Volume 4 Issue 2
Transcription
Volume 4 Issue 2
The Beaver Bulletin July, 2015 VOL. 4, Issue 2 Beaver Ponds Environmental Education Center (BPEEC) helps people of all ages learn about domestic livestock, horticulture, green energy generation and environmental conservation in a high-alpine, natural setting at Sacramento Creek Ranch near Fairplay, Colorado. Your Donation Goes Further This Year • This year, you can benefactor. We will use this The program also helped the stretch your donations to money to purchase a environment, by preventing Beaver Ponds, because an microfodder system, almost 5,000 paper bags from anonymous benefactor has including seed for the fodder being used. offered to match donations system, which will provide dollar for dollar, up to fresh grass for our animals $25,000 this year. year-round. • A kind supporter, Nancy • Beaver Ponds was the C., donated $2,000, which beneficiary of the Whole was also matched by our Foods bag donation credit, anonymous, matching-dollar which netted nearly $500. • In addition, Whole Foods donated past-prime vegetables for the animals. • Beaver Ponds still has a number of funding needs. For example, we want to complete (continued on p. 2) INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Meet Bob Trepany: Newest Board Member, p. 2 Kids’ Programs, & Kevin Completes Energy Program, p. 3 Alpacas and Goats Get Early Summer Haircuts, p. 5-6 Meet Our New Intern, p. 7 Bob Trepany: new board member Tulane, Stanford and MIT. “The value I bring to my job has been my ability to find empathy and solutions to those I support,” Bob says. “I adhere to these values throughout my daily life and feel that I can leverage my Donations, cont. our Passive Solar Energy Education Classroom, which would display key components of our energy systems, by adding glass walls, a tiled floor, and other necessary items to our first two garage bays. • We’d also like to add a For the last 35 years, Bob experiences within the scientific quality weather Trepany has been working as a framework established at station and energy tracking software and system engineer Beaver Ponds. We all have software to get a better handle for Apple, Nortel and Digital stewardship of this world and on energy usage during Equipment Corp. His focus: need to educate and enlighten various weather conditions. supporting the needs of his this next generation of customers. learners as to why this is of His background includes four years in the United States Air value to them as we pass this torch of learning to them.” • In addition, we want to offer trail improvements, including an iPad app to further explain our Force, where he was an NSA Bob’s wife, Stephanie Young interpretative trails for kids trained cryptologist. He holds Trepany, is the director of and adults. degrees in psychology and Microsoft’s worldwide software engineering from distribution. They have three Northern Michigan University daughters and a grandson. and St. Petersburg College. Mary is a junior at CU in For six years, he taught various programming languages at St. Petersburg College, as an adjunct professor. During his tenure at Apple, he attended several engineering courses at University of Washington, Northwestern, Boulder, studying design and art; Nancy is a senior at Rollins College, studying business and communications; and Lindsey works in the healthcare industry. Bob’s interests include lifelong learning, skiing, sailing, running, reading and physics. • We are also looking for a volunteer to offer his or her time to help us write the app, (used on iPads) for the interpretive trail. Kevin Hosman completes Colorado Energy Master’s Executive Director Kevin Hosman recently For his final project, Kevin performed an completed the Colorado Energy Master’s energy audit of the Beaver Ponds center of Program. operations and living quarters. In the The program consisted of a series of webinars and classroom sessions beginning in February and concluding with a final project presentation in May. It covered topics ranging from coal and natural gas production in Colorado to the latest in alternative energy. The presentations were fact based, and the presenters were non-biased. Kevin learned the status of energy production and usage in both Colorado and nationwide, along with the benefits and drawbacks of current and alternative energy methods. In addition to the instruction periods, the class took field trips to the Clean Energy Collective Photovoltaic 500kW array in Aurora, CO and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, CO. process, he discovered that the geothermal heat pump, along with the associated circulation pumps, were accounting for about two-thirds of the electricity usage at the site. Although the site uses very little electricity, we are working to improve the efficiency of the geothermal heat pump system and to reduce its electricity consumption. Contribute through AmazonSmile Beaver Ponds participates in the AmazonSmile program. That means you can