Irvine Nature Center Stream & Wetland Restoration Design-Build

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Irvine Nature Center Stream & Wetland Restoration Design-Build IRVINE NATURE CENTER Irvine Nature Center Stream & Wetland Restoration Design-Build Owings Mills, Maryland An educational nature center lives its mission to protect nature by restoring stability, function, and habitat to more than 1,500 feet of degraded stream and adjacent wetlands. ditched to support agricultural wet habitat areas, restore ripar- practices. Those alterations, ian wetland hydrology, reduce along with more recent land sediment and nutrient loading, use changes on adjacent and and reestablish a mosaic of native nearby properties, had caused emergent, forested, and scrub ocated on a 210-acre site the streams and wetlands to shrub wetlands. The project re- L featuring forests, mead- become degraded. stored 1,550 linear feet of stream ows, wetlands, and headwater and restored and enhanced tributaries of the Jones Falls, With funding from the wetlands adjacent to the stream. a highly regarded headwater Chesapeake and Atlantic Revegetation involved the plant- trout stream in Baltimore Coastal Bays Trust Fund Capital ing of more than 2,100 trees and County, Irvine Nature Center Improvement Grant and a shrubs, and seeding with native offers experiential environ- partnership with the Maryland dry and wet meadow herba- mental education programs Association of Soil Conservation ceous seed mixes. The project for children and adults of Districts (MASCD), Resource is regarded by the MASCD as a the greater Baltimore area. Environmental Solutions, model for municipalities seeking With a mission that includes Biohabitats, and Irvine Nature nutrient and sediment credits. inspiring people to explore, Center teamed up to implement respect, and protect nature, stream and wetland restora- SERVICES Irvine recognized the need to tion. The design approach was Inventory & Assessments protect and improve some of to restore the degraded stream Design the nature in its own backyard. sections, divert stormfl ow to ad- Permitting Several sections of tributaries jacent fi eld areas where it would Construction Procurement on the site had long ago been infi ltrate and create localized Construction Management Physiographic Province Piedmont Bioregion Chesapeake/Delaware Bays 800.220.0919 Watershed www.biohabitats.com Jones Falls.
Recommended publications
  • Fall Conference 2005 Weekend Field Trips
    MNPS 2005 Annual Fall Conference Weekend Field Trips Field trips will be held Saturday afternoon and Sunday. They have been grouped on this page around the conference themes, and by levels of plant and/or ecological knowledge. Saturday afternoon field trips will end in time for the social. Lengthier field trips and those to more distant sites are scheduled for Sunday. Start and end times of Sunday field trips vary. SIGN UP FOR FIELD TRIPS SATURDAY MORNING AT THE CONFERENCE. • Field Trips to Natural Areas • Native Plant Garden Tours • Field Trips to Managed Natural Areas, Mitigation Sites, and Other Planting Sites Field Trips to Natural Areas Primarily for Beginners Introductory field trips. Leader will make a point of explaining basic concepts of native plant communities and plant/animal relationships, and will use mainly common names. • Irvine Nature Center (Saturday) – BEGINNER ONLY. Introduction to plant communities and plant/wildlife relationships. • Patapsco Valley State Park (Saturday) – Primarily for BEGINNERS, may be of interest to others who want to get to know this park – unusually rugged terrain. Emphasis on plant/wildlife relationships. Beginner - Intermediate Field trips to exceptionally fine natural areas. Leader will make a point of explaining basic concepts of native plant communities and habitat, and will use mainly common names. • Robert E. Lee Memorial Park (Saturday) – Globally rare ecosystem: mainly serpentine forest, may see some grasses and rare plants. • Gunpowder Falls State Park (Sunday) - Piedmont forest. Emphasis on plant communities. • Marshy Point Nature Center (Sunday) – Canoe trip through estuarine marshes and open water, short walk through Coastal forest. • North Point State Park (Sunday) – Marsh plants, butterfly and waterfowl habitat field trip.
