Woods Creek Restoration
2008
For Woods Creek, a Season of
Restoration:
Spring peepers. Robins. Earth Day. If
it’s April, it’s also the season of a favorite community tradition, Woods
Creek Restoration Day.
But this year, look for it in a
different form: Not a single day of activities but a whole season. The
activities start in early April, when groups of students from Maury River
and Lylburn Downing Middle Schools are taking a unique excursion to track
the flow of runoff from their respective schools to Woods Creek, testing
for water quality as they go. And in May, the theme of caring for this
important local watershed will still be current, as Lylburn Downing middle
schoolers revisit the Woods Creek segment at Jordan’s Point and MRMS kids
install a rain garden on their school grounds.
These
school activities,
coordinated by Boxerwood Education Association are part of a
community-wide recognition of the importance of Woods Creek led by various
groups who’ll be doing restoration and maintenance along the creek’s
riparian buffers and in existing rain gardens throughout April and into
May.
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The week of April 20-26 is being
designated as Woods Creek Week – coinciding with Earth Day, April 22
– but as Kitty Sachs, Boxerwood Community Rain Garden Coordinator
and coordinator of creek restoration activities remarked, “It’s
really more like Woods Creek Month.”
VMI cadets are scheduled to participate early in April,
installing a new riparian buffer just upstream of the Lime Kiln
Bridge, and |
local Boy Scout troops are expected to
participate on creek-related projects. Several groups of individuals also
volunteered to clean signage along the stream, and Sachs said that an
anonymous benefactor has already cleaned the bluebird houses along the
Woods Creek Trail.
Boxerwood Education Steward Elise
Sheffield outlined what is expected to be a full day of activities for the
middle school students at both ends of town. The entire MRMS sixth grade
is slated to hike
in teams along tributaries of Woods Creek,
sampling and testing specific segments of the waterways leading to the
creek. At the confluence of
Woods Creek and Sarah’s
Run, they are expected to work
alongside DEQ staff to assess the biological health of Woods Creek via
macro-invertebrate sampling. As part of citizen outreach, The 6th grade
investigators are also scheduled to plant 120 new tree seedlings along the
Creek. The students will
meet with DEQ staff and encounter some of the creek’s
macroinvertebrate critters, then help city arborist Betty Besal
with some plantings in the riparian buffer area.
Back at MRMS, plans are
underway for about 30 of these students to
continue the watershed care
by constructing a modest-sized demonstration rain
garden on school grounds; the
project will be part of their activities in a 9-week Landscape
and Design art class.
All LDMS
sixth graders are to assess the health of Town Branch along their urban
watershed hike, do some Woods Creek macro-invertebrate sampling with DEQ
personnel, and help with maintenance for the Jordan’s Point rain garden
that separates a large parking area from the creek. Also on tap:
historical sleuthing around the Point and timed races
for tiny batteau
along Woods Creek.
These students will return to
Wood's Creek and Jordan's Point in May.
They'll be implementing their plans for improving the rain garden there as
well as participating in art and poetry activities
designed and led by LDMS staff.
“Slow the Flow” is the moniker of a
3-year federal Learn and Serve grant – held on behalf of all four area
middle schools by Rockbridge County Public Schools
(and administered by Boxerwood) –
that supports these activities. Field days are led and organized by
Boxerwood staff and volunteers, and resource personnel from DEQ, Natural
Bridge Soil and Water Conservation Board, and the City of Lexington.
People interested in joining Boxerwood staff on these
investigations should contact Elise Sheffield, who says she actively
welcomes new volunteers into the fold, with training included. Sheffield
and Sachs, both at Boxerwood, can also provide information about how you
can participate in the ongoing care of the watershed. Woods Creek Month –
and beyond!
Take a look at Woods Creek Restoration Days
Past