support BPEEC through your regular online shopping at Amazon — at no additional cost to you. With every purchase, Amazon.com donates 0.05% of the total price. Beaver Ponds teaches kids We had a wonderful visit from 32 Frisco Elementary mint, chives and lettuce, and smiling for the camera. To participate, avoid logging second-grade students, along directly into your Amazon with their teachers and a few They especially liked the account. Instead, log in through parents on May 11. rolling composter they could AmazonSmile.com. The first time you log into AmazonSmile, you will be asked to select a charity. In the pick your own charitable organization search box, enter Beaver Ponds. When you find Beaver Ponds Environmental Education Center in the list, press spin, as well as the worm They learned about beavers, alternative energy, the greenhouse, the animals and bins. The kids brought along their awesome leaders, Rick Salazar and Jenny Andrusin. composting. Everyone had fun, from all the kids and The club returned on June 4 adults, to our dogs, and even for a hike and interpretive the alpacas. tour. They wanted to “give back,” so they returned June 5 the select button next to our The Boys and Girls Club of and helped with trail building. name, and we’ll automatically South Park visited Beaver in the morning. receive 0.05% of your purchase. Ponds several times recently. You can bookmark the site, so every time you log in, you automatically open AmazonSmile, with Beaver Ponds In May, they planted vegetable seeds and learned about plants, soil, composting, vermiculture and our animals. as the beneficiary. Thanks for After planting, we spent time your support! in the greenhouse tasting Alpacas and Goats Get Early Summer Haircuts The goats, alpacas and llamas were either combed or sheared in late May. The first to have her fleece removed was Viola, the cashmere goat. The fleece removal involved a combination of combing, clipping and teasing Viola’s coat Viola and Miranda, pre-comb. Photo credit: Walter Newton cooperative as Viola, but we managed to reduce much of her outer coat. Marny Pavelka, from Sister Sheep, dressed up our two angoras, Jellybean and Kahale. nicely. On June 1, Scott Dontanville, of New West Shearing, arrived around noon and sheared all of the llamas and alpacas, finishing by 2:30 p.m. It was nice watching professionals in action. Thanks to everyone who helped! BELOW: Viola proudly shows off her new “haircut.” off. Miranda was next up. She wasn’t as willing or Alpacas and Goats Get Haircuts: Photo Gallery From left: Quantum and Radar pre-shear; and Quantum, Radar and Kaya post-shear. From left: Miranda post-shear; Kahale pre-shear. Below: Jellybean pre-shear, and Jellybean post-shear. Beaver Ponds inspires intern Sophia Mershad When Sophia Mershad first visited Beaver Ponds, it was through Kristin Barrett’s Intro to Environmental Science class at Colorado Mountain College. “I was just in awe and asked, ‘How can I get involved?’” Sophia said. “It was my dream place.” The 21-year-old aspires toward sustainable farming and “trying to share that mission with others and show that it is possible,” she said. When she saw the greenhouse, the animals and all the forms of alternative energy in one place, she was amazed — she had never seen anything like it. Since she began her summer internship, she has taught kids from the Boys and Girls Club about soil, sustainability and plant identification; helped with the worm farm and beds outside the greenhouse; and helped shear the alpacas and comb cashmere from the goats. For the rest of the summer, she will continue to help, about four days a week, wherever Eric and the crew needs a hand. “It’s not a job for me; it’s a treat,” she said. “I look forward to getting up every morning I go to Beaver Ponds.” “I just really love everything Beaver Ponds stands for … Now I really know what I want to do with my life — I can actually see what I want to do with it.” Growing up in Columbus, Ohio, her first “real” nature experience occurred when she was 16, as a friend took her on a day hike at Lake Placid. She made it to the top of the mountain and said to herself, “I’m going to live in the mountains for the rest of my life.” Three years ago, she moved to Colorado (initially, Telluride). She moved to Breckenridge 18 months ago to pursue her college degree while living in the mountains. Working at Beaver Ponds has inspired her to live more consciously when it comes to sustainability, from reducing waste, turning off unused lights and unplugging unused electronics to watching what kind of food she eats. She’s also brought discussions about sustainability into her family, which she had never done prior. “I just really love everything Beaver Ponds stands for, and I think it has a lot of potential to show people a more sustainable way to live,” she said. “It’s an amazing and rewarding experience, and I feel privileged. Now I really know what I want to do with my life — I can actually see what I want to do with it.”