Spring 2015 - Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin
Transcription
Spring 2015 - Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin
Connecting people to conservation in Wisconsin C.D. Besadny Grant Program turns 25 years old Page 4 Great Wisconsin Birdathon takes flight Page 6 Endowment honors life-long love of Wisconsin’s natural resources Page 8 On the cover: A Baltimore oriole flies from its nest on the “Whooping Crane and Kirtland’s Warbler Bird Protection Fund Adventure” at Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in 2014. Photo: Brent Daniel, winner of the 2014 Field Trip Photo Contest SPRING 2015 BRIDGES FROM THE DIRECTOR Ruth Oppedahl My first introduction to the Foundation seems fitting. As executive director of the Bayfield Regional Conservancy, I had applied for a grant through the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program to bring in experts for a day-long bioblitz at Big Ravine in Bayfield. I won’t soon forget when former Foundation board member Bob Banks personally delivered the check to our little office in Bayfield, about as far north in the state as you can get, to our second floor office, which I can only describe as an attic. This year, as we celebrate the 25th anniversary of our C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program, I’ve been reflecting on the true value of that $1,000 check. Our bioblitz brought in bird, dragonfly, fungus and bat experts to teach us about Big Ravine’s diversity and ended with a campfire at the top of the Ravine. The interaction also introduced me to an organization that I would soon proudly lead. More than that, though, like all of the other checks we give out through the Besadny grant program, it represents the Foundation’s legacy of empowering local conservation organizations to care for Wisconsin’s woods, wildlife and waters that we all cherish. It represents hope. Since its inception in 1990, the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program has awarded $420,000 to more than 500 organizations, in every county of the state. These groups are doing impressive work—the most recent grant winners are training volunteers to monitor bats in light of white-nose syndrome, re-locating populations of salamanders that have vanished, installing video cameras to monitor raptors in rehabilitation, establishing a native pollinator habitat adjacent to community gardens, building boardwalks, and more. Collectively these kinds of projects ensure a beautiful and healthy Wisconsin for generations to come. But their stories also effectively inspire each of us to channel our inner conservationists and to do more than just tread lightly on the earth. I think that this is what the late C.D. “Buzz” Besadny had in mind when he co-founded the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin—that the Foundation would not only empower local conservation throughout the state, but also ignite a renewed sense of hope in those of us who value our connection with the natural world and seek ways to preserve it. Thank you to all of the local conservation organizations for doing such great work and giving us hope for our state’s future, every single day. Sincerely, Ruth Oppedahl Helping You Help Wisconsin Every purchase you make with your NRF Visa Signature® Card supports State Parks, rivers, and conservation projects in our state. Join the cardholders who have already raised $125,000 for Wisconsin. Learn more and apply at usbank.com/NRF_wisconservation. BRIDGES • SPRING 2015 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Dave Adam James P. Bennett Linda Bochert Bruce Braun Scott Craven Rebecca Haefner Rita Hayen Martin Henert Jim Hubing Kristine Krause Mark LaBarbera Diane Humphrey Lueck William Lunney Peg Mallery Jim Matras Tom Olson Ron Semmann Bill Smith Michael Williamson 2 EMERITUS BOARD Darrell Bazzell Anthony Earl Robert Froehlke David Ladd Thomas Lyon Howard Mead Thomas Schmidt Toby Sherry Christine Thomas Todd Tiefenthaler Albert Toma BRIDGES / SPRING 2015 HONORARY BOARD C.D. “Buzz” Besadny Collins Ferris Daniel T. Flaherty Paul Hassett Warren Knowles Cliff Messinger Gaylord Nelson Dair J. Steward Daniel Trainer Nash Williams Margaret Van Alstyne Sally Whiffen FOUNDATION STAFF Barb Barzen, Grants and Program Coordinator John Kraniak, Membership Director Lysbeth Lesak, Field Trip Assistant Ruth Oppedahl, Executive Director Diane Packett, Birdathon Coordinator Lindsay Renick Mayer, Communications Director Christine Seeley, Office Manager Christine Tanzer, Field Trip Coordinator Caitlin Williamson, Program and Development Coordinator Camille Zanoni, Development Director Brooke Hemze and Olga Bednarek, Interns OUR MISSION: Connecting generations