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Habitat Restoration at Oak Lane Day School: Elementary Environmental Education Delaware Estuary Environmental Summit 2007 January 23, 2007

Blue Bell, Pennsylvania Dottie Baumgarten [email protected]

Presentation Outline •

• • •

Habitat restoration, initial need: Assessment and professional development, September 2000 Sense of Place Habitat restoration project, spring 2004 Hopes 2004/2005: Hopes achieved Hopes 2007: Sustainability

Habitat Restoration: Beginning, September 2000 • Context: – excellent elementary science education – appropriate use of land resources

• Needs: – assessment of resources – professional education

Initial Need: Assessment

Thank you to Jason Hunt Philadelphia Water Dept.

Thank you to Jason Hunt Philadelphia Water Dept.

Habitat: marsh and hedgerow Square stemmed monkey flower

Habitat: meadow

Activities: butterfly catching, plant and animal observation

Spring-fed pond, beloved by the school community

Activities: frog catching, macroinvertebrate studies

Habitat: spring-fed creek, leading to the pond

Activities: animal and plant observation and study, water testing Habitat improvement: including Sense of Place Project, June 2004

Habitat: natural woods and creek

Habitat: crabapple forest

Initial Need: Professional Development • Workshops • Meetings/ conferences • Informal interactions

Finding fish at Bell’s Mill Bridge, Wissahickon Creek

Workshops: Multiple and Varied • Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association, Pennsylvania Songbirds • Schuylkill Environmental Education Center, Macroinvertebrates • Montgomery County Intermediate Unit, Internet for Teachers • Lancaster County Environmental Center, Reptiles and Amphibians • The Academy of Natural Sciences and The Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, 7th Annual Teachers Workshop

Meetings and Informal Interactions • • • • • • •

National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) Schuylkill Action Network (SAN) Friends Environmental Education Network (FEEN) Grant writing (DEP mini-grants) Curriculum development Community connections Mentoring

Community-Based Action • Community service monthly activities including Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association (WVWA) • Care of our land in the Watershed • Desire to provide further adult education

Community service

Riparian buffer project

Community-Based Connections: Initial and Continuing • • • • •



Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, Sense of Place Consortium for the Scientific Assistance to Watersheds (C-SAW) Chestnut Hill College, Professor Robert Meyer Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association Department of Environmental Protection, Environmental Education Grant Program Whitpain Township Shade Tree Commission

2003/2004

Restoration Project by spring-fed creek

Sense of Place June 2004 Plant delivery fourth grade students

Class activities matched to age and experience of children

Digging humus: soil, insects, roots, plants pre-primary grades

Riparian restoration second grade students

Parent support

Parent support

first grade students

Digging holes was a favorite task

third grade students

Study of age appropriate topics: •Watershed •Water quality •Plant details

Moving plants and humus fifth grade students

Japanese knotweed

Japanese knotweed removal, May 2004

Weeping willow wood chips used as mulch

June 2004 summer camp

Sustainable habitat August 2004

June 2005

Japanese knotweed June 2005

Continuing events: Removing invasive plants, adding native plants, spring 2005

Target grant tools

Spice trees from Greene Street Friends School

DEP equipment grant 2004/2005

2004/2005 Hopes • Sense of Place: new native trees and bushes • Native plant propagation: new skills • Whitpain Township Shade Tree Commission: tree inventory

Sense of Place and Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust: native trees and bushes, hopes exceeded, fall 2005

Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust Fall 2005 Native plant propagation

Hopes exceeded: •Plant advice. •Seed collection. •Mentoring of our staff.

Whitpain Township Shade Tree Commission Tree inventory, summer 2005 Hopes exceeded: 60 unique trees identified •4 magnificent trees: Sycamore, Lacebark pine, River birch, Burr oak

•Student activities: •Adopted trees •New educational ring of logs •Care of trees: •Removal of invasive trees • Norway maple •Cabling of several large trees •Future direction

Continuing events: Earthweek April 2006

Support from Partnership for the Delaware Estuary and Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust: Earth week, April 2006

2007 Needs/Concerns: Sustainability Future hopes

• Long term planning • Funding • Maintenance: - gardening care - deer browse • Balance needs: - trees, watershed - education, time • Specific: - volunteer gardeners

Habitat Restoration at Oak Lane Day School: Elementary Environmental Education Dottie Baumgarten [email protected]