ILCS 805, Downstate Forest Preserve District Act) describes the function of these Districts to: “acquire and hold lands containing natural forests, land capable of being reforested or lands connecting such forest; for the purpose of protecting and preserving the flora, fauna, and scenic beauties, and to restore, restock, protect, and preserve the natural forests and said lands, together with their flora and fauna, as nearly as may be, in their natural state and condition, for the purpose of the education, pleasure, and recreation of the public.” Stemming from this, the District sees its mission as protecting, conserving, enhancing, and promoting Will County’s natural heritage for the educational, recreational, and environmental benefit of present and future generations (Ordinance No. 320). The District’s overarching vision is for the people of Will County to view the District as vital to enriching their quality of life – a critical component of an essential green infrastructure. Will County’s historically rural character has been rapidly disappearing. Will County’s population in 1990 of 357,313 grew by more than 40% to the 2000 census population of 502,266, making it one of the fastest growing counties in the nation. In 2007, the population estimate was 673,586. The Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission (now known as the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning) forecasted the 2030 population to increase to 1.1 million. With demand for open space increasing in direct proportion to the decreasing supply of land, the District has used a broad range of preservation strategies. Traditionally, the preferred technique by landowners has been to sell property to the District in full fee simple (i.e., including all ownership rights). Other preservation methods that have been employed are: purchase of land with the owners retaining certain temporary rights; land donations; wills; acquisition or donation of certain ownership rights, such as the future ability to develop (a conservation easement); leases; licenses; intergovernmental management agreements; rights of first refusal; etc. For more information on land preservation strategies, contact the District’s Land Preservation Coordinator at 815.727.8700. This book describes the Forest Preserve District of Will County’s system of preserves and greenways. More information can be obtained from the District’s website, www.fpdwc.org; by calling 815.727.8700; or by visiting one of the Forest Preserve District’s facilities. 1 BLACK WALNUT CREEK WATERSHED Black Walnut Creek Preserve The Forest Preserve District initiated preservation of the wetlands associated with the headwaters of Walnut Creek in Monee and Crete Townships, in 2006. Preservation is on-going; 65 acres have been protected to date, with another 40 acres pending. Black Walnut Creek 2 CLOW CREEK AND WOLF CREEK WATERSHEDS Clow Creek Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve Located in a portion of Wheatland Township that was settled by people from Vermont, this historic pioneer cemetery protected one of the highest quality prairie remnants in the state from plowing and topsoil loss. The one-acre cemetery was donated to the District in 1998 by the Natural Land Institute after being saved by the late Dr. Robert Betz in the 1960s. Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve has since grown to over 25 acres in the City of Naperville. Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve The cemetery was dedicated as a State Nature Preserve in 1999 in recognition of its important Grade A (the highest quality) dry-mesic prairie and rare species, including the federally threatened and state endangered Mead’s milkweed. The fire-dependent prairie is being maintained by prescribed burns and by controlling exotic, invasive plant species which may crowd out the native vegetation. District Natural Resource Managers began expanding the prairie into the area around the cemetery in 2004, and ongoing agricultural activities are in the process of being phased out. Tombstone conservation is also being investigated. The District has partnered with a developer to protect additional lands along Clow Creek (a tributary to the DuPage River), to construct public access to Vermont Cemetery Prairie, to create and enhance wetlands, and to build a trail upon the vacated Normantown Road south to the Wolf Creek Greenway. The District is also working with local municipalities and park districts to extend Normantown Road Trail north to the Virgil Gilman and Grand Illinois Trails, east to the DuPage River Greenway Trail, and south to the Village of Plainfield’s trail systems, a three-mile connecting trail when done. Wolf Creek Wolf Creek Preserve In 2004, a 16-acre parcel at the headwaters of Wolf Creek was donated to the District. In partnership with a local developer, a portion of the parcel is being restored as wetland. The remainder of the parcel donated by the Wiesbrook family will be used to provide public access (Wiesbrook Access) to the future Normantown Road Trail along the vacated Normantown Road north to Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve and onward to the Virgil Gilman Trail. Wiesbrook Access is located on Christa Drive in Naperville. 3 CLOW CREEK AND WOLF CREEK WATERSHEDS 4 DEER CREEK WATERSHED Deer Creek Preserve Within Deer Creek Preserve flows Deer Creek, a tributary of Thorn Creek. This heavily wooded preserve, located on Thorn Creek Lane between Park Forest and University Park, is part of the greater historic grove that also included what is now Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve. The preservation of the 35-acre Deer Creek Preserve in 1994 was triggered by a 5-acre land donation from naturalists William and Mary Lou Stanley. The District initiated management activities in the upland and floodplain woodlands in 2000. Due to its small size and limited accessibility, no recreation or education facilities or public access currently exist. The District has explored the potential to connect Deer Creek Preserve to Thorn Grove Preserve to the north and the greater Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve to the west, but it remains a small island within an area of large residential lots for now. DEER CREEK WATERSHED 5 DES PLAINES RIVER WATERSHED The Des Plaines River is the primary waterway in Will County. It is a commercially navigable shipping route, and lined by industry. Yet within the complex of industry and transportation lies a vast wealth of cultural and natural features. The Des Plaines River Valley contains one of the highest densities of pristine Illinois Natural Areas Inventory sites in the entire state. These prairies and woodlands represent a valuable asset to the people of Will County and all of Illinois, the dividends from this asset being not only in their scientific, educational, and economic benefits, but also in the benefits derived from a sense of history and “roots.” The river flows down from Wisconsin, and merges with the DuPage and Kankakee Rivers at the Will and Grundy County line to create the Illinois River. This historic French colonial voyageur route was at one time a broad and shallow wetland, but years of human manipulation by dredging, channeling, lock installation, and construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal and the Sanitary Ship Canal have created the river that we know today. Des Plaines River Greenway This greenway of District holdings and leases extends 11 miles along either or both sides of the river south from the Cook County line to the City of Joliet. In excess of 1,500 acres, it is comprised of 10 preserves. Keepataw Preserve Keepataw Preserve is located on Bluff Road between Woodridge and Lemont. The bulk of the 215-acre Keepataw Preserve was acquired in 1978 to protect wooded uplands, steep bluffs, floodplain wetlands, and cultural resources, and to buffer and expand the adjacent Forest Preserve District of Cook County’s Black Partridge Woods and the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County’s Wood Ridge and Waterfall Glen Preserves. The preserve is linked to the District’s downstream Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve by leasehold property along the river. Keepataw protects several historic features related to its history as a limestone quarry. The names Keepataw and Black Partridge honor historic Potawatomi leaders. Active natural resource management by the District commenced in 1993. To date, the emphasis has been on removing exotic plant species invading the wetlands and the bluff top, and enhancing and monitoring habitat for the federally listed (Endangered Species Act) Hine’s emerald dragonfly and other rare species. There is limited public access and a short nature trail atop the bluff providing a scenic vista of the Des Plaines River Valley. The District has partnered with the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority and local municipalities towards the future construction of a bike trail bridge across the river to the Centennial Trail from Bluff Road. Eventually, the vision is for trail connections to extend south along I-355 to link with the Spring Creek Greenway Trail, and north to the DuPage County trail system. Veterans Woods Veterans Woods is an 80-acre preserve overlooking the river valley on Joliet Road in the Village of Romeoville. It was acquired in 1966 and originally named Veterans Memorial Woods. It is characterized by wooded uplands, a steep bluff, and limited floodplain wetlands. Veterans Woods has two developed public access areas (Traders Corner and Roy F. Hassert Grove). Both areas include picnic shelters that are very heavily used by the public. The picnic groves are scheduled for relocation, replacement, and enhancement. There is currently no ongoing natural resource management. The District has been exploring with adjacent owners a long-term goal of connecting Veterans Woods to the rest of the greenway upon completion of mining operations in the area. 6 Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve Since 1982, the 330-acre Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve has been protected by a combination of District purchases, land donations, leases, and conservation easements within the eastern portion of the Village of Romeoville north of 135th Street/Romeo Road. Romeoville Prairie lies adjacent to the District’s Centennial Trail and Isle a la Cache as part of the protected greenway along the river. Romeoville Prairie was dedicated as a State Nature Preserve in 1984 to acknowledge the significance of its wet to mesic dolomite prairie, marsh, sedge meadow, springs, fens, and floodplain forest on shallow soils over limestone bedrock. Prescribed management fires and brush cutting by Forest Preserve Resource Managers started in 1985 to maintain and improve the health of these plant communities. There has been an emphasis on hydrological control and the expansion, enhancement, and monitoring of habitat for rare species such as the Lakeside daisy and leafy prairie clover. There is currently no public access or recreational facilities at Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve. Isle a la Cache This island (“isle” in French) in the Des Plaines River in Romeoville may have been used by voyageurs in the 1700s to cache their supplies and goods. In the early 1900s, the island was used for summer homes, private Isle a la Cache recreation, and sportsmen’s clubs. Between 1982 and 1997, the District secured 100 acres through purchases, land donations, and conservation easements, including the island and nearby shorelines of the river. Located on the island on the south side of 135th Street/Romeo Road is the Isle a la Cache Museum. The museum and outdoor educational elements of the Isle interpret the late 18th century fur trade between Native Americans and French voyageurs. The island has a canoe landing for river access and a connection to the Centennial and Illinois and Michigan Canal Trails, which are located east of the Isle. Prairie and wetland communities were re-created in 1993. The museum also underwent major renovations in 1993 and 2007. The District is working with the Village of Romeoville on a trail connection westward into the community. Centennial Trail Centennial Trail extends six miles from Lockport to Cook County. The northern three-mile section runs from the Schneider’s Passage access on 135th Street/Romeo Road in Romeoville to the Cook County line in Lemont. This land is leased by the District from the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago since 1993 to celebrate its centennial. The southern three-mile section of the trail lies along the Illinois and Michigan Canal on a leasehold from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, and connects to Lockport Township Park District’s Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail in Lockport. 