to the wonders of Wisconsin’s lands, waters, and wildlife through conservation, education, engagement, and giving. WisConservation.org Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin WISCONSERVATION SPOTLIGHT: Your Support at Work Turtle-Flambeau Scenic Waters Area to benefit from three conservation projects Through the Turtle Flambeau Scenic Waters Area Fund, which has given out more than $20,000 since it was established in 2006, the Foundation has disbursed funds this year to three key conservation projects aimed at protecting and enhancing this special place. • Campsite Lakeshore Restoration: This project will restore eroded shoreline at several of the campsites in the Turtle-Flambeau Scenic Waters Area. • Seed Availability Research: This project will research the relationship between predator species, their prey and the abundance of seeds the prey feed on. • Invasive Species Monitoring: With this grant, the Iron County Land & Water Conservation Department will be able to expand its aquatic invasive species education and monitoring efforts. Become a Wisconsin Master Naturalist Join a growing corps of well-informed citizens dedicated to conservation education and service within their communities by becoming a Wisconsin Master Naturalist. Volunteer training courses are held throughout the state and give participants a foundation in natural history, interpretation, and conservationstewardship.Upcomingvolunteercoursesinclude: • June 15: Cable Natural History Museum and Northern Great Lakes Visitors Center, Ashland/Cable • June 20: Riverland Conservancy, Merrimac • September 2: North Lakeland Discovery Center, Manitowish Waters Learn more at WiMasterNaturalist.org. Wisconsin DNR receives $33,000 to care for Lower Wisconsin State Riverway Ten years ago DNR wildlife biologist Paul Brandt established a fund to help manage and restore the Lower Wisconsin State Riverway. This year the Foundation was able to donate $33,000 to the Wisconsin DNR in support of efforts to help protect and restore native plant communities, enhance habitat for native wildlife species and connect people to the riverway. Brandt created the fund with an initial $25,000 gift, which he supplemented with $600,000 from his estate when he passed away in 2006. The fund currently generates more than $30,000 annually to the DNR’s Bureau of Wildlife Management to support wildlife habitat and natural areas within a six-county area along the riverway. In 2014, the Foundation provided more than $140,000 to the DNR for work on public lands management and rare and endangered species. Thanks to funding from the Knowles-Nelson Stewarship Fund and the Wisconsin Energy Foundation, Friends of Cedarburg Bog and contracted DNR crews have been able to work at removing buckthorn, Oriental bittersweet, and other invasive plants from the bog. Buckthorn is one of the most aggressive and harmful invasive plants that has infested Wisconsin. It out-competes native plants for sunlight and water and spreads rapidly. Cedarburg Bog is the largest example of the rarest type of wetland in southeast Wisconsin and the second property in Wisconsin to become a state natural area. The Bog has been designated a National Natural Landmark, a Wetland Gem and an Important Bird Area. The Foundation supports Cedarburg Bog through its priority State Natural Area Funding Program and through its Cedarburg Bog Stewardship Endowment Fund. Learn about and contribute to these projects at WisConservation.org. Thank you! Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin BRIDGES / SPRING 2015 3 Thomas Meyer Cedarburg Bog benefits from invasive plants removal Community conservation: 25 years of the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program The Natural Resources Foundation has been a model for community conservation for more than 25 years by providing hundreds of small grants to local conservation groups in Wisconsin through the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program. Created in 1990, the program fosters responsible stewardship of Wisconsin’s lands, waters, and wildlife by supporting grassroots, community-based projects. To date, the Natural Resources Foundation has awarded $420,000 to more than 500 organizations in every county in Wisconsin. The program is named after the late C.D. “Buzz” Besadny, who was the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources from 1980 to 1993, and co-founded the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin in 1986. “The Foundation is honored to make these grants to support conservation and education projects across the state in honor of Buzz Besadny,” said Ruth Oppedahl, executive director of the Natural Resources Foundation. “Wisconsin’s