    [Show full text]
  • Keep Maryland Beautiful Award Recipients
    Protecting Land Forever Keep Maryland Beautiful Award Recipients Fiscal Year 2019 Bill James Environmental Grants Historic Sotterley, Inc Howard County Antique Farm Machinery Club Mountain Laurel Garden Club North County High School Pocomoke Middle School Clean Up & Green Up Maryland Grants African American Firefighters Historical Society Alice Ferguson Foundation Allegany County Commissioners & the Allegany County Solid Waste Management Board Annapolis Arts District Annapolis Green, Inc. Antietam-Conococheague Watershed Alliance Back River Restoration Committee, Inc. Banner Neighborhoods Bel Air Downtown Alliance Bethesda Green Beyond the Classroom, Inc. Brunswick Main Street, Inc. BUILD - Rebuild Johnston Square Neighborhood Org C.A.R.E Community Association, Inc Centreville Main Street Town of Centreville City of Greenbelt Department of Public Works Downtown Frederick Partnership Downtown Sykesville Connection at the Community Foundation of Carroll County Druid Heights Community Development Corporation Dundalk Renaissance Corporation Elkton Alliance, Inc. Fusion Partnerships, Inc. (Whitelock Community Farm) Galena Tree and Park Committee Havre de Grace Citizens Against Trash Historic Frostburg - a Maryland Main Street Community Howard County Conservancy I'm Still Standing By Grace Intersection of Change, Inc. Let's Beautify Cumberland! Main Street Historic Chestertown Main Street Middletown, MD Inc Main Street Princess Anne Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments Milton Montford Montgomery Parks Foundation Park Heights Renaissance Pigtown Main Street, Inc. Sandtown South Neighborhood Alliance Southeast Community Development Corporation Strong City Baltimore Takoma/Langley Crossroads Development Authority, Inc. The 6th Branch The Town of Colmar Manor Town of Emmitsburg Town of Manchester Town of Oakland Town of Thurmont & Main Street Westport Community Economic Development Corporation Margaret Rosch Jones Awards All Saints Episcopal Church Cool Green Schools Maryland Coastal Bays Program Sky Valley Association, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Towson University Office of Graduate Studies a STUDY of NATURE
    i Towson University Office of Graduate Studies A STUDY OF NATURE PLAY SPACE SUSTAINABILITY IN THE PIEDMONT REGION OF MARYLAND by Victoria Rose Brusaferro A thesis Presented to the faculty of Towson University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Environmental Science in the Department of Environmental Science of Towson University Towson, Maryland 21252 (May, 2015) Thesis Committee: Dr. Sarah Haines Dr. Amy Trauth-Nare Dr. Brian Fath ii ii ABSTRACT Most of the United States population lives in urban areas, where heightened anthropogenic activity acts as a source of the majority of greenhouse gases (Hoornweg, 2011). Adaptive ways to deal with regional land management efforts need to be addressed in an effort to combat the effects of spreading urbanization (Roling, 1997). A positive environmental ethic is developed through children’s regular contact with nature, as well as substantial nature-based play (Bunting and Cousins, 1985). This paper proposes targeting the age when children first begin developing their bond with earth to harness a generation of environmentally conscious thinkers that will integrate sustainable practices in their behaviors and careers (Sobel, 1994). The most rapidly urbanizing region of Maryland, the Piedmont, can be studied to discern the present-day perspectives of best sustainable practices for naturalization of outdoor spaces specifically targeted to children ages four to seven years old in that area. ii Table of Contents LIST OF FIGURES……………………………………………………………………..vi
    [Show full text]
  • April/May/June 2015 Trailblazer