7 NORTH DES PLAINES RIVER GREENWAY 8 Trail access is available at Schneider’s Passage, Isle a la Cache, and Second Avenue in Lockport. A historic swing bridge has been incorporated into the trail north of 135th Street. The bridge had formerly spanned the Des Plaines River on 135th Street/Romeo Road. The District worked with the Village of Romeoville and the Illinois Department of Transportation to relocate and preserve the bridge. The District worked with the Forest Preserve Districts of Cook and DuPage Counties to extend the trail into Lemont. The District is exploring the possibility of preserving the remainder of the land lying between the Des Plaines River and the Sanitary Ship Canal north of 135th Street/Romeo Road with the Water Reclamation District. Historic swing bridge on Centennial Trail Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail / Heritage Trail Since 1994, the District has leased a three-mile section of the Illinois and Michigan Canal from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The trail has been developed between the Des Plaines River in Joliet and the Lockport Township Park District’s Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail in Lockport. This trail links the District’s Joliet Iron Works Historic Site to the Lockport Township Park District’s Dellwood and Dellwood West Parks. In conjunction with the District’s Centennial Trail and the Park District’s Trail, the trail length is over 11 miles. Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve On the west side of the Des Plaines River, north and south of Division Street (between Lockport and Crest Hill) lies the 270-acre Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve leased by the Forest Preserve District from the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago since 1983. It has been a dedicated State Nature Preserve since 1983 due to its globally significant, high quality dolomite prairie, bluff, fens, seeps, and federally endangered leafy prairie clover. There is some limited public access to Lockport Prairie, including a half-mile trail and informational signs. The District began managing the prairie in 1981 with prescribed burns, brush removal, and hydrological work to maintain and enhance the leafy prairie clover population and Hine’s emerald dragonfly and other endangered or threatened species breeding habitat. Restoration work will continue into the future. Prairie Bluff Preserve Prairie Bluff preserve was created in 2006 with the lease by the District of 730 acres from the IDNR and the Illinois State Police. This land was previously part of the Illinois Department of Corrections’ Stateville Prison. This new preserve has been protected to allow restoration and hydrological management activities to promote groundwater recharge of the seeps which feed the wetland breeding habitat of the Federallyendangered Hine’s emerald dragonfly in the adjacent Lockport Prairie. The Lockport Township Park District also leases a portion of the property. Prairie Bluff provides a uniquely large amount of space in an urban setting; the two districts are working together to plan for public access. The Forest Preserve plans restoration work for 2011 and preserve access in 2012. 9 Lockport Prairie East Preserve This preserve, which is located across the Des Plaines River east of the District’s Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve, is small (only 30 acres), but its significance is not diminished for that. It contains an Illinois Natural Areas Inventory Site (a high level of state significance) harboring wet-mesic to mesic dolomite prairie with exposed bedrock, leafy prairie clover, and sedge meadow, and lies adjacent to Lockport Township Park District’s Dellwood Park and Dellwood West Park. The District received the bulk of the site from the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority in 2008 as mitigation for I-355 impacts to Keepataw Preserve. Teale Woods Overlooking the Des Plaines River Valley on Theodore Street in Joliet is the 15-acre Teale Woods. This preserve was purchased in 1994 and honors naturalist Edwin Way Teale, who was born in Joliet and was the champion of small “wild” areas in cities. There is currently no public access to the woods, but the District will be building such in the future. Teale Woods is the northern anchor of the City of Joliet’s Broadway Street Greenway along the west bank of the river. Joliet Iron Works Historic Site Joliet Iron Works Historic Site is located on Columbia and Scott Streets in downtown Joliet. This 50-acre preserve started in 1991 with the Edwin Way Teale 45-acre donation of a historic industrial archaeological site by USX Steel through the Corporation for Open Lands. Situated at the confluence of the Illinois and Michigan Canal and the Des Plaines River, it currently is the southernmost portion of the District’s Des Plaines River Greenway holdings. The site has been open since 1998. Public access and an education trail were installed in the mid-1990s to interpret part of the ruins of a late1800s to early-1900s steel and iron manufacturing facility, including four blast furnace foundations and associated structures. Adjacent and integral to the site is the Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail managed by the Forest Preserve District and the Lockport Township Park District. Site management has concentrated on stabilizing the structures by removing vegetation and roots that had grown over and weakened the foundations, and improving safety and visibility by removing rubble. The site has been used to film television and movie scenes because of its atmosphere and location. Picnic, water and restroom facilities are planned at the access area. The District is exploring planning partnerships to preserve the historic context of the site and heritage of the area. Immediately to the north lies the facility’s coke ovens, which have been designated as a County Historic Landmark but are otherwise unprotected. Across the railroad tracks to the east lies the manufacturing and office portion of the plant, which are included on the National Register of Historic Structures but are also otherwise unprotected. Also to the east lies the old Joliet Correctional Facility, which has frequently appeared on television and in films. The Illinois and Michigan Canal joins the Des Plaines River at this location, and there are several locks on the canal in the area. The District is also seeking local partners for a future trail connection eastward to the Spring Creek Greenway Trail. 10 SOUTH DES PLAINES RIVER GREENWAY 11 Des Plaines/DuPage Rivers Confluence Preserves Briscoe Mounds Lying at the confluence of the DuPage and Des Plaines River on Front Street in Channahon are two Native American prehistoric burial mounds and a village site owned by the Illinois State Museum Society. In 1989 the District received a donation of 30 acres of wooded floodplain associated with the site along both rivers. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources also owns portions of the Des Plaines River shoreline in this area and at the nearby Illinois and Michigan Canal State Park on the DuPage River. The preserve is predominately floodplain and is not suitable for public access or recreational development. Natural resource management activities have not been initiated. McKinley Woods The core of McKinley Woods on McKinley Road in Channahon was acquired in the 1930s and was doubled to 475 acres in the 1990s. In 2003 an additional 70 acres, known at the time as “Moose Island” (actually a peninsula), was acquired and added to the preserve. The original portion of McKinley Woods is heavily wooded (oak/hickory forest) with steep bluffs, ravines, and islands where the Grant Creek cut-off of the Kankakee River joins the Des Plaines and DuPage Rivers to create the Illinois River. The area had been used in the 1930s as a Civilian Conservation Corps camp. It is unusual in Will County for its redbuds, blue ash, and chinquapin oaks. Currently McKinley Woods has public access and recreational facilities. In addition to two picnic shelters and two and a half miles of hiking trails, McKinley Road access area at Frederick’s Grove has camping, access to the 60-mile Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail, fishing, and a canoe landing. Much of the infrastructure is scheduled for replacement and enhancement. In 1995 work was done to expand the yellow lady slipper orchid population. Invasive and exotic plant species control work, prescribed burns, and woodland enhancement activities have also been initiated in the late 1990s and early 2000s to defend and maintain native plant communities. More natural area restoration work will continue, and the existing recreational facilities are to be upgraded. McKinley Woods In 2005, Moose Island was incorporated into McKinley Woods. This area features woodlands and very scenic river and back-bay frontage. The northern portion of the island was named Kerry Sheridan Grove after the District’s long-serving Board President, and the southern portion is designated as the Four Rivers Environmental Education Center. Opened in 2007 with access from Blackberry Lane in Channahon, Kerry Sheridan Grove provides public fishing, canoeing, picnicking, biking, and hiking. The Center opened in 2008. The District is working with the Village of Channahon to protect additional portions of the wooded bluffs and ravines; to improve a trail connection between the two access areas (which combined with the Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail would create a large loop trail); and to improve trail connections into the community. 