Beth Tucker and the Fairfield Bay Garden Club visited the Nature Center September 29, sharing mutual admiration for the relationship between those magnificent Monarch butterflies and their Milkweed floral counterpart. Our outing featured hiking around those future butterfly zones with a casual assessment of the vegetation viability. Regarding the extensive planting project in June the term ‘nursery’ was clearly embraced as we gently coddled and encouraged the newborn growths. We look forward to our continued partnership and monitoring!
Nemo Vista 9th Graders

Thirty-nine high school students arrived at the stone entrance of South Fork for the day…Friday, Sept. 18. Scott Perry’s civics class (they were also Jared Brice’s biology students) came to learn about pioneer log cabin life and aspects of ecology they could experience at the nature center. The “nature deficit syndrome” that many students experience was bypassed for the day…interest ran high as lessons in the chemistry of soap making and experience using an old cross-cut saw took the spotlight. Docents led students along the trails studying insects, fungi, and other decomposers that were shaping the ecosystems on the peninsula. Other students seated in a bench circle in the woods reviewed flower parts and their functions as they discussed the sexual and asexual reproductive process influencing the outdoor species of plant life…large colorful trumpet vine flowers (red, orange, and yellow) aided their understanding of the activity.

Other student groups “journaled” their ideas and experiences as they took in the sights and sounds of the South Fork woods…they wrote miniature essays that they turned in to their docent leader…neat readings. Still other students did leaf-stamping art with nature and painted with sticks and walnut hull dye…they created artistic renditions of leaves by using paint on the lower leaf surface, transferring that leaf vein print to art paper, and spatter painting the leaf outline…the artful leaf and its colors were an introduction to the coming fall season.

It was 12:30…sack lunches at the picnic tables restored energy levels before everyone had a chance to “pull” the old, 5 ft., cross-cut saw as their partner then pulled the saw back in return. After a number of logs had been cut in pieces, the 30 year old pine had produced two piles of sawdust, one on each side of the cut log, sawdust from the growth rings the tree had made from carbohydrates translocated from photosynthetic activity way out in the leaves during the tree’s previous years of life. Thinking back over the 30 years during which the pine had grown, a number of events that took place during those years were remembered: birthdays, ball games, war in Europe, 9/11, etc. The old pine had been around a long time witnessing lots of activity.

Before taking pictures of all the class on the Riddle Cabin porch, there was a wrap-up of the day’s activities…lots of ground had been covered, new ideas had surfaced, and textbook learning from back in the classroom had been used in a new setting (the slogan “no child left inside” surely fit the day’s activities)…the day had been a special one, a day of fun where the learning took place outside on the Greers Ferry peninsula known as South Fork.
VBC Fair Booth
Docents Krissi Graham and Glenda Hall were busy manning the SFNC booth this year at the Van Buren County Fair. Krissi took the lead this year in setting up our booth and we want to thank all our docents who volunteered to do community outreach and help the public find out a little bit more about our great Nature Center and the educational opportunities available for area students, families and organizations. We signed up approximately 20 new people to receive our newsletter. It was a great opportunity to once again meet people of Van Buren County!
Little Red River Audubon Society Enjoys Quiet Night Songs

Joyce Hartmann again gave the short program on insect sounds, and passed around the book “The Songs of Insects,” by Elliott and Hershberger, with its accompanying CD, and recommended online sites such as www.songsofinsects.com for insect identification. One audience member summarized, “It’s all about sex,” as the group learned the songs were all males calling to females.

The group heard a Summer Tanager scolding them, and saw bats chasing insects in the overhead clearing. Joyce played owl sounds so that members could recognize and identify any that they heard. After she played the Screech Owl calls, two Screech Owls answered, calling back and forth to each other on opposite sides of the peninsula. (No one would have heard them if the insects had been singing loudly as they were just 10 days ago.)
Photos: Don Culwell
After the program, Bob Hartmann led the group in a sunset walk, showing them the milkweed plantings to help the monarch butterfly population and the sawmill operation designed to produce usable fence posts and boards using local timber. While walking, the group heard the Dusk-singing Cicada which gave way at nightfall to loud choruses of Katydids and Crickets, singing slowly due to the cooler temperature.
Back at the cabin, Joyce played songs by Almeda Riddle. A nearly full moon provided light, along with the campfire and a lantern. Members enjoyed a potluck and roasted hot dogs and s’mores. The coals were perfect and the fire felt good in the chill of the evening.
What will the night sounds be like each month? Be sure to go outside and listen…
Clinton Junior High Visit
Several Clinton Junior High students and staff found perfect weather and hiked the trails on Wed. June 3, 2015. Ms. Pratt also led students in a Predator/Prey activity and Ms. Graham taught a short lesson on recycling. The students were part of an after school enrichment program.
Krissi Graham
Glade Restoration Update
A portable sawmill is site at SFNC and now beginning to process the numerous logs produced by the Glade Restoration Project. Some of the milled lumber will be used to construct key area structures
needed for maintenance and equipment. First products to be milled include posts, rails and pickets for a ‘hog tight’ old time picket fence to be placed around the cabin area.
Weather permitting, mill operations will be in the early hours, before noon
on week days only.
Bob Hartmann
Our glade restoration and milkweed planting funded by the US Fish and Wildlife Service was visited by Joe Krystofik, State Coordinator for the Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program. We have been working on the clearing for the glade restoration on in 3 areas of the Nature Center amounting to approximately 10 total acres. We have successfully planted approximately 400 milkweed plants in the glade areas. For purposes of the Federal grant these two projects are not considered finished by USFWS. We will be doing a controlled burn in these areas probably in late winter next year. This should cause the relic seed bed to spring in to life next Spring.
Don Richardson















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