natural resources continue to benefit from the legacy of Buzz’s 42-year career at the Department of Natural Resources. With each grant we award, we are providing hope for the future of our state’s wildlife and wild lands.” The C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program supports projects in Wisconsin that promote the responsible stewardship of Wisconsin’s natural resources at the local level. The Foundation annually awards grants ranging from $100 to $1,000 to projects that benefit the public, involve management and restoration of Wisconsin’s natural resources, or contribute to knowledge about Wisconsin’s natural resources through education. Recipients are required to match the grant on a 1:1 basis with funds or in-kind services. This means the Foundation has leveraged nearly $1 million in funding for conservation in the state. 4 BRIDGES / SPRING 2015 Tribal youth participate in the Bad River Youth Outdoors Program’s water monitoring on the Bad River. “Receiving C.D. Besadny conservation grants has allowed us to provide opportunities to our community that we otherwise wouldn’t have been able to,” said Jeanette Kelly, of the Beaver Creek Reserve Citizen Science Center in Eau Claire County. The Beaver Creek Reserve has received two Besadny grants over the years, most recently in 2014 for a bat education and research project. “The Besadny grant brought great attention to our organization, our programming, and the work we do.” In addition to protecting Wisconsin’s natural resources, the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program strives to involve students and communities in education. “There are so many unique ways to approach conservation on the landscape, and getting students involved is a perfect way to stimulate an interest in the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin Photo courtesy of BRYO By Caitlin Williamson • Purchasing a great blue heron nest camera at Horicon Marsh in Dodge County • Developing honey bee education and land stewardship programming at the Heckrodt Wetland Reserve in Outagamie County • Maintaining the Aldo Leopold Memorial Reserve Trail at the Aldo Leopold Foundation in Sauk County • Creating a native prairie plant demonstration garden at Big Foot Beach State Park in Walworth County • Controlling invasive purple loosestrife with the Gordon St. Croix Flowage Association in Douglas County • Providing support for the Bad River Youth Outdoors tribal youth outdoor and environmental education program in Ashland and Iron Counties • Protecting Blanding’s turtles in urban and rural areas with the City of Middleton in Dane County Make a difference For 25 years, the Natural Resources Foundation’s C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program has provided support for on-the-ground conservation work that benefits the public, protects Wisconsin’s natural resources, and contributes to knowledge about our natural resources through education. Through the support of generous donors, we are able to provide small grants that make a meaningful difference in our communities. If you would like to make a contribution to the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program, visit WisConservation.org, or call 866-264-4096. Your generous donation will support small-scale natural resource conservation projects and programs that promote the responsible stewardship of Wisconsin’s natural resources at the local level. In 1994, the Alma Road & Gun Club received a C.D. Besadny grant to purchase bluebird house material to give to Alma High School in Buffalo County, where students learned to build birdhouses. In 1993, the D.D. Kennedy Environmental Outdoor Classroom received a C.D. Besadny grant to construct a wheelchair-accessible fishing pier at the environmental center in the town of Garfield. Photo courtesy of Clean Lakes Alliance • Creating a wetland identification and information toolkit for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources • Developing a hands-on geology education toolkit for High Cliff State Park in Calumet County 2015 grant applications for the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program are due on Sept. 1. For more information on how to apply, visit WisConservation.org. Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin NRF board member Bill Smith delivers a Besadny grant check to Cully Shelton, International Crane Foundation interpretive programs manager, for a prairie restoration education project. Lindsay Renick Mayer NRF board member Mark LaBarbera delivers a Besadny grant check to Clean Lakes Alliance. Photo courtesy of Heckrodt Wetland Reserve Families learn about the importance of honey bees at Heckrodt Wetland Reserve. Photo courtesy of the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin outdoors and its resources,” said Bob Welch of the Waupaca Field Station, which received a Besadny grant for oak barrens and sand prairie restoration and the recovery of the Karner blue butterfly. Examples of projects funded by the C.D. Besadny Conservation Grant Program include: Mequon Nature Preserve received a Besadny grant in 2014 to translocate tiger and blue-spotted salamanders to their preserve. BRIDGES / SPRING 2015 5 By Diane Packett What? I thought. That’s ridiculous. I was at a meeting of the Amos W. Butler Audubon Society in Indianapolis, waiting to give a presentation on my graduate research at Purdue University funded by two small grants. It was only $2,000, but it was enough to pay some field assistants to help me count migrating birds and measure vegetation in the small woodlots in northern Indiana’s agricultural fields for two years. And I had just heard that the funds I received were raised though a “birdathon.” Birdwatchers are a competitive and numbers-driven bunch. We keep lists of the birds we see in our yards, our counties, and our states, every day of every year. We post them on listservs, share them, and compare them. We challenge ourselves to see as many birds as we can on big sits, big days, and big years. Some birders, I’ve been told, even have “defecation lists” to immortalize unfortunate encounters with certain species. At some point, someone figured out how to harness this energy into fundraising. Like a walk-a-thon, a birdathon participant solicits pledges and donations and then tries to see as many bird species as possible in a day. Bird Studies Canada launched the first birdathon in 1976, and since then the concept has spread throughout the United States, and even reached the Amazon. The Amos W. Butler Audubon Society, as I found out at that meeting, raised $26,000 in 2007 for projects such as the Indiana Important Bird Areas program, habitat restoration at Marian University, purchase of bird wintering habitat in Panama and several research projects like mine. A few dollars pledged here, a few donations there, together made a real difference for conservation at home and abroad. Now I have a chance to give back to the Birdathon project by coordinating the Great Wisconsin Birdathon. From April 15-June 15, teams sporting names like Cutright’s Old Coots, Titmouseketeers, and Bodacious BirdGeeks are fanning out 6 BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 The Great Wisconsin Birdathon takes flight for bird protection t Ryan Brady Birdathon. “A few dollars pledged here, a few donations there, together made a real difference for conservation at home and abroad.” -Diane Packett Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin LYDIA MARTIN Birds everywhere! B. Bartelt Hillary Thompson The Craniacs Team scans the treetops during the Great Wisconsin Birdathon. across the state in pursuit of birds and pledges. The Birdathon gets people outdoors to enjoy nature, practice their hobby, and connect with the birds they’re working to save. It’s an inclusive event that attracts all types of people, including those who don’t have $100 to give to an organization, but can give $1 to a birder. Most importantly, it’s fun—and surely there’s room for fun in conservation these days. My birdathon-funded research was eventually published and used to help develop guidelines for wind turbine siting. One of my birdathonfunded technicians had found a migrating Kirtland’s warbler, wearing several leg bands, that had stopped to rest and refuel in one of our study sites. This prompted a consultant working for a local wind energy project to recommend protecting this stopover habitat by not putting a turbine near that woodlot. I like to think that a Kirtland’s warbler now sings somewhere in Wisconsin because a group of Indiana birders formed a team with a funny name and went around knocking on doors and asking for donations. So rock on, you Bodacious BirdGeeks! See a bird, save a bird. To form a team or make a donation to the Birdathon, visit http://www.WIBirdathon.org Ryan Brady of the Lake Superior Team looks out over the shoreline. The Great Wisconsin Birdathon started April 15 and there are so many ways to join the fun! You can start a team, join a team, donate to a team or register for one of our June Birdathon tours. Our tours are openregistration teams that do their Birdathon with an expert leader in one (or more!) of Wisconsin’s best birding spots. Participants can spend a morning birding with Birdathon Coordinator Diane Packett starting with coffee, tea, or chocolate at a local coffee shop. This team will stroll through the Pheasant Branch Conservancy’s creek corridor, a hidden hotspot in Madison, talking about bird migration and why spots like this are important. Or join Tom and Wendy Schultz for a unique biking Birdathon at the White River Marsh. This tour will take you on a 23-mile bike ride through a rich variety of habitat that could produce a number of target birds. Learn more at http://www.WIBirdathon.org. Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 Mike McDowell Get out on an expert-led Birdathon tour 7 Photo courtesy of Lee Binkley Fund honors Nina Binkley’s life-long love of Wisconsin’s natural resources By Lee Binkley As a lifetime resident of Wisconsin, Nina Binkley developed a deep appreciation for the natural beauty of the state. She worked to cultivate this appreciation in others through her teaching, her writing, and her own gardens. Nina was raised in Green Bay and graduated with a Bachelor of Science from UW–River Falls. She went on to teach elementary school in New London and Monroe. She saw the best in all students and gave tirelessly to those students who found math to be particularly challenging. Nina often said, “I can see things through different eyes.” She used this ability to help her students learn and also see things in different ways. This ability to see things from a unique perspective is what allowed Nina to really recognize and enjoy the natural beauty around her. Flowers were a big part of Nina’s life. She transformed her yard into a magnificent display of flower gardens. People would stop to compliment the gardens or ask questions about how to get their own gardens to thrive, and Nina would take the time to explain and teach what she had learned. As a Master Gardener, Nina also wrote a column in the local newspaper as a way to continue sharing her gardening knowledge. Nina also had a deep love for animals. She contributed to the efforts of counting cranes in the state and felt that the preservation of natural areas and habitats was vital for animals to thrive. At home, she often enjoyed watching a sunrise with one of her pets by her side. When Nina was diagnosed with a terminal disease, she stated that she wanted to help support efforts to preserve and maintain the natural areas and habitats in the state of Wisconsin. Although she is no longer with us, Nina’s appreciation for nature and desire to share that appreciation lives on through the teaching and sharing that she did over the years. Nina’s family is pleased to have established the Nina Binkley Endowment for Wisconsin State Parks and Natural Areas. This fund will be used for support of Wisconsin State Parks and the management, protection, restoration, and appreciation of State Natural Areas throughout Wisconsin. Donate directly to the fund by visiting https://donatenow. networkforgood.org/Wisconservation and entering “Nina Binkley Endowment for Wisconsin State Parks and Natural Areas.” Founding Foundation board member inducted into Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame Photo courtesy of the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin Avid outdoorsman, conservationist, lover of trees and timber industry programs, and so many more.” founding board member of the Foundation, David Ladd, was The Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame and Visitor inducted into the Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame May 2. Center in Stevens Point was established in 1985 to advance Ladd founded Walnut Hollow, Inc., a forest-products business Wisconsin’s legacy of conservation and recognizes 86 state in Dodgeville that promotes environmentally sustainable leaders. Ladd was one of three individuals inducted this year. forest and industry practices. “The inductees this year clearly illustrate the importance of Ladd’s life-long contributions to conservation extend citizen action and the power of conservation organizations,” even beyond that. Ladd helped found the Wisconsin says Joe Passineau, president of the Wisconsin Conservation Woodland Owners Association, was a founding member of Hall of Fame. “Through their efforts they have advanced the Southwest chapter of Trout Unlimited, served on the resources and public policy, and helped to protect and Wisconsin Conservation Congress for more ecologically restore natural lands for than 40 years and chaired a Blue Ribbon task the benefit of citizens statewide.” force of the Wisconsin Stewardship Program. In addition to helping found the “Few people have had the extensive Natural Resources Foundation, Ladd involvement in Wisconsin’s conservation received a Lifetime Conservation landscape as has Dave Ladd,” said Foundation Achievement Award from Gathering board member Ron Semmann. “His leadership Waters in 2011. in a variety of