12 MCKINLEY WOODS AND BRISCOE MOUNDS PRESERVE 13 DUPAGE RIVER WATERSHED The streams of northwestern Will County flow into the DuPage River in urban Naperville and Bolingbrook, flow southward through a rapidly urbanizing stretch (Plainfield, Joliet, and Shorewood), and finally to the Minooka and Channahon area at the confluence with the Des Plaines River. In a 1983 District report, the river was described in this way: “A canoe trip down the DuPage River will take the canoeist past towns, playgrounds, farms, railroads, and highways, but it will also allow the traveler to feel like a native American or an early French fur trader or explorer as (s)he passes the dense forests of Glyman Woods, Hammel Woods, Channahon State Park, and other areas. The abundance of wildlife adds to the ‘otherworldliness’ of the river trip. The water quality in the river has improved in recent years, and fishermen and fish are both a common sight.” Although the rural character and farmlands of large stretches on the river are quickly disappearing, the efforts of the communities along the river have made it the premiere long distance canoe (water trail) route in the County. The District has been an integral part of this effort. DuPage River Greenway The District and the local governments and not-for-profit organizations along the river have together protected an almost continuous 12-mile greenway along the river from the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County’s holdings on the county line south through Shorewood and Joliet. Trail linkages connect the greenway to other local and regional trail networks such as Naperville’s River Walk, the Virgil-Gilman Trail, and the Grand Illinois Trail. The river in this stretch has become a critical open space resource (“green infrastructure”) for the communities that share it. Whalon Lake Along the east branch of the river lies the District’s 250-acre Whalon Lake, acquired between 1992 and 1994. Whalon Lake was named after an early settler and owner of the parcel. The lake is located on Royce Road in Bolingbrook and Naperville, directly south of the Green Valley Preserve in DuPage County. Across the river to the south are various holdings of the Village of Bolingbrook and the Bolingbrook Park District; while immediately downstream to the west are City of Naperville and Naperville Park District lands. In partnership with a previous owner, a quarry in Whalon Lake was converted to an 80-acre public fishing lake that was opened in 2008. A popular 8-acre dog park with an Whalon Lake’s wetlands additional 2.5-acre dog area for dogs under 35 pounds, and a picnic shelter opened in 2005, and large wetland areas were restored or enhanced. A canoe landing, trail connections and woodland and other restoration projects are planned for the future. The District continues to provide planning and preservation assistance to local communities to remove gaps and inholdings. We are also working in partnership with these agencies to complete a greenway trail and to make additional neighborhood and regional trail connections. 14 DUPAGE RIVER GREENWAY 15 DuPage River Confluence Preserve Between 1991 and 1993, the District preserved 260 acres in Bolingbrook at Boughton Road at the confluence of the east and west branches of the DuPage River and Spring Brook. Also preserving lands in this area are Naperville and Bolingbrook municipalities and park districts, and The Conservation Foundation (a not-for-profit land preservation organization). Although there are currently no public access or recreational facilities at this site, the District is working with the other public landowners to construct and operate a multi-use greenway trail and access to the DuPage River. District staff are also working with others on a trail connection to the Virgil-Gilman Trail and hence to a regional, state, and national trail system. Natural resource restoration is also planned. The District will continue to assist local governments in planning and preservation efforts to enhance or expand the greenway. Of particular importance is closing the gap along the river between the Confluence and the District’s downstream Riverview Farmstead. Riverview Farmstead One of the District’s most unique acquisitions started in 1994. The 15-acre purchase forms the core of a preserve which protects a historic farmstead on 111th and Book Road overlooking the DuPage River in Naperville. An additional 67 acres was acquired in 2006 and 2007 including the 10-acre KroppSchulenberg Prairie. The Naperville Park District holds a strip along the river itself. The Farmstead was settled and built by the Clow family, and includes a mid-1800s limestone house, an early frame residence that had been converted to a barn, and a large timber frame barn. The site is being programmed for the interpretation of the Riverview Farmstead – limestone house, historic transition from settlement house, and timber frame barn horse to mechanical powered agriculture. To stabilize the timber frame barn, a “barn raising” was held in 2001. Public access will be provided in 2009 and will include the development of a canoe landing and bicycle trail along the river on properties owned by the Forest Preserve District and the Naperville Park District. As annexation proposals and development plans come in, the District will continue to work with local municipalities and agencies to extend the greenway south from Riverview Farmstead. The District is also planning with local governments, not-for-profit organizations, and developers to preserve some of the last remaining farmlands in the area. 16 HAMMEL WOODS AND CATON FARM 17 Caton Farm Preserve A 35-acre tract of three parcels on Caton Farm Road in Joliet known as the Munroe Access was acquired in 2008 to remove a gap in the future DuPage River Greenway Trail. This new preserve lies just across the river from the mouth of Lily Cache and Plainfield’s Van Horne Woods Park. Hammel Woods At the site of the historic Grinton Mill in Shorewood lies the District’s 390acre Hammel Woods, named in honor of those who fought in the World War I battle in Hamel, France. The first 150 acres were the District’s second and third purchases (1930), and acquisition continues today. Hammel Woods has three picnic shelters (one of which was built in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps), two miles of trails, camping, fishing, canoe landings, and a dog park. It is the halfway point of the Will County Grinton Grove dam at Hammel Woods segment of the DuPage River water trails, and one of the most scenic portions. The preserve can be accessed from U.S. Route 59 and Black Road (two entrances). A 7-acre dog park, the first developed by the forest preserve, opened in the fall of 2002. Together with Joliet and Plainfield and their park districts, the District is protecting lands along the river north of Hammel Woods to consolidate the greenway between Shorewood and Plainfield, and for the development of a trail along the river. We are also providing planning and preservation assistance to Shorewood to extend the greenway and/or trail southward. Lake Chaminwood The 115-acre Lake Chaminwood (Channahon/Minooka/Shorewood) was purchased between 2000 and 2006. The goal is to provide public fishing access to an abandoned quarry, the DuPage River, and the Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail. Other Holdings The remaining six miles to the river’s confluence with the Des Plaines River are characterized by individual preserves which do not yet constitute a continuous greenway: • 11 acres of floodplain within Lake of the Woods subdivision, south of Shorewood protected by donated land and easements in 1998; • 17-acre wooded floodplain portion of Camelot subdivision, north of Channahon known as HastertBechstein Preserve, with no road frontage or access, that was donated in 1992; • 60 acres of wetland known as Bird’s Junction Marsh in Camelot subdivision purchased in 2001, currently undergoing natural resource restoration/enhancement planning; and The District is working with local municipalities to connect these holdings south to Briscoe Mounds and McKinley Woods at the river’s confluence. 18 DuPage River Preserves 19 FIDDYMENT CREEK WATERSHED Runyon Preserve Fiddyment Creek flows westward from Homer Township into Lockport where it flows into the Illinois and Michigan Canal. The District’s first holding along the creek is the wooded 20-acre Runyon Preserve located on Hamilton Street in Lockport. Named after local settler and Illinois and Michigan Canal visionary and advocate Armstead Runyon, it was formerly known as Legion Park when it was acquired from the American Legion in Runyon Preserve 1934. This small, urban preserve has a picnic shelter but no hiking trails. It is not currently under natural resource management. Fiddyment Creek Preserve The 274-acre Fiddyment Creek Preserve acquired in 2007 and 2008 lies between Homer Glen and Lockport in Homer Township. The Preserve protects an aesthetic landscape with woodlands, prairies, a scenic valley and the creek. The District is working with the Village of Homer Glen to preserve additional lands, removing the gap in the preserve. The District has initiated cultural and biological resource inventories in preparation for upcoming planning. RUNYON AND FIDDYMENT CREEK PRESERVES 20 FORKED CREEK WATERSHED Forked Creek is the largest watershed in Will County, and drains portions of Monee, Green Garden, Wilton and Manhattan Townships, Wesley and Florence Townships and Kankakee County. It joins the Kankakee River in Wilmington. This historically agricultural and scenic waterway is attracting residential development. Wayne Lehnert Preserve This 80-acre parcel on Center Road in Peotone Township was acquired in 1971 and named after a District Board member. A tree plantation and grassland were put in during the early 1970s as “wildlife” habitat. There is no public access or facilities planned, and no ongoing resource restoration or management activities. WAYNE LEHNERT PRESERVE 21 Laughton Preserve Gerdes Grove was acquired in 1931 from the Gerdes family. This eight-acre parcel was for many years the full extent of the preserve. However, extensive acquisitions in the 1990s and in 2006 created the 495acre Laughton Preserve, of which Gerdes Grove is currently the sole access area. The preserve protects a remnant of the historic Twelve Mile Grove (a prairie grove 12 miles along the road from Joliet to Danville), portions of the 1832 Ce-Na-Ge-Wine and Joseph Laughton Reservations, and the historic Wallingford Settlement in Wilton Center on Joliet Road. Laughton Preserve is predominantly floodplain forest known for its bluebells, and is buffered by fallow agricultural fields and upland woods. An old Civilian Conservation Corps (C.C.C.) shelter is currently maintained and used for picnicking at Gerdes Grove, but the remainder of the preserve does not have public access. Woodland and other restoration activities will be planned in the future in conjunction with improved public access to Laughton. Future planning will also look at extending the preserve along the creek both upstream and downstream. Huyck’s Grove Preserve This 480-acre preserve on the south branch of the creek in Wilton Township was acquired in 2006 and 2007. It contains a prairie grove remnant along a scenic stretch of Forked Creek. An additional 22 acres is pending. LAUGHTON AND HUYCK’S GROVE PRESERVES 22 Forked Creek Greenway The three-mile, 790-acre greenway starts at the Wauponsee Glacial Trail on Route 102 in Ritchie and protects both sides of Forked Creek downstream into Wilmington at Forsythe Woods except a 1/2-mile gap south of Ballou Road. The Forsythe Woods access area on Kahler Road at the northern end of the greenway was acquired in 1974 and continuing land assemblage has proceeded ever since. Forked Creek Preserve Forsythe Woods lies at the confluence of Forked and Jordan Creeks and includes parking, a picnic shelter, and primitive trails. Prairie areas have been enhanced by prescribed burns since 1986, supplemented with brush control starting in 1993. The remainder of the greenway is in interim row crop production. Forked Creek The District will be developing a portion of the greenway at Ballou Road for a large access facility to the Wauponsee Glacial Trail and a trail linkage from there to Forsythe Woods. Future planning will look at extending the trail into Wilmington and to the Kankakee River and eastward toward the Kankakee County line. The District will also be upgrading the existing public access facilities at Forsythe Woods. 