    April/May/June 2015 Supporting Oregon Ridge Park TRAILBLAZERand Nature Center for 32 years WANT BUTTERFLIES? DON’T FORGET THE CATERPILLARS! Presentation By Naturalist Sheryl Pedrick Monday, April 20, 2015, 7:30 PM Most people love butterflies in their garden and often provide flowering plants to attract them. However, many WHAT’S INSIDE... aren’t certain or aware of how to attract the greatest diversity of butterfly species. One solution is to consider the caterpillars, WILDLFOWER WANDERINGS and the plants on which they depend. Join Sheryl Pedrick, Talk by Naturalist Heather Helm Ladew Gardens’ Education Director, on a metamorphic May 18, 7:30 PM journey to examine the full life cycle and needs of common butterflies of the central Maryland region. Examine PRIMITIVE TECHNOLOGY WEEKEND recommended nectar plants for butterflies and the host May 2 and 3, 10 AM to 4 PM plants for their caterpillars. Also, learn about Ladew’s 1500 MUSIC IN THE WOODS square foot, native butterfly house, which features all four life cycle stages of numerous butterflies (and moths), including May 9, 10 AM to 4 PM monarchs, spicebush swallowtails, buckeyes, hummingbird PICNIC UNDER THE STARS moths and more. June 19, 6 PM, Location in Park TBA Sheryl Pedrick began her environmental education/ naturalist career almost 20 years ago at Oregon Ridge Nature SECRETS AND MYSTERIES OF SPRING WILDFLOWERS Center as a weekend/seasonal naturalist. She received her Master’s Degree in Environmental Studies from Montclair essay by ORNC Director Winny Tan State University through a Graduate Fellowship with the ORNC HOPES TO BE A GREEN CENTER New Jersey School of Conservation.
    [Show full text]
  • Cromwell Valley Park
    BALTIMORE BIRD CLUB PROGRAM 2014 - 2015 Updated March 2015 BALTIMORE BIRD CLUB a chapter of the MARYLAND ORNITHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, INC. Cylburn Arboretum 4915 Greenspring Avenue Baltimore, MD 21209-4168 Website: http://www.baltimorebirdclub.org/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/382565775136349/members/ OFFICERS PRESIDENT ..................................................................................... Joan Cwi 633 Stoney Spring Drive, Baltimore, MD 21210 .......................... 410 467-5352 ........................................................................................ [email protected] VICE PRESIDENT ............................................................................. Peter Lev 7 Devon Hill Rd., Unit A6, Baltimore MD 21210 ......................410 823-2962 ......................................................................................... [email protected] TREASURER ................................................................................. Dick Krejci 101 Daleview Court, Timonium, MD 21093................................... 410 252-7147 ............................................................................. [email protected] RECORDING SECRETARY ................................................ Mary Anne Fluke 4246 Darleigh Rd, Nottingham, MD 21236 ................................... 443 690-4319 .................................................................................... [email protected] MEMBERSHIP .............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Native News, May/June 2002
    Native News Newsletter of the Maryland Native Plant Society May/June 2002 Volume 2 Number 3 Inside This Issue: Upcoming Monthly Meetings President’s Letter “The Flora of the Greater Washington, D.C. Area” Page 2 ~ Tuesday, May 28, 7:00 pm MNPS Contacts Visitors Center Auditorium of the National Zoo, Page 2 Washington, D.C. ~ Committee Updates and Stanwyn Shetler, Botanist Emeritus, National Museum of Natural History, Volunteer Needs Smithsonian Institution, and author of Annotated Checklist of the Vascular Page 3 Plants of the Washington – Baltimore Area, will give a presentation on the ~ botanical work in the greater Washington, D.C. area, from the early botanists and floras up to and including the current flora checklist. Changes in spring Montgomery County flowering times will also be discussed. This regular monthly meeting of the Celebrates Legacy Open Space Maryland Native Plant Society is cosponsored by the Virginia Native Plant Acquisition Society and the National Zoo. Page 4 ~ Directions: From the Capital Beltway (I-495) take the Connecticut Avenue It’s Your Website Exit 33 south for about 5 miles. The Zoo will be on your left at 3001 Page 4 Connecticut Ave. Parking Lot A is closest to the Auditorium. After-hours ~ parking is free. Follow signs to the Visitors Center/Auditorium. Late Spring Field Trips By Metro: take the Red Line to the Woodley Park/Zoo/Adams-Morgan stop Page 5 or the Cleveland Park stop; the Zoo entrance lies halfway between these ~ stops. Please note that it is an uphill walk from the Woodley Park stop to the Zoo.