environmental programs at the “Mr. Ladd’s contributions to state and local level has been remarkable and the conservation community in has left a strong imprint in Wisconsin. Dave Wisconsin are innumerable,” wrote has earned the respect and admiration of the Foundation Development Director Conservation Congress, the Department of Camille Zanoni in the Conservation Natural Resources and countless conservation Hall of Fame nomination letter. “His organizations for his role in the Stewardship impact on our lands, waters and program, the Foundation’s C.D. Besadny wildlife will be felt for generations Dave Ladd holds his biography, Uff-da! What Conservation Grant Program, the wood and to come.” a Ride! by Lynnette Schuepbach. 8 BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin Discover Wisconsin’s State Natural Areas on a Field Trip natural resources fou ndatio 2015 Fieldn ofTWisriconsin p G u i d e B o o K Add more trips to your registration More than 50 field trips still have spaces available. You can now add a few more trips to your registration, for a total of eight trips per person! Go to our registration page to view the list of trips and remaining capacity, then modify your registration to add on more trips. We’d love to see you get out in the field with us to learn as much as you can about Wisconsin’s amazing woods, waters and wildlife! Questions about field trips? Email us at: fieldtrips@ WisConservation.org T. Meyer The theme of this year’s field trip program is State Natural Areas (SNAs). Wisconsin’s 673 SNAs provide some of the last refuges for rare plants and animals and protect outstanding examples of Wisconsin’s native plant communities, significant geological formations, and archeological sites. To celebrate these amazing gems, a third of the field trips in this year’s line-up visit SNAs. Some trips are fundraisers that have raised more than $1,300 for SNA management. Join us in th e fie ld to & sup port Wiscons discover, ch er ish in’s natur al places Honorary & memorial gifts The Foundation recognizes gifts made in honor or memory of the following people: Sept 18, 2014 through April 7, 2015 In Memory of: Joan Todd & Kris Wiegand In Honor of: Lauralyn Andrews Deborah & Ralph Henry In Honor of: Barb Barzen Jill Metcoff-Jahns In Honor of: Anne Bogar Sheralynn Stach In Honor of: Ryan Brady Stephen & Cynthia Brady In Memory of: Paul Brandt Merle & Nancy Biggin In Honor of: Friends of the Cedarburg Bog John & Jennifer Rothstein In Memory of: Joanne B. Christensen Association of Retired Conservationists In Honor of: James Connell Mary Eloranta In Memory of: Robert Earl Deer Association of Retired Conservationists In Memory of: David Discher Russell Berndt In Honor of: Robin & Patti Duffy Zachary Duffy In Honor of: Bernhardt And Erickson Families Linda Bernhardt In Memory of: Dorothy I. Fischer Donald R. Fischer In Honor of: Karen & David Franker Ned Parker Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin In Honor of: Barbara Fulton Karen Agee In Honor of: Julia Govis Patti Bursten Deutsch In Honor of: Kim Grveles Port Washington Garden Club In Memory of: Robert Halpin Eleanor Davidsaver In Honor of: Jack & Jo Handley Lilly Handley In Honor of: Charles Harmon Susan & David McAlister In Memory of: Thomas Kermit Hollway Roberta Sladky In Memory of: Alice Homstad Gil Homstad In Memory of: Richard Hunt Thomas & Linda Hansen In Memory of: Kelley James Amy McAllister In Honor of: Chris Jennings William Schierl In Memory of: Valerie Keehn Gregory P. Stebbins In Honor of: Curt Krupp Maura Henning In Memory of: Harley Lichtenwalner Association of Retired Conservationists In Honor of: Dr. Gary Ludi Erica Ludi In Memory of: William Marxen Duane & Peggy Marxen In Memory of: Rick Stockton In Memory of: Barry Mitchell Sue Bussman Colleen Marsden Joseph Girardi In Honor of: Thomas Mowbray Patrick Lampe Charles & Carolyn Mowbray Peggy Stockton In Honor of: To all who work so hard Daniel Winters on behalf of nature In Memory of: Edgard W. Trout Marcia & Timothy Obukowicz Doris Coplien In Honor of: My Parents In Memory of: Mary Van De Wege Marcia Wagner E.A. Fuerst In Honor of: Marsha Rea In Honor of: Bernie Van Ee Susan & David McAlister Verlan G. Van Ee In Memory of: Dave Redell In Memory of: Mary Ann Varsos William & Sue Bridson Friends of Cherokee Marsh June E. Goglio Russell & Donna Frisinger Jeffrey & Erin Huebschman Christine Grannis Kris & Thomas Kesselhon Eileen Howard Janet & Andrew Raddatz Betty Rhyner Donald Reed Steven J. Varsos Eric J. Larson In Honor of: Oakwood Village In Memory of: Richard J. Ring Nicole Harpt Mary Kay Ring In Memory of: Susan Weyh In Honor of: Maria Sadowski Anonymous Nancy Long In Memory of: John White Debbie Garvey