23 FORKED CREEK GREENWAY 24 Donohue Grove Preserve In 2008 the District acquired 133 acres of a woodland grove located along a scenic and winding stretch of Forked Creek on Donohue Road in Wesley Township to create Donohue Grove Preserve. An additional 95 acres is pending. John Wesley Preserve In 2008, 274 acres was acquired in Wesley Township which was named John Wesley Preserve. Future efforts will be to continue protecting this scenic valley, connecting the John Wesley and Donohue Grove Preserves. The preserve contains a section of Forked Creek with extensive floodplain and hydric soils for future restoration. DONOHUE GROVE AND JOHN WESLEY PRESERVES 25 FRACTION RUN WATERSHED Lambs Woods Fraction Run is a small watershed in rapidly urbanizing Homer and Lockport Townships which flows into the Illinois and Michigan Canal in Lockport at the Lockport Township Park District’s Dellwood Park. Near the creek on Bruce Road in Lockport lies the District’s 75-acre Lambs Woods, acquired in 1971. Lambs Woods is a mature oak woodland with a picnic shelter but no trails. The parking area and walkways are planned for upgrading in the future. Lambs Woods Picnic Shelter Lambs Woods 26 HICKORY CREEK WATERSHED Hickory Creek flows through a heavily wooded valley in Frankfort, Mokena, New Lenox, and Joliet. Hickory Creek is an important educational resource for northeastern Illinois. Research on the creek began in the 1800s, and use of the creek by local schools and universities as well as the Field Museum of Natural History continues. Maintaining high water quality and a natural riparian environment are necessary for the on-going protection of this resource. With 2,040 acres preserved by the District, it is now right behind Plum Creek as the best-protected watershed in the County. The creek is still being studied by various schools and organizations, building upon the earlier research. Sauk Trail Reservoir The 260-acre Sauk Trail Reservoir was acquired in the 1970s in conjunction with the State Division of Waterways for the construction and operation of a local stormwater reservoir/management facility on Sauk Trail Road, Laraway Road, and Harlem Avenue in Frankfort. To protect the dam and stormwater storage capacity, prescribed burns and brush cutting are part of the annual management. There is currently no public access, but parts of the site are used by an adjacent school as a nature education trail. The District is working on a bike trail along the north portion of the preserve in conjunction with the Village of Frankfort. Hunters Woods The 43-acre wood lot known as Hunters Woods was acquired between 1973 and 1975. It lies adjacent to Old Plank Road Trail on 78th Avenue in what was then the eastern edge of the Village of Frankfort, but it is now surrounded by subdivisions. The oak woodland and small marsh have limited access, wildlife viewing and an unimproved trail. Hickory Creek Preserve The 1,600-acre preserve started with a 139-acre purchase in 1942. The bulk of Hickory Creek Preserve was protected in the 1970s and ’80s for a regional stormwater reservoir, which was never constructed. It is the District’s largest individual preserve, and is dominated by various woodland and aquatic habitats, and several significant education and recreation areas. In 1998, the District dedicated 575 acres of the western portion of the preserve as the Hickory Creek Barrens Nature Preserve. From the dedication proposal’s introduction: “First and foremost is the presence of a large mosaic complex of prairie-forest transition that includes prairie and savanna, and a silt-loam barrens community, remnants of which were formerly not known to occur in northern Illinois. This complex indicates unique ecological processes, affords an unprecedented management and restoration opportunity to reconstruct a dynamic, large-scale prairie-forest continuum, and is proposed to serve as a ‘restoration model’ that exemplifies science-based, ecosystem management. The site provides habitat for the largest Illinois population of the state-threatened savanna blazing star (Liatris scariosa nieuwlanndi) and includes an experimental re-introduction of the federally-threatened Mead’s milkweed (Asceplias meadii). The proposed nature preserve provides habitat for two state-listed bird species including the state threatened veery (Catharus fuscesencs) and state threatened brown creeper (Certhia americana). There also exists a larger, habitat-sensitive avifauna that includes numerous neotropical migrant, summer resident and winter resident bird species. Finally, the preserve includes nearly 2.5 miles of a medium gradient perennial creek associated with a large complex of upland and floodplain forest, with inclusions of unique aquatic features such as relict meander or channel cut-off pool wetlands, or forested floodplain spring/fen wetlands.” 27 HICKORY CREEK PRESERVE 28 Prescribed fire was first used as an ecosystem management tool in 1985. In 1997, control of non-native invasive species which could take over natural plant communities, and the seeding and planting of native vegetation began. Invasive species control, vegetation monitoring, and restoration/enhancement efforts are still ongoing. Restoration is also planned for the location of the vacated Van Horne Woods Access on Route 30, just east of Wolf Road. The following educational facilities are found in Hickory Creek Preserve: • The historic one-room Schmuhl School Museum is owned and Hickory Creek Preserve operated by the New Lenox Historical Society. The school was relocated to its current location from the Southeast corner of Route 30 and Schoolhouse Road on April 26, 2000. • The District’s Environmental Learning Center provides training to teachers, environmental educators, school and youth groups, and the public. This site was developed in 1992 to include outdoor camping and a yurt. There are also three large-scale access areas with shelters: • The Hickory Creek Barrens and Schmuhl School access is on Schoolhouse Road in New Lenox, and includes parking, restrooms, a picnic shelter, and access to the 2.7-mile west branch of the Hickory Creek Bikeway. • Hickory Creek Junction in Mokena provides access from Route 30 to the Hickory Creek Bikeway, Barrens Nature Preserve, and the Old Plank Road Trail. It also includes a playground accessible to children with varying abilities built in the summer of 2000 with the support of Trinity Services, the Will-Grundy Center for Independent Living, and the Lincoln-Way Special Recreation Association; and a picnic shelter. • LaPorte Road Access serves as the trailhead for the 1.8-mile east branch of the Hickory Creek Bikeway and Mokena’s LaPorte Road bike trail, with a connection to Frankfort’s Route 30 bike trail. The access area provides two picnic shelters, restrooms, and water. Future planning efforts include working with Mokena to improve the trail connections between the portions of the preserve east and west of Wolf Road, and working with Mokena Park District to provide a connection with their adjacent Community and Yunker Farm Parks. The District will also be working with New Lenox on its greenway efforts to the west. Frankfort’s efforts upstream to the east provide another opportunity for a trail connection to Old Plank Road Trail. The District is also working with the Illinois Department of Transportation and local units of government to develop a trail along Route 30. 29 Potawatomi Woods The District acquired this 114-acre parcel in 2000 to expand and buffer the Joliet Park District’s Pilcher Park and Higginbotham Woods between Joliet and New Lenox, and to protect the Hickory Creek Sedge Meadow Illinois Natural Areas Inventory Site. Potawatomi Woods also includes wet, wet-mesic, and mesic floodplain forest; mesic and wet-mesic upland forest; calcareous fen; forested seep; and a perennial stream with deep pools and gravel/cobble bars. Preservation of the parcel protected interior woodland bird habitat and cultural resources on adjacent parcels from indirect impacts. The preserve is named after the most significant Native American group still in Will County at the time of Euro/American settlement. The District is initiating resource management work and will be coordinating with the Joliet Park District to provide public access to the landlocked parcel from Francis Road in New Lenox. Future planning will look at possible trail linkages to Old Plank Road Trail and Spring Creek Greenway Trail. Potawatomi Woods 30 JACKSON CREEK WATERSHED Jackson Creek Preserve A new preserve was created in Frankfort and Green Garden Township when the District acquired 240 acres in 2006 to protect a portion of the headwaters of the main branch of Jackson Creek. The District is working with the Village of Frankfort to restore a channelized portion of the creek, to preserve additional open space near the preserve, and to connect a Jackson Creek trail in the future to the Village’s trail system. An additional 138 acres is pending. Jackson CREEK PRESERVE 31 JOLIET JUNCTION TRAIL Joliet Junction Trail A 4.5-mile (60-acre) abandoned private railroad was acquired and developed by the District as a paved bike trail in partnership with the City of Joliet between 2000 and 2002. In conjunction with the State’s Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail and the District’s Rock Run Greenway Trail, it creates a 15-mile loop trail through Joliet, Crest Hill and Rockdale. The District provides access to the Joliet Junction Trail at Theodore marsh on Gaylord in Crest Hill. Joliet Junction Trail 32 JOLIET JUNCTION TRAIL 33 KANKAKEE RIVER WATERSHED The Kankakee River drains the southern portion of the county, and was a major French voyageur route from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River, with a broad and scenic valley and excellent canoeing. About 17 miles of the river flows across Will County, 3.5 miles of it through the Illinois Department of Natural Resources’ (IDNR) Kankakee River State Park, and six miles flows alongside IDNR’s Des Plaines Conservation Area and the U.S. Forest Service’s Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. Evans-Judge Preserve In 2002 and 2003, the District acquired this 180-acre preserve on Route 113 near Custer Park, which includes floodplain terrace and wetland slough in an abandoned river channel, disturbed sand savanna, and degraded upland forest. The preserve was named after earlier owners of the property. The District will be restoring and enhancing its natural resources and providing public access in the future to the Kankakee River for canoeing and fishing. Long-range planning will look at ways to provide habitat and/or trail linkages upriver to the Kankakee River State Park and downstream to the District’s nearby Wauponsee Glacial Trail. KANKAKEE SANDS The Kankakee Sands area lies between the Mazon and Kankakee Rivers. Its sandy soils and crescentshaped sand dunes are relics from when the area was the shoreline of glacial Lake Wauponsee. The result was unusual sand savannas. Large-scale farm drainage ditches have severely impacted the natural hydrology of the area, as has a history of coal mining in the region. Braidwood Dunes and Savanna Nature Preserve This 325-acre preserve on Route 113 in Braidwood was acquired from 1980 to 1997. It was dedicated by the District as a State Nature Preserve in 1981 (with additions in 1983 and 2001) because of its remnant dry-mesic sand savanna, mesic and wetmesic sand prairie, sedge meadow, and marsh. From the 1995 Directory of Illinois Nature Preserves is this description: “The area is one of the largest and most diverse examples of its type remaining in Illinois. The savanna communities exist in a delicate balance between forest and prairie with fire as the influencing factor. By consuming accumulated litter and preventing succession by trees and shrubs, fire allows the savanna to flourish. Understory savanna species in need of filtered light include climbing vines such as grape and woodbine. Other notable plants of the savanna are clammy false foxglove and huckleberry. The well-drained dune ridges and high blowouts contain western prairie species such as prickly pear cactus. Eastern coastal plain species including yellow-eyed grass, grass pink and tubercled orchid occur in the low wet swales. Due to the wide diversity of habitats within the preserve, the potential for numerous wildlife species is great. Braidwood Dunes Over 30 species of birds have been identified and several species of mammals, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates have been and Savanna Nature Preserve observed. Tiger salamander, western chorus frog, six-lined racerunner, western slender glass lizard, bullsnake and bluebirds are some of the more uncommon animals known from this preserve.” 