    [Show full text]
  • Winter 2016/2017
    Supporting Oregon Ridge Park TRAILBLAZERWINTER 2017 and Nature Center for 34 years WHAT’S INSIDE Holiday and Special Events this Winter Trail Guide Training and Master Naturalist Course Maple Sugar Season Is Approaching MARYLAND’S FRESHWATER FISHES New Staff Joins the Team Speaker: Dr. Stanley J. Kemp Director of Environmental Betsy Kadow leaves to Sustainability & Human Ecology become a Ranger at University of Baltimore Lake Roland Park Monday, January 16, 2017, 7:30 PM Our Volunteers Make Free at ORNC the Nature Center Go Round Outside of trout, bass, perch and other fish we like to catch for sport, there is a wide variety of species about which very little is known by most people. Most PLASTICS: Here Today, surprising is that these mysterious swimmers that populate Maryland’s rivers and Where Tomorrow? streams are also relatively unknown to science at large. This lack of knowledge is detrimental to the efforts to protect and restore native fish communities. Without knowing the needs of different species, we cannot maintain healthy fish Annual Report 2015-16 communities. These communities serve as a sign of healthy ecosystems, which provide quality ecosystem service such as clean drinking water, commercial and Honey Harvest 2016 recreational fisheries, and aesthetic qualities. Stanley Kemp will introduce us to a Big Success! some of these other fish from our streams and discuss their interrelationships and Thank you Volunteers! vulnerabilities, using photos and video to illustrate his talk. (Continued page 2) Oregon Ridge Nature Center Council, 410-887-1815; www.OregonRidgeNatureCenter.org; TDD/Deaf 410-887-5319 HOLIDAY AND WINTER SPECIAL EVENTS HOLIDAY HOUSES AND TWEETY TREATS DECEMBER 17 AND 18, FROM 1 - 3 PM $6 OR $4/MEMBERS FOR AGES 5+ Bring the Family to Create a Candy-Coated Graham Cracker Masterpiece.
    [Show full text]
  • Sheraton North Baltimore Hotel, Towson, MD
    Sheraton North Baltimore Hotel, Towson, MD HIGHLIGHTS Professional Development Workshop on Thursday ★ Thursday Night Dinner and Social ★ Friday Pre-Conference Workshops ★ First Timers’ Welcome ★ STEAM Festival (students, families, community members, STEAM professionals, and conference attendees) ★ Friday Conference Opening and Happy Hour ★ Exhibit Hall ★ 50+ Saturday workshops ★ Lightning Rounds ★ Exhibitor Presentations ★ Movie ★ Book readings from local authors ★ Saturday Night Trivia and Social ★ Sunday Field Experiences MAEOE Welcomes STEAM Keynote Speaker Keith Williams, Saturday Conference Lunch STEAM provides the tools, the data and the knowledge to help us accomplish enormous charge. But we still need to foster that strong emotional connection that inspires change. There are few environments that are better suited to blending STEAM and emotional connection than the underwater world, and we have amazing underwater ecosystems ripe for that blending right in our backyards. Join me as I take you on an underwater journey through streams that flow past our homes and schools and through our communities. Experience the beautifully diverse and intricate life of our ​ Chesapeake rivers and streams. Besides being mind-blowing, the underwater worlds of our everyday freshwater ecosystems are the perfect setting for students to explore, make connections, seek answers, create solutions and STEAM forward. Keith is the founding Director of Education, and is the current Executive Director of the NorthBay Education Foundation. He has a BS in Environmental Biology from Kutztown University and MS in Ecological Teaching and Learning from the Lesley University Audubon Expedition Institute. Keith worked as an Environmental Biologist with the U.S. Army for 10 years before starting his education career, and has conducted environmental assessments throughout North America, South West Asia and Central America.