John & Brenda Hagman In Memory of: Rose Scanlan In Memory of: Dr. Vic & Betty Wilson Association of Retired Nancy Wilson Conservationists In Honor of: Wisconsin Department In Honor of: Beverly Schwabe of Natural Resources Dr. Michael & Edie Schwabe Dr. Robert & Diane Dempsey Susan Schwabe Thomas D. Schwabe In Honor of: Ken Wood Patrick & Debra Ready In Memory of: Keith Simpson Janet Dow In Honor of: Brian Yanke LeeAnn DuVall BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 9 New board members and staff join the Foundation The Natural Resources Foundation was thrilled to welcome two new board members and three new staff members this year: Dave Adam (board member): Dave is the senior vice president of finance and head of corporate treasury for Johnson Financial Group. He oversees Johnson Financial Group’s investments, funding and corporate insurance functions and is a member of its Benefits Plan Committee. He is a certified public accountant and has served on the Foundation’s finance and endowment committees since 2009. He hopes to use his financial background to help the Foundation be good stewards of the assets entrusted to its care. Michael Williamson (board member): Michael was named the executive director of the State of Wisconsin Investment Board in 2012. He has served as deputy secretary for the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources, the director of the North Carolina Retirement System and deputy director of the District of Columbia Retirement Board. He is a former University of WisconsinMadison administrator who enjoys cross-country skiing, hiking, biking, bird watching and fly fishing for trout. Diane Packett (Birdathon coordinator): Diane came to love birds and birding while living in the forested mountains of West Virginia. She received her Master of Science in wildlife science at Purdue University, where she studied migratory bird ecology. After working as a bird biologist in the Midwest, data analyst in Indiana, and conservation GIS analyst in West Virginia, she came to rest in Oregon, Wisconsin. Lindsay Renick Mayer (communications director): Lindsay comes to the Foundation from The Nature Conservancy’s Maryland/DC and Virginia chapters, where she was associate director of marketing. Prior to that, she was a communications specialist for the Smithsonian’s National Zoo, covering science for the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. Lindsay is passionate about species-based conservation and finding compelling ways to tell stories that demonstrate the value of all of the planet’s critters, big and microscopic. Camille Zanoni (development director): After working as vice-president of advancement for the Aldo Leopold Nature Center for the last two years, Camille Zanoni has re-joined the Foundation as development director. Camille served as director of member relations with the Foundation from 2003-2012. Prior to that, she worked with DNR’s Bureau of Parks and Recreation as Friends Group coordinator and executive director to the Friends of Wisconsin State Parks. She also served as an agroforestry volunteer with Peace Corps in Paraguay. 10 BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 Estate gifts to honor Marilyn Deutsch Hampton’s love of animals Marilyn Deutsch Hampton is a self-proclaimed squirrel aficionado. In fact, spend a few minutes talking to her and you’ll learn that she has a profound love and respect for all members of the animal kingdom, something she says her father helped instill in her. This love has spurred Hampton to care for hurt and orphaned animals in her own backyard, to take classes to learn about wildlife and was the impetus for the five years she spent volunteering at a wildlife rehabilitation center in central Wisconsin. Most recently, Hampton’s commitment to animals resulted in her decision to generously establish two estate gift funds through the Foundation to help protect wildlife well into the future: the Marilyn Deutsch Hampton Wildlife Rehabilitation Fund and the Marilyn Deutsch Hampton Endangered Species Preservation Fund. “For me it has been an ongoing process of falling in love with animals. When I worked at the rehab center, I realized how hard these people work and the joy you feel when you can release an injured or orphaned animal back into the wild,” Hampton says. “I want the money that came to me by way of inheritance to go to non-profit organizations I have supported over the years, and that I feel connected to. The safest way to guarantee that those monies don’t just sit and go nowhere and do nothing is to establish a fund through the Natural Resources Foundation.” Learn more about the Foundation’s planned giving program: WisConservation.org/ donate-now/planned-giving/ Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin Cherish Wisconsin: Coming home to Mother Nature Story and photos by Lindsay Renick Mayer “What I cherished about this state growing up as a kid are the same things that are now enriching my life in a profound way as an adult.” •Lindsay Renick Mayer Renick Mayer helped a team from Mequon Nature Preserve translocate tiger and bluespotted salamander eggs from Kettle Moraine to their preserve. Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin habitat and I’ve witnessed the zany sky dance of the woodcock. I get to walk to As a kid, I was under the impression my office along a lake, go for bike rides in that nature was there for the taking. My an arboretum and will soon have a kayak taking. I spent my time climbing trees I can take out on one of any number of barefoot, fishing every lakes. summer night for sunfish, I have also met so racing frogs against toads, many Wisconsinites camping in Door County who, in their own and building tree forts in ways, are caring for my neighbor’s yard. At the our state’s treasures. time I had no sense that They’re battling invasive Mother Nature’s gifts are species, they’re meeting finite, ours for the taking with lawmakers, they’re but only if we don’t take creating endowment While the Foundation does not condone kissing frogs, connecting too much. funds, they’re teaching with nature is an important part of Nor did I understand outdoors education developing a conservation ethic. at the time how unique and they’re connecting it is to grow up in a others with nature. state with such a strong They share the kind of conservation ethic. Not passion necessary to only does Wisconsin have ensure that we’re not a tradition of conservation just taking from the through the likes of Aldo natural world, but also Leopold, John Muir and giving back to it. Gaylord Nelson, but In short, what I so we seem to place an cherished about this unparalleled value on time State natural areas such as Quincy state growing up as Bluff and Wetlands provide Wisconsin spent outdoors, whether residents and visitors a great a kid are the same it’s kayaking, gardening, opportunity to connect with nature. things that are now snowshoeing, hunting, enriching my life in a rollerblading or mountain biking. There’s profound way as an adult — the beauty, no better evidence of this than the rate the fresh air, the frogs, the connection at which the Foundation’s field trips filled to something so much grander than up this year, and every year. my own single life. To me, this is what In the nearly 10 years that I lived on the Cherish Wisconsin Outdoors Fund is the east coast, I certainly had moments all about. It’s an acknowledgment that of the kind of joy I experienced outdoors Wisconsin has touched each of our lives as a kid in Wisconsin, but it wasn’t until and a commitment to future generations moving back to my home state recently that will be shaped in much the same that I’ve been reminded of the source way. It is an investment in our corner of of my own deep love for nature. Since the planet, a planet that has done more December I have toured Wisconsin state than give us life, but that also sustains natural areas that have transported me our souls. to other times and other worlds, I have Lindsay Renick Mayer is the communications director seen my first snowy owl, I’ve helped for the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin. translocate salamanders to their natural She was born and raised in Wauwatosa. The “Cherish Wisconsin” column features a different Wisconsin voice in each issue of Bridges, reflecting on what the author cherishes most about our state. BRIDGES /SPRING 2015 11 Prsrt Std U.S. Postage PAID Madison, WI Permit 906 P.O. Box 2317 Madison, WI 53701 Toll-free (866) 264-4096 With appreciation to our sponsors: Total Administrative Services Corporation Wells Print & Digital John J. Frautschi Family Foundation Brookby Foundation WisConservation.org E 30% post-consumer fiber T rav el with the F oundation New Zealand Witness the untamed beauty and experience the Kiwi spirit An Expedition with the Natural Resources Foundation: November 2015 Join us November 2015 to discover a land of jaw-dropping beauty, accentuated by steamy hot springs, icy glaciers, volcanic valleys, and snow-capped mountains. We’ll also dive into modern Kiwi and ancient Maori cultures by interacting with friendly locals, who are sure to remind you that there is simply nowhere quite like New Zealand. • Small Groups, Affordable Rates, Magnificent Settings • Find a trip itinerary and registration information on our website, http://www. WisConservation.org/get-involved/travel/ or call us at 608-264-8922