34 Management by prescribed fire and invasive species control started in 1982 to enhance the fire-dependent savanna. Between restoration and enhancement projects and maintenance activities, almost the entire preserve is being managed. Public access is limited to a nature trail. Future preservation planning will look at a habitat linkage to the District’s nearby Sand Ridge Savanna Nature Preserve. Sand Ridge Savanna Preserve This 494-acre preserve on the south side of Route 113 between Braidwood and Wilmington is the result of ongoing acquisition from 1990 to 2004. The central core of the site was dedicated as a state nature preserve in 1993: “The Sand Ridge Savanna is a diverse high quality sand prairie and sand savanna ecosystem located in Will County. This 227.342-acre tract features high quality sand prairie with a large population of the state threatened tubercled orchid, and high quality shrub prairie (a rare coastal plant community) with the state endangered shore St. John’s wort and state threatened narrowleaved sundew. The site also contains a rich fauna of 41 prairie and savanna butterfly species, including two skippers (the black dash and the two-spot) that are on the Illinois watch list” (dedication proposal). Management of the fire-dependent plant communities through prescribed burns started in 1992. An additional 12-acre prairie was created in 1993, 36.5 acres in 2000, seven acres in 2001, and 14.5 acres in 2003. Hydrology restoration and invasive species control started in 1996, and habitat enhancement started in 1996. Recent additions to the south and west of the dedicated nature preserve remain in interim agricultural use pending preserve master planning. There is currently no public access to Sand Ridge, but it has been funded and scheduled. Sand Ridge Savanna Preserve Preservation planning activities will continue to explore additional habitat connections west to the District’s Braidwood Dunes and Savanna Nature Preserve, north to the State’s Hitt’s Siding Nature Preserve, and expansion southeast to include an additional sand savanna; a link to Horse Creek; and connection to a future potential extension of Wauponsee Glacial Trail into Kankakee County. Kankakee Sands Preserve The 525-acre preserve on the north side of Route 113 was assembled between 1999 and 2008. The northern portion of the preserve is known as Shenk Grove. The preserve connects Sand Ridge Savanna to the State’s Wilmington Shrub Prairie Nature Preserve. Access, restoration and development planning is scheduled in conjuction with Sand Ridge Savanna Preserve. . 35 BRAIDWOOD DUNES, SAND RIDGE SAVANNA, AND KANKAKEE SANDS 36 LILY CACHE CREEK WATERSHED Lily Cache Creek and Lily Cache Slough are in some locations (through historic human manipulation) free flowing streams, but mostly they are slow flowing wetlands. Draining southwestward from Bolingbrook and Romeoville to the DuPage River in Plainfield, the entire watershed is urban. Due to aesthetic, recreation, and wetland benefits, all of the communities along the two branches have been working individually and together to preserve greenways along the creek. Lake Renwick Preserve The 832-acre Lake Renwick Preserve is an abandoned quarry in Plainfield which was acquired by the District beginning in 1989 to protect breeding and foraging habitat for five species of then endangered or threatened birds. The preserve is comprised of: Lake Renwick Heron Rookery Nature Preserve (320 acres dedicated in 1992); Copley Nature Park (two acres); and Turtle Lake (510 acres). The Nature Preserve includes 200 acres of lake which contains numerous small islands used for nesting by great blue herons, great egrets, black-crowned night herons, double-crested cormorants, and cattle egrets. The rookery is unusual for its diversity. The 320-acre nature preserve is owned jointly by the District and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The site’s interpretive center and viewing areas accessible from Renwick Road are open but with restricted hours to the public during the height of the breeding season, as is the preserve’s three miles of trails. Interpretation at the site utilizes the Will County Chapter of the Audubon Society and other volunteers. Nesting trees were being lost to soil erosion on the islands, so in 1992 and 2002 nesting structures were built, in 1994 the protection of nesting trees against beaver damage was initiated, and in 2003 land bridges providing access to the islands by predators were removed. Copley Nature Park was acquired in 1998 with the assistance of the Corporation for OpenLands, the Will County Chapter of the Audubon Society, and a local Friends of the Rookery citizen’s organization. The site includes access from Route 30, and a gazebo with mounted view scopes for bird viewing. Turtle Lake on Lockport Street was first opened to the public in 2004 to provide fishing opportunities on portions of the Lake Renwick complex in such a way as to ameliorate and minimize impacts to foraging birds away from the nesting island lake. It also provides access to the three-mile bike trail. Extensive wetland restoration has occurred in the eastern side of Lake Renwick. The District has been working with adjacent quarry operators and developers to assure the continuance of water flow into the Lake. Prescribed fires were initiated in 2005 to control exotic plant species and encourage natural plant communities. At the end of 2007, District volunteers and stewards, Don and Espie Nelson, donated three acres of land and 34 acres of Conservation Easement known as the Nelson Prairie on the south side of Renwick Road on Lily Cache. Ongoing preservation planning seeks to expand and/or buffer the lake. Other planning activities include exploring preservation options for private recreational quarry lakes to the north, and trail and greenway connections to surrounding communities. 37 LAKE RENWICK PRESERVE 38 O’Hara Woods The District purchased a 2.5-acre landlocked wooded parcel in 2005 to expand and buffer the Village of Romeoville’s O’Hara Woods Nature Preserve on 135th Street on Lily Cache Slough. An additional 50 acres has been acquired in 2008. Preservation planning is ongoing between the District, the Conservation Foundation, and the Village of Romeoville to expand the nature preserve westward toward other village holdings along the slough and downstream to Plainfield. O’HARA WOODS 39 Lily Cache Wetlands In 2005, the District agreed to accept three separate donations totaling 129 acres of mitigated wetlands in Bolingbrook and Romeoville on the main branch of Lily Cache Creek. These wetlands were created, restored, or enhanced as part of ongoing industrial development in the area. These wetlands are part of Bolingbrook’s Lily Cache Greenway and Trail. Future planning will look at extending the greenway downstream into Romeoville and Plainfield. LILY CACHE WETLANDS 40 OLD PLANK ROAD TRAIL After 20 years of effort by the District, numerous agencies and units of local and state governments in Will and Cook Counties (working together as a group that later became the Old Plank Road Trail Management Commission), and the Corporation for Open Lands (a not-for-profit land preservation organization), the 21-mile abandoned New York Central Railroad corridor was acquired in 1992 and later developed and operated as the multi-jurisdictional Old Plank Road Trail. Before the railroad was constructed in the 1850s, the corridor had originally been secured to build a wagon and horse road using wood planks, but the road was never built. The portion owned or developed and managed by the District is approximately 11.5 miles long (now over 130 acres), with the remaining eight and a half miles owned by other local agencies. It was the District’s first linear “rail-2-trail” project. The District owns and/or manages portions of the trail from Washington Street in Joliet east to 108th Avenue in Frankfort, and another section from Pfeiffer Road in Frankfort eastward to the Cook County line. The Village of Frankfort owns and manages the portion of the trail between 108th Avenue and Pfeiffer Road. Portions of the trail in Cook County are owned or managed by the Villages of Matteson and Park Forest, Rich Township, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The trail currently ends at Western Avenue in Park Forest. Although the area has since urbanized, prairie remnants along the trail have been managed via prescribed burns and brush control since 1993. Prairie enhancement Old Plank Road Trail and expansion efforts started in 1998. The District currently has a public access facility serving the trail at Hickory Creek Junction in Mokena and parking at Park Road in Joliet, but another facility is being built on Washington Street in the City of Joliet. Old Plank Road Trail is part of the Grand Illinois Trail, which circumnavigates the northern quarter of the state, and the coast-tocoast American Discovery Trail. The District is working with Joliet to link the Old Plank Road Trail to the Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail and the Wauponsee Glacial Trail along street routes. The District is also exploring with the City of Joliet a linkage to the Forest Preserve’s Spring Creek Greenway Trail. The District will be working with numerous municipalities, park districts, and townships that wish to connect their local trails to this regional, state, and national trail. 41 OLD PLANK ROAD TRAIL 42 PLUM CREEK WATERSHED Plum Creek flows northeast from Crete Township to Lake Michigan via the Calumet River. The area was at one time a wetland area lying between glacial moraines, but early historic agricultural drainage work may have breached a moraine. This rapid outflow of waters to the north lead to soil erosion, which created the wooded ravines which now characterize the valley, and exposed peat deposits with Pleistocene mega-fauna (mastodon, horse, great beaver, etc.) fossils. This watershed is of great significance not only for its natural and scenic resources, but its geology, paleontology, and archaeology. Plum Creek Greenway The 7-mile-long Plum Creek Greenway has been the District’s largest preservation project with over 2,200 acres protected. These lands are divided into five preserves: Plum Valley Ravines, Moeller Woods, Plum Valley Preserve, Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve, and the Vincennes Trail. Plum Valley Ravines This preserve started with land donations in 1977 and 1979, and has rapidly grown to 800 acres today. Plum Valley Ravines extends the greenway to the Cook County line and is immediately adjacent to the Forest Preserve District of Cook County’s Plum Creek Preserve. Recreational facilities and public access are funded and being planned but do not currently exist. This portion of the greenway contains the steepest ravines, buttonbush swamps, various woodlands, and past and potential massasauga (a State-endangered snake species) habitat. A preservation goal is to join these parcels to Moeller Woods to create one larger preserve. Natural resource management, enhancement, restoration, and monitoring activities started in 2002. Moeller Woods Moeller Woods is a “surprise” preserve. The District had long sought to acquire this property, but had not been successful. In 2003, the District learned that the late Adeline Moeller had left a right of first refusal to purchase the parcel on Exchange Street in unincorporated Crete Township from the church to which she had willed her larger estate. This 90-acre purchase in 2003 became the core of the 450-acre Moeller Woods. There are currently no recreational facilities or public access at the heavily wooded site. Resource inventory studies are underway or planned to assist in future resource management. The District is exploring the potential for a trail linkage southward to Plum Valley Preserve and a short greenway connection north to Plum Valley Ravines. Plum Valley Preserve Preservation in this area lying between Burville Road, Stoney Island Avenue, and Route 394 in Crete Township began in 1990, and already 450 acres have been acquired. Plum Valley Preserve is a portion of the creek with a visible valley. Tree planting, seeding, and invasive species control work started in 2001 to expand and enhance the woodlands and to ameliorate some of the fragmentation impacts caused by the numerous gas pipelines that bisect Plum Valley Preserve. As more acres are restored, the interim agricultural activities will be phased out. There are currently no recreation facilities or public access, but a greenway trail and associated amenities are being planned. 