    [Show full text]
  • September/October 2014 Trailblazer
    Oregon Ridge Nature Center Council 13555 Beaver Dam Road NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION Cockeysville, MD 21030 U.S. POSTAGE PAID PARKTON, MD PERMIT NO. 120 SEPTEMBER - OCTOBER 2014 Supporting Oregon Ridge Park TRAILBLAZERand Nature Center for 32 years Oregon Ridge Nature Center's Annual Is YourCurrent? Membership T I V A L H O N E Y H F E S A R V E S T It’s Saturday 10/4 Sunday 10/5 Free Please 11 to 4 come and enjoy these activities: Honey Extraction by Elena Hoffman, 2014 Honey Princess Honey Ice Cream Making Demonstrations RENEW OREGON RIDGE NATURE CENTER COUNCIL Open Hive Demos ATTENTION MEMBERS: You can now manage your membership online. Apple Cider Pressing NOW! To pay by credit card, visit our Web site: oregonridgenaturecenter.org/ membership. (For more info, please read the article on page 8.) Civil War Reenactments • Individual $15 Wool Spinning Demos NEW • Family $30 YEARLY • Supporting $75 Blacksmithing Demos • Sustaining $250 DUES: • Lifetime $500 Animal Encounters Puppet Shows TIG MEMBERS RECEIVE: GET HT WI NOW TH JOIN ! • Bimonthly Trailblazer newsletter Canoeing N A • Member discounts on all programs TU RE! • Priority mailing of seasonal calendar Music • First option for camp registration • “Members Only” events Food !!! Full Name ________________________________________________________________ !! Address ________________________________________ State _____ Zip _________ ! Phone _____________________ Email ________________________________________ Checks to ORNC Council, 13555 Beaver Dam Road, Cockeysville, Maryland 21030 410 887-1815 [email protected] www.oregonridgenaturecenter.org Oregon Ridge Nature Center Council, Inc., 410-887-1815; www.oregonridgenaturecenter.org; TDD/Deaf 410-887-5319 Page 2 Sept/Oct 2014 Sept/Oct 2014 Page 11 SUMMER CAMPS wERE ORNC COUNCIL SPEAKER SERIES wIlD AND wONDERFUl! MarylAND AMPhIBIAN MESSING AROUND wITh BIRDS: Rachel Tuchman (photo below, left) and Kim Erickson AND REPTIlE ATlAS: For Fun and Science (photo below, right) led a fantastic season of eight summer camps.
    [Show full text]
  • Why Get Maryland Green School Certification?
    Targeting the Next Generation of Recyclers: Maryland Green Schools and Solid Waste Reduction Welcome, Introductions & a little admin Our Moderator: • Peter Houstle - MRN Executive Director Our Presenter: • Laura Johnson Collard Executive Director of the Maryland Association for Environmental and Outdoor Education Mark Your Calendars: • February 6-9, 2014 – MAEOE Annual Conference • June 19-20, 2014 – MRN/SWANA-MA Annual Conference Admin • Post questions in chat box on right hand side of screen • Recording will be posted on MRN website What is a Maryland Green School? What is a Green School? Program Philosophies • Whole School Culture Shift • Student Driven • Hands-On Inquiry • Non-Prescriptive Framework Why get Certified? • Academic achievement • Interaction with Nature • Health effects on Social, Emotional, Cognitive and Physical Development • Development of a 21st Century Workforce • Importance of Environmental Literacy and Engagement MD Green Schools* by county/city Total: 419 - 20% of all Schools in Maryland Allegany 2 Howard 46 Anne Arundel 67 Kent 1 Baltimore City 28 Montgomery 50 Baltimore County 64 Prince George’s 18 Calvert 25 Queen Anne’s 5 Caroline 1 Somerset 1 Carroll 29 St Mary’s 19 Cecil 5 Talbot 1 Charles 9 Washington 8 Frederick 7 Wicomico 3 Garrett 11 Worcester 3 Harford 16 *Supported by 36 Maryland Green Centers Environmental Literacy • Roper Report – a longitudinal study of adults – 58% of adults are environmentally literate. • Maryland’s Definition • MSDE- High School Graduation Requirement, environmental literacy standards. • http://www.marylandpublicschools.org/MS DE/programs/environment/tk/elci_gb Overview The MD Green School Application Pre K-12 Summarize the school’s actions over 2 years.