43 Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve The first parcel of this 890-acre preserve was secured in 1938, while the core of Goodenow Grove started with the purchase of a Boy Scout camp in 1977. The preserve can be accessed from Dutton Road off of Goodenow Road in Crete Township. Goodenow Grove was dedicated as a State Nature Preserve in 1996 in recognition of its rich, diverse mixture of natural communities, including dry-mesic and mesic upland forests; mesic and wet-mesic floodplain forests; forested seeps; savanna; dry-mesic and mesic prairies; wet-mesic prairie/sedge meadow; marshes; and vernal depressions. The preserve protects habitat for several state-threatened or endangered species, including the eastern massasauga rattlesnake, the Kirtland’s watersnake, the spotted coral root orchid, and the earleafed foxglove, among others. Prescribed burning, brush control, seeding, planting, and monitoring were initiated in the 1990s to maintain and enhance plant community and wildlife habitat diversity and quality. Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve’s recreational amenities include Plum Creek Nature Center, a large sledding hill, numerous nature trails, two picnic shelters, camping Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve areas, and a skating pond. It is the site of many educational programs for school children and families and is a recreation “hot spot” in the winter. The nature center underwent a major redesign in the fall of 2002 including new exhibits, native gardens, and boardwalks. The District removed the greenway gap in Goodenow Grove, and is working on the gap in the greenway between the Nature Preserve and Plum Valley Preserve immediately downstream. Preservation and planning efforts now focus on the upstream headwaters area and residential and transportation development impacts; expansion and buffer of wooded areas around the perimeter of Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve; and the protection of snake habitat north of the preserve boundary. Upgrades and expansion of existing facilities and infrastructure will continue. Vincennes Trail The 2005 Capital Improvement Program Acquisition Plan included a partnership with local governments to preserve the abandoned Chicago Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad in eastern Will County for conversion to a multiuse trail. The Vincennes Trail is proposed to go from the Old Plank Road Trail to the Momence Wetlands on the Kankakee River in Kankakee County for a potential future trail of 25 miles. The first 0.5-mile segment just south of Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve has been donated to the District by the Crete Rural Park District. Active planning efforts with local units of government are underway to complete the first segment from Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve to the Village of Beecher. 44 PLUM CREEK WATERSHED 45 PRAIRIE CREEK WATERSHED Prairie Creek Preserve The District initiated the creation of Prairie Creek Preserve in 2006 with the preservation of 121 acres near Manhattan (McClure Woods). Preservation is ongoing to protect an unchannelized portion of Prairie Creek between the U.S. Forest Service’s Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie and the District’s Wauponsee Glacial Trail. The preserve includes sinuous riparian habitat. The District and Forest Service will be partnering on restoring and managing the area when preservation is completed. PRAIRIE CREEK PRESERVE 46 ROCK CREEK WATERSHED Rock Creek flows southwest from Monee, past Peotone and into Kankakee County where it joins the Kankakee River. The portion of the stream in Will County has a rural agricultural quality, but to the south within Kankakee River State Park, it is a high quality natural and scenic resource. The District has two preserves near the headwaters of the creek – Monee Reservoir and Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve – which total 400 acres. Monee Reservoir 175 acres of the 268-acre Monee Reservoir were acquired in 1982 from the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad. The reservoir was created by the railroad and used to supply water to steam engines, and was later operated by the Izaak Walton League as a fishing lake. Since its acquisition, the District has enhanced the lake and created a sustainable public fishery, expanded the lake from 35 to 40 acres, and re-created prairie areas in other portions of the site. Monee Reservoir on Ridgeland Avenue in Monee was acquired and developed by the Forest Preserve as a public fishing facility and opened in the spring of Monee Reservoir 1992. A concession facility on-site provides fishing bait and gear, row boats, canoes, kayaks, winter recreation, and seasonal educational programs. The site includes shoreline fishing, boat docks and landings, hiking/biking trails, picnic shelters, and other public amenities. Because the lake depends upon a steady supply of unpolluted surface water, District planning and preservation efforts in the area focus on protecting intermittent “feeder” waterways west of the District’s holdings and the upper reaches of the headwaters to the northeast. Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve Preservation of the 212-acre Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve has been ongoing since 1937. It protects part of a reservation granted to the daughters of a Potawatomi woman Marie Bailly in 1832. Some sources believe that “Monee” is derivative from the name “Marie.” Portions of Raccoon Grove were used as a park first known as Ziemer Grove and later known as Oakdell Park. 47 The District dedicated Raccoon Grove as an Illinois State Nature Preserve in 1989 in recognition of its high quality dry-mesic upland forest dominated by white, bur, and black oak and shagbark hickory, and its mesic upland forest dominated by red and white oak and sugar maple. The District has managed it as a prairie grove with woodland, savanna, and prairie areas. Public access is provided by a short nature trail which provides excellent spring wildflower viewing. To protect the prairie grove character and function of the Nature Preserve, District planning and preservation efforts in the area have concentrated on surrounding grassland bird breeding and foraging habitat. Raccoon Grove ROCK CREEK WATERSHED 48 ROCK RUN WATERSHED Rock Run Greenway The Rock Run is a low gradient creek slowly flowing through high-quality wetlands from Crest Hill and Joliet into the Des Plaines River. Rock Run has been adopted by local residents and the City of Joliet as an important amenity. The District, aided by the City, has successfully protected over 1,200 acres within the watershed to date with more expected. District holdings connect and link to those of Lockport Township Park District, Channahon Park District, Joliet Park District, and Joliet Junior College to create an almost continuous greenway along the entire Rock Run. Theodore Marsh The 180-acre Theodore Marsh on Gaylord Avenue and Theodore Street in Crest Hill and Joliet was acquired between 1994 and 2006 through land purchases and donations. This wetland area includes habitat for such interesting birds as yellowheaded blackbirds and pied-billed grebes. Theodore Marsh includes a playground built and managed by the Lockport Township Playground at Theodore Marsh Park District, and a public trailhead access area for the 9-mile Rock Run Trail going southwest, and the 4.4-mile Joliet Junction Trail going south. Starting in 2000, the District removed fill that had previously been dumped into the wetlands, and restored, enhanced, and created upland prairie and wetland on over 120 acres. In 2001, work began on creating an additional 12-acre prairie. Management of fire-evolved plant communities with prescribed burns started in 2005. Rock Run Preserve The 280-acre Rock Run Preserve lies west of Essington and south to Jefferson Street in Joliet, along a 2.5-mile stretch of wetlands. Rock Run Preserve includes multiple public trail access points such as Black Road and Paul V. Nichols on Essington Road, the Rock Run Greenway Trail, and a nature trail winding around a restored quarry pond and wetland. Invasive species management, brush removal, and prescribed burning started in 1998, and additional wetland enhancement activities started in 2002 to promote and reestablish the natural plant communities. In 2003, much of the site was granted further protection and registered as an Illinois Land and Water Reserve. Portions of the trail may be relocated, and infrastructure replacements are scheduled. Colvin Grove Colvin Grove (formerly “Middle Rock Run”) currently contains 175 acres linking Joliet Park District and Joliet Junior College properties. It was purchased between 1991 and 2006 along the east channel of Rock Run to protect the historic Colvin grove, and eliminated a gap in the Rock Run Greenway. Ongoing preservation seeks to continue along the west channel. The Rock Run Greenway trail passes through the preserve. 49 Lower Rock Run Preserve – I&M Canal Access South of I-80 on both sides of the Illinois and Michigan Canal between Joliet and Channahon lies a 420-acre preserve acquired between 1989 and 2003 to protect wetlands and wooded habitat, and to provide trail access. A 54-acre portion is a conservation easement dedicated to the District. Lower Rock Run provides public access to the State’s Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail, the District’s Rock Run Trail and a short nature trail, and lies adjacent to Channahon Park District holdings. Rock Run Rookery Lower Rock Run – I&M Canal Access This 210-acre complex of abandoned quarries on Young’s Road and Route 6 at the Rock Run’s confluence with the Des Plaines River in Joliet was acquired in 2002 to protect nesting islands for herons, egrets, and cormorants. Future planning will look at restoration needs, public access/fishing potential, and trail linkages. Other Holdings • The 3-acre Kraske Preserve was donated to the District in 1998, and lies near the headwaters of the Rock Run on the east side of Weber Road. It expands and buffers Lockport Township Park District property. • Alessio Prairie (13 acres) was created by a 1995 donation in Crest Hill on the west side of Weber Road. This high-quality wetland has been enhanced and managed as orchid habitat since 1996. Rock Run Rookery 50 ROCK RUN GREENWAY 51 SPRING CREEK WATERSHED Spring Creek Greenway Spring Creek has a broad and very scenic valley. It enters Will County in Homer Township, and flows west to its confluence first with Hickory Creek, and then the Des Plaines River in Joliet. The stream and floodplain is hydrologically significant. Although much of the stream has been channelized, the hydric soils remain, offering an excellent opportunity for stream dechannelization and wetland re-creation. The underlying Hadley Aquifer is an important water source for the City of Joliet. The District has been very successful in this watershed by protecting a 7-mile-long greenway of four preserves totaling over 1,765 acres in a rapidly developing area. Messenger Marsh Beginning as a two-acre purchase in 1989, Messenger Marsh located on either side of South Bell Road in Homer Glen, has grown to over 625 Messenger Woods acres. In 2008, the District completed preserve improvements that expanded public access areas, extended the trail system, created a dog park, and connected to the downstream Messenger Woods Nature Preserve. Future preservation and planning activities include working with Homer Glen on equestrian trail connections to Forest Preserve District of Cook County equestrian centers to the north, and working with Orland Park to extend the greenway and trails eastward into Cook County. Messenger Woods Nature Preserve The first parcel of land purchased by the District was the 144-acre Messenger Woods on January 20, 1930 for approximately $125 an acre. This later grew into a 435-acre preserve on Bruce Road in Homer Glen. The parcels were dedicated as a State Nature Preserve in 1994 and 1999 in recognition of their very high-quality mesic and dry-mesic upland forests, as well as wet-mesic upland, and mesic and wet-mesic floodplain forests; shrub swamp; and wet prairie. State-listed species include rock elm, heart-leaved plantain, golden seal, red shouldered hawk, Cooper’s hawk, and veery. Messenger Woods is well known for its spectacular spring wildflower display. Messenger Woods has two picnic shelters, campsites, and two miles of trails. Infrastructure upgrades are planned. Invasive species control to protect the natural areas started in 1994, leading up to non-native brush clearing starting in 2001 and the first use of prescribed fire in 2002. Some initial restoration and maintenance has occurred, with more work in the planning phase. Ongoing preservation and planning efforts are to connect Messenger Woods both upstream and downstream to the rest of the greenway, protecting more open space, completing a wildlife habitat corridor, and providing roadway trail linkages. Work is also underway to relocate recreational areas outside of the environmentally sensitive interior and to provide new access and expanded recreational opportunities. 52 Messenger Woods and Messenger Marsh 53 Hadley Valley Preservation of Hadley Valley started in 2000, which extended the Spring Creek Greenway eastward three miles from Walnut Hollow Preserve, and protects a portion of the Hadley Valley Aquifer recharge area (primary source of the City of Joliet’s drinking water), and a scenic vista from Route 6. Hadley Valley is currently 500 acres with additional donations and purchases pending. It includes a 0.5-mile-wide valley providing a scenic view from Route 6 along the north edge of New Lenox from Farrell Road in Joliet to Bruce Road in Homer Glen. The District is partnering with the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority on a large-scale stream de-channelization and Hadley Valley wetland and wildlife habitat restoration project in Hadley Valley using U.S. Army Corps of Engineer O’Hare Modernization Mitigation Account (OMMA) funds secured through OpenLands. The District is also developing a multi-use trail and access facilities. Future planning and preservation will look to link the trail southward to Joliet Park District and Forest Preserve District holdings on Hickory Creek (eventually to the Old Plank Road Trail) and northward along I-355 to the Des Plaines River. The District will work with New Lenox and Homer Glen to extend the greenway eastward to Messenger Woods Nature Preserve as annexation and development occurs. Walnut Hollow This 210-acre site (previously known as “Lower Spring Creek”) west of Farrell Road in Joliet started with numerous purchases between 1973 and 1975 for a proposed regional stormwater reservoir partnership with the state. Although the project did not come to fruition, it did give the District a western terminus for a future greenway to build upon. Given the soils and configuration of the site, there are limited opportunities to develop public access or recreational facilities. There is currently no active resource management. Ongoing preservation and planning activities will explore ways to buffer Walnut Hollow and to work with others to provide local public access and trail connections westward through Joliet to the Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail, Joliet Iron Works, Joliet Prison, and other cultural resources along the heritage corridor area of the Des Plaines River, for education and recreation. 54 Lower Spring Creek Greenway 55 SUGAR CREEK WATERSHED Sugar Creek is a tributary of Hickory Creek and flows through a rapidly developing area in the southern portion of Joliet. The District has only a limited presence in the watershed so far, with holdings near the headwaters of each branch of the creek. Sugar Creek Preserve This 300-acre preserve lies along the headwaters of the north branch of Sugar Creek. Acquisition began with the 1972 acquisition of the 30-acre Zalar Woods from the Zalars, with the rest of the preserve being added between 1990 and The Wauponsee Glacial Trail and the 2002. Sugar Creek Preserve Sugar Creek Administration Center includes an access area on Laraway Road which contains biking, hiking, and equestrian facilities on the 23-mile Wauponsee Glacial Trail. In 2003, the District’s environmentally “green” Sugar Creek Administration Center was completed to house District staff and customer services, and provide space for additional programming. Ongoing preservation planning work is exploring the extension of the greenway another 0.5-mile downstream as it parallels the Wauponsee Glacial Trail into Joliet. Long-range planning will look at removing a small gap in the greenway and making trail connections northeast to the Old Plank Road Trail. Operations and Law Enforcement Facility Until 2003, this eight-acre parcel on the south branch of Sugar Creek at Cherry Hill Road and Route 52 was the home of the District’s Administration Center. Built in 1976, the building now houses the Law Enforcement and Operations Departments and Resource Management field crews. Operations and Law Enforcement Facility 56 SUGAR CREEK WATERSHED 57 THORN CREEK WATERSHED Thorn Creek Greenway Thorn Creek flows from Monee northeastward through University Park and Park Forest and into Cook County on its way eventually to Lake Michigan. The District owns or manages over 1,100 acres in two preserves in conjunction with a partnership of governmental entities that make up the Thorn Creek Woods Management Commission. Together the two preserves protect a large portion of the original, historic oak forest along Thorn Creek. An additional 760 acres are protected by Governor’s State University, and the Cook County Forest Preserve District also has substantial holdings along the Creek. Due to the unique partnership among the District, local units of government and the state, the entire four-mile portion of Thorn Creek from its headwaters in Monee to the Cook County line has been protected. Including Forest Preserve District of Cook County’s 640-acre Sauk Trail Preserve, a more than 2,200-acre ecosystem macrosite has been preserved. Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve The bulk of the forest is protected in the 1,000-acre Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve that grew from a five-acre purchase in 1974. Over 720 of these acres are owned by Park Forest, University Park, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, which together with the District form the Thorn Creek Woods Management Commission. Under a Management Agreement, the Commission operates the educational facilities and programs, and the District manages the natural resources. Thorn Creek Woods is in Park Forest and University Park. In 1978, 500 acres were dedicated as a State Nature Preserve in recognition of the “upland, bottomland and ravine forests, glacial potholes, prairie and the aquatic environment of Thorn Creek” (dedication document). Approximately 240 additional acres were dedicated in 1993, and 77 acres more in 2001. Several state-listed species inhabit or use Thorn Creek Woods. The Commission has hired staff to operate Thorn Creek Nature Center and provide programs in a historic 1862 church off of Thorn Creek Woods Monee Road since 1981. Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve also includes 2.5 miles of nature trails. Invasive plant control Nature Preserve was initiated in 1998 to protect the woods, and planting and seeding of native plants began in 2003. Although prescribed fire has not been used as a management tool in this preserve, significant wildfires occurred in 1999 and 2004, which together impacted more than half of the site. Numerous monitoring programs are underway, but restoration/enhancement actions have only recently started. 58 Thorn Grove Preserve Thorn Grove Preserve lies directly east of Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve between Park Forest and Steger. Starting with a five-acre donation in 1988, it has grown to 130 acres with 21 acres pending. Predominantly woodland, it also includes amphibian breeding habitat in vernal (springtime) depressions, wetlands, and ponds. There is currently no public access or facilities. Ongoing preservation efforts work toward protecting interior woodland habitat by reducing fragmentation through expanding and buffering the grove, and toward gaining hydrological control of ponds and wetlands that extend beyond the boundaries. Long-term planning will look at enhanced connections or new linkages to other public open space on Thorn and Deer Creeks. Thorn Creek Headwaters The District created a new preserve at the headwaters of Thorn Creek in University Park in 2007 and 2008 with the acquisition of 430 acres. Currently farmland, the District will be exploring wetland restoration opportunities in the future that will benefit the Thorn Creek watershed. THORN CREEK GREENWAY 59 WAUPONSEE GLACIAL TRAIL In the 1990s, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources secured two abandoned railroads: the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific from Joliet to Manhattan, and the Wabash/Norfolk Southern from Manhattan to Custer Park. In 2004, the State transferred the 220 acres to the District. The District has paved a 2.5-mile biking/hiking trail from its Sugar Creek Administrative Center on Laraway Road north into Joliet. The District is working with the City of Joliet to connect the trail to the Old Plank Road Trail via a one-mile street route. The remainder is a limestone screening trail from Sugar Creek southward to the Kankakee River in Custer Park. The trail is for biking, hiking, and equestrian use. The trail through the old glacial Lake Wauponsee and across the Kankakee River to Custer Park was completed in 2007. Trail access is currently provided by the District at Laraway Road in Joliet, Manhattan/ Arsenal Road in Manhattan, and Commercial Avenue in Symerton. Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie is building an access to the trail on Wauponsee Glacial Trail Hoff Road in Manhattan. A large southern trailhead will be built along Forked Creek. The trail’s total length is 23 miles. Prairie management and enhancement of remnants along the trail are underway. Wayside informational signs along the trail will be installed in the future. Ongoing planning activities include working with local municipalities on trail connections and linkages, and extending the trail southward to the county line. Long-term planning will involve working with the State and Kankakee County to continue the trail to the south. 