    [Show full text]
  • Poster Abstracts P
    Watershed Forum Poster Abstracts p. 1 2016 Chesapeake Watershed Forum Poster Session Poster Abstracts Welcome to the Sixth Annual Chesapeake Watershed Forum’s Poster Session! We invite you to peruse the posters throughout the conference, and to attend the poster session Saturday evening to mingle with poster presenters. At Saturday’s poster session, you are invited to vote for the People’s Choice Poster Award (please use form below), and through your vote, enter to win a raffle prize. Posters will be judged both by you (the People’s Choice Award) and by a panel of professional evaluators (Best Poster Award.) Poster prize winners will receive free registration to the 2017 Chesapeake Watershed Forum. Poster topics: Restoration – Forestry, Oysters, Wetlands p. 2 Outreach, Community Engagement, Stewardship and Volunteerism p. 4 Science, Methods, Monitoring, Evaluation p. 9 Environmental Education p. 13 Voter Name: Poster Contest – People’s Choice Poster Award Form ______________ By submitting this form, you are submitting ONE vote for the People’s Choice Poster Award and entering to win the voter’s raffle. Poster awards and voter raffle award will be announced at the conclusion of the poster session. You do not need to be present to win the voter raffle. Voter Email: YOUR VOTE: ______________ Poster # Author/Presenter Name: Watershed Forum Poster Abstracts p. 2 Poster Presenters Affiliation Title and Abstract # Restoration – Forestry, Oysters, Wetlands, and More 1 Bezerra, Neighborhood Eleanor Roosevelt Eco Murals Natalia Design Center The purpose of the Eco Murals project at Eleanor Roosevelt High School was to improve neighborhood livability and bridge the gaps between students and the environment by allowing students to express their views and visions of their community through public art.
    [Show full text]
  • Read the Full 2019 MBCP Director Year-End Update Here!
    MBCP Update 2019 Year-end Report Chris Eberly, Executive Director 1. Partners • MBCP has 40 partner organizations as of 12/31/2019. Figure 1 shows the geographic distribution of these partners. The farther west partner is Western MD RC&D in Hagerstown. An effort has been made to identify potential partners in western Maryland, southern Maryland, and the upper Eastern Shore. Several potential partners have been identified and will be “recruited” in 2020. Not surprisingly, many partners are in the greater Annapolis area (Figure 2). 1430 WNAV Lights Out Baltimore Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay Lower Shore Land Trust American Bird Conservancy Maryland Biodiversity Project American Daughters of Conservation Maryland Coastal Bays Program American Forests Maryland DNR Assateague Island National Seashore Maryland League of Conservation Voters Audubon MD-DC Maryland Ornithological Society Chesapeake Bay Foundation Maryland Zoo Chesapeake Conservancy National Wildlife Federation – MD Chapter CleanBeachOC Phoenix Wildlife Center Conservation Community Consulting Safe Skies MD Delmarva Low Impact Tourism Experiences Scenic Rivers Land Trust Ducks Unlimited Smart Growth MD (Preservation Maryland) Eastern Shore Land Conservancy Southern MD Audubon Society Friends of Jug Bay Susquehannock Wildlife Society Greater Baltimore Wilderness Coalition The Nature Conservancy-MD-DC Harford Glen USDA NRCS Hazel Outdoor Discovery Center USFWS Irvine Nature Center USGS Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary Western Maryland RC&D 2. Building the Partnership, Engaging Partners, and Recruiting Volunteers • Presentations: Gave 14 presentations, reaching 927 people, added at least 35 new volunteers through these presentations. See Table 1 for list of presentations. • MBCP Facebook: 1410 followers, a 43% increase from 2018. • eNews subscribers: 215, a 23% increase from 2018.
    [Show full text]