60 WAUPONSEE GLACIAL TRAIL 61 OTHER PRESERVATION PROJECTS The District has also played a significant supporting role in preservation by others through financial contributions, grant writing, technical expertise, legal protection through easements, etc. DuPage River Shady Nook Park – Naperville Park District The Forest Preserve District contributed money to assist the Park District in purchasing 8.5 acres along the west branch of the DuPage River in 1993, removing a gap in the multi-jurisdictional greenway. The property is managed by the Park District. McDonald Farm – The Conservation Foundation Also on the west branch lies this 80-acre working farm. It was Mrs. McDonald’s desire to assure that the parcel was doubly protected; the Conservation Foundation owns, manages, and operates the facility, while the District has held a conservation and agricultural easement on the parcel since 1997. Hidden Lakes Park – Bolingbrook Park District In 2002, the Forest Preserve District helped the Bolingbrook Park District protect 26 acres along the south side of the east branch of the River by providing technical expertise and securing acquisition grants on their behalf, reducing the gap in the multi-jurisdictional greenway. The Forest Preserve and the Park District have also partnered to protect an additional 17.5 acres to remove more of the gap in the greenway and to protect wooded uplands in 2007. Jackson Creek Round Barn Farm – Manhattan Park District The Forest Preserve District contributed funds and technical assistance and secured a grant for the Park District for the 2006 acquisition of the 95-acre Round Barn Farm to protect the historic barn, Jackson Creek, and Five-Mile Grove (historic oak grove remnant). The Park District will own, manage, and operate the Park and long-term preservation will be assured via an easement to the Forest Preserve District. Mink Creek Mistwood – Mistwood Golf Course In 1998, the District received a conservation easement on a 195-acre private golf course. The easement protects foraging habitat for birds from Lake Renwick Heron Rookery, and requires ecologically friendly turf management and water use. 62 APPENDICES – Forest Preserve Map 63 APPENDICES – Forest Preserve Features and Amenities Chart 64 APPENDICES – Preserve Access Locations Braidwood Dunes and Savanna Nature Preserve is located on Route 113, east of Route 53 and I-55, approximately 0.75 miles east of Braidwood. Centennial Trail – Schneider’s Passage is on 135th Street (Romeo Road), approximately 0.75 mile east of Route 53 in Romeoville. Forked Creek Preserve – Forsythe Woods is located on Kahler Road, 1 mile east of Route 102, in Wilmington. Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve – Plum Creek Nature Center (27064 S. Dutton Road, Beecher, IL 60401) is located 1.25 miles east of the intersection of Routes 1 and 394 on Goodenow Road, in Crete Township. Hammel Woods – Crumby Recreation Area and DuPage River Access are located on Black Road, east of Route 59 in Shorewood. (Crumby Recreation Area entrance is closer to Route 59; DuPage River Access is east of Crumby.) Hammel Woods – Route 59 Access is located on Route 59, north of Route 52 (Jefferson Street) in Shorewood. Hickory Creek Barrens Nature Preserve is located on Schoolhouse Road just north of Route 30 in New Lenox. Hickory Creek Preserve – Environmental Learning Center (20851 S. Briarwood Lane, Mokena, IL 60448 is open by permit only and is located in Mokena, north of Route 30 and east of Wolf Road. From Wolf Road, turn east onto Cleveland Avenue, then south on Briarwood. The entrance is at the end of Briarwood Lane. Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Junction is on Route 30, 1 mile west of Wolf Road in Mokena. Hickory Creek Preserve – LaPorte Road Access is on LaPorte Road, 1 mile east of Wolf Road in Mokena. Hunters Woods is located on 78th Street, south of Route 30, 0.75 mile west of Harlem Avenue in Frankfort. I&M Canal Trail/Heritage Trail north access is located at Centennial Trail–Schneider’s Passage in Romeoville and southern access is at the Joliet Iron Works Historic Site. Isle a la Cache – Isle a la Cache Museum (501 E. 135th Street, Romeoville, IL 60446) is located 0.5 mile east of Route 53 in Romeoville. Joliet Iron Works Historic Site is located on Columbia Street, off of Scott Street, 0.25 mile east of Ruby Street Bridge in downtown Joliet. Keepataw Preserve is located on Bluff Road, 0.5 mile east of Joliet Road in Bolingbrook. Lake Renwick Preserve – Copley Nature Park is located on Route 30, between Renwick Road and Route 59 in Plainfield. Lake Renwick Heron Rookery Nature Preserve (23144 W. Renwick Road, Plainfield, IL 60544) is on Renwick Road, 0.5 mile east of Route 30 (Plainfield Road), in Plainfield. Lake Renwick Preserve – Turtle Lake Access is located on Lockport Street, 1 mile east of Division Street in Plainfield. 65 Lambs Woods is located at the intersection of Farrell and Bruce Roads in rural Lockport. Laughton Preserve – Gerdes Grove is located on Route 52, west of Route 45 in Wilton Center. Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve is located on the west bank of the Des Plaines River in Lockport. Take Route 53 south to Division Street, turn east on Division Street and follow to trailhead. Lower Rock Run Preserve – I&M Canal Access is located on Empress Road (Houbolt Road), 0.25 mile south of I-80 in Joliet. McKinley Woods – Frederick’s Grove is located on McKinley Road, south of Route 6 and Bridge Road in Channahon. McKinley Woods – Kerry Sheridan Grove is located on Blackberry Lane, south of Route 6 in Channahon. Messenger Woods Nature Preserve is located on Bruce Road, north of Route 6 (Southwest Highway) and east of Cedar Road in rural Lockport. Messenger Marsh is located on South Bell Road, approximately 0.25 mile south of 159th Street (Route 7) in Homer Township. Monee Reservoir – Monee Reservoir Visitor Center (27341 Ridgeland Avenue, Monee, IL 60449) is located on Ridgeland Avenue, west of Route 50 and south of Pauling Road, 2 miles south of Monee. Operations and Law Enforcement Facility (22606 S. Cherry Hill Road, Joliet, IL 60434-1069) is located 0.5 mile south of Laraway Road, at the intersection of Route 52 and Cherry Hill Road in Joliet. Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve is located on Pauling Road, just east of Route 50 (Governors Highway), 1 mile south of Monee. Riverview Farmstead is located at 11236 S. Book Road, Naperville, Illinois 60564. The entrance is located at the intersection of Book Road and 111th Street, approximately 1 mile west of Weber Road. Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve is located 0.25 mile east of Route 53 on 135th Street Romeo Road) in Romeoville. Parking is available at the Isle a la Cache Museum parking lot. Rock Run Preserve – Black Road Access is located on Black Road, approximately 0.25 mile east of the l-55 overpass in Joliet. Rock Run Preserve – Paul V. Nichols is located at the intersection of Essington Road and Ingalls Avenue, 0.5 mile north of Black Road in Joliet. Runyon Preserve is located on Hamilton just east of Route 171 (Archer Avenue) and north of Thornton in Lockport. From Route 171, turn east onto Thornton (Thornton is 1 block north of 2nd Street) to Hamilton. Travel north on Hamilton, 1 block past Franklin to Morgan Street. Sugar Creek Preserve – Sugar Creek Administration Center (17540 W. Laraway Road, Joliet, IL 60433) is located 0.75 mile east of Route 53 in Joliet. Theodore Marsh is located on Gaylord Road, approximately 0.25 mile north of Theodore Street in Crest Hill. Veterans Woods – Traders Corner and Hassert Grove is located on Joliet Road, north of Route 53 in the Bolingbrook area. Whalon Lake is located on Royce Road, 1 mile west of Route 53 in Naperville and Bolingbrook. 66 APPENDICES – Preserve and Preserve Map Index Preserve Alessio Prairie Bird’s Junction Marsh Black Walnut Creek Braidwood Dunes and Savanna Nature Preserve Briscoe Mounds Caton Farm Preserve Centennial Trail – Schneider’s Passage Colvin Grove Deer Creek Preserve Donohue Grove Preserve DuPage River Confluence Evans-Judge Preserve Fiddyment Creek Preserve Forked Creek Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve Hadley Valley Hammel Woods Hastert-Bechstein Hickory Creek Hunters Woods Huyck’s Grove Preserve Illinois and Michigan Canal Trail/Heritage Trail Isle a la Cache Jackson Creek Preserve John Wesley Preserve Joliet Iron Works Historic Site Joliet Junction Trail Kankakee Sands Keepataw Preserve Kraske Preserve Lake Chaminwood Lake of the Woods Lake Renwick Preserve Lambs Woods Laughton Preserve Lily Cache Wetlands Lockport Prairie East Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve Description Page 50 18 Map Page 51 19 2 34 2 36 12 18 13 17 7 8 49 5 25 51 5 25 16 15 34 36 20 20 23 44 24 45 54 18 18 27 27 22 55 17 17 28 28 22 9 11 7 31 8 31 25 25 10 11 32 34 6 50 18 18 37 33 36 8 51 19 19 38 26 22 40 10 26 22 40 11 9 11 Lower Rock Run – I&M Canal Access McKinley Woods Messenger Marsh Messenger Woods Nature Preserve Moeller Woods Monee Reservoir O’Hara Woods Old Plank Road Trail Operations and Law Enforcement Center Plum Valley Preserve Plum Valley Ravines Potawatomi Woods Prairie Bluff Preserve Prairie Creek Preserve Raccoon Grove Nature Preserve Riverview Farmstead Rock Run Preserve Rock Run Rookery Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve Runyon Preserve Sand Ridge Savanna Preserve Sauk Trail Reservoir Sugar Creek Preserve Teale Woods Theodore Marsh Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve Thorn Creek Headwaters Thorn Grove Vermont Cemetery Prairie Nature Preserve Veterans Woods Vincennes Trail Walnut Hollow Wauponsee Glacial Trail Wayne Lehnert Preserve Whalon Lake Wolf Creek 67 50 51 12 52 52 13 53 53 43 47 39 41 56 45 48 39 42 57 43 45 43 30 9 45 30 11 46 46 47 48 16 15 49 50 7 51 51 8 20 35 20 36 27 56 10 49 58 28 57 11 51 59 59 59 59 3 59 4 6 44 54 60 8 45 55 61 21 21 14 3 15 4 APPENDICES – Visitor Facilities Sugar Creek Administration Center Sugar Creek Preserve 17540 W. Laraway Road Joliet, Illinois 60433 815.727.8700 Weekdays, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Closed on weekends The Sugar Creek Administration Center provides informational services, such as brochures and permits for the public. The office also offers educational programs. Plum Creek Nature Center Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve 27064 S. Dutton Road Beecher, Illinois 60401 708.946.2216 Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Sunday, Noon - 4 p.m. Plum Creek Nature Center features hands-on displays to explore your natural world. The Nature Center provides educational programming for school groups, youth groups, and the public. Isle a la Cache Museum Isle a la Cache 501 E. 135th Street Romeoville, Illinois 60446 815.886.1467 Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Sunday, Noon - 4 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum features hands-on displays of the 18th-century fur trade between Native Americans and French voyageurs. The museum provides educational programs for schools, youth groups, and the public. 68 Environmental Learning Center Hickory Creek Preserve 20851 S. Briarwood Lane Mokena, Illinois 60448 708.479.2255 Open by permit only. The Environmental Learning Center offers a wide range of environmental education programs for educators, schools, youth groups, and the community including camping, workshops, nature and science programs. Conference facilities are also available. Monee Reservoir Visitor Center Monee Reservoir 27341 Ridgeland Avenue Monee, Illinois 60449 708.534.8499 April - October, 6 a.m. - 7 p.m.; November - March, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Closed on Mondays Monee Reservoir Visitor Center provides boat rentals, concessions and tackle, snowshoe rentals and a variety of outdoor recreation programs. Four Rivers Environmental Education Center McKinley Woods – Kerry Sheridan Grove 25055 W. Walnut Lane Channahon, Illinois 60410 For hours of operation, please call 815.722.9470. The Four Rivers Environmental Education Center offers environmental education programs for educators, schools, youth groups, and the community as well as state-of-the-art conference facilities. 69 Notes Notes www.fpdwc.org • 815.727.8700