Natural Enquirer: March/April 2012

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Natural Enquirer N e w s l e t t e r f o r S p r i n g Va l l e y S u p p o r t e r s a n d Vo l u n t e e r s

v o l . 3 n o . 2 • M a r c h / A p r. ‘ 1 2

In this issue...

A characteristic common to those who frequently carve out space in their lives to spend time immersed in nature is attentiveness to detail. Modern life, with its fast pace, the constant hum of traffic and the regular beeping and chiming of electronic devices, dulls our awareness of the rich sensual textures, sounds and smells of the natural world. This issue of the Natural Enquirer alludes to that deeper awareness still possible for all of us. Just as regular physical exercise tones and strengthens muscles and reflexes, time spent leisurely and quietly in nature strengthens our observational powers. With this heightened awareness, we can truly experience the abundant explosion of new life in springtime. We can also better understand the insights of our ancestors that led them to design gardens in imitation of nature. We can also become better stewards of our own home landscape, better able to notice subtle changes in the plants and other creatures that share our neighborhoods. While we are all encouraged to make New Year’s resolutions in January, there is no more inspiring a time than spring to make a resolution to get outside more often and exercise your senses.

Inside Bunny Tails and Spring Trails.............................2 High Times for Lazy Beds....................................3 What’s Happenin’.............................................. 4-5 Emerals Ash Borer...............................................6

Spring Valley General Information....................10 Volunteer News Contents Volunteern Want Ads...........................................7 Volunteer Calendar........................................... 8-9

Visit www.parkfun.com and take our Spring Valley Program Survey.


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

Bunny Tails and Spring Trails

A

by Luetta Coonrod

h, the smell of spring; there’s nothing else quite like it. After the drag of late winter, without the excitement of the holidays, it feels great to get outside. Spring is a breath of fresh air, and Spring Valley is a perfect place to enjoy tails and trails. There are over three miles of trails, and surprises can be found along any one of them. Animal babies are popping up all over, and bunny tails are likely to be spotted as the latest additions explore their strange new world. As the lion of early March begins to give way to the lamb, there are plenty of opportunities to feed your mind and body. Discover the joys of coffee and/or cheese at the Heritage Farm; get out and paint in the open air. Peer at the night sky through teleRabbit scopes or expand your night vision with an evening hike. Sugar Bush Fair, March 17 & 18 (9AM-Noon) is a chance to learn how maple syrup is made. Visit historic demonstrations and modern interpretations and top off your morning with a pancake breakfast. Spring break offers students a chance to discover the land in a new way, including a day spent at the cabin cooking in the fireplace.

winged blackbirds dart hither and yon, protecting their hidden hideaways near the marsh. Turtles find a comfortable place to lay their eggs, often where

If you don’t feel like a structured program, the grounds are open 8AM-5PM for you to enjoy. Redwing Blackbird Trails wind through the prairie, wetlands, and woodlands; spring ephemerals greet passing footsteps with a nod or a bow. Each week brings new wonders to the landscape, and flowers are just the beginning. Birds are returning from their winter vacation, and their calls fill the air. Nests are being built, and young ones will soon flex their wings before they fledge.

Boiling Sap at the Sugar Bush Fair

Closer to the ground, the pond comes to life. The chirps, whirs, creaks, and croaks of frogs can be heard from the Nature Center and beyond. Red-

we least expect. As the insects return for the season, fish jump to catch one as it darts through the air. In the prairie, the ground begins to warm, preparing for new growth. Early flowers bring a flash of color and light to the otherwise barren-looking land-

Woodland Trail at Spring Valley

Snapping Turtle

2

scape. Patches of black, sometimes with specks of green poking through, indicate where controlled burns have recently occurred. Snakes warm themselves on the path, slithering away as hurried shoes disturb their nap. In an astoundingly short period of time, the prairie will transition from its browns and greys of winter to the various greens of spring. The woods bring forth not only the bursting of leaf buds on trees, but their herald—the woodland flowers. These predictors of spring must bloom, flower, and seed before the trees above their heads shadow them into submission for the remainder of the year. This is a spectacular sight, and well worth the time to find their short-lived beauty. Among these early bloomers, small creatures of the woods begin their annual march through their own life cycles. The interdependence of these plants and animals are part of what makes Spring Valley so special. Prairie, wetlands, and woodlands are all a part of the great confluence of spring. Each is unique, and has its own story to tell. As you make time to visit, look for bunny tails along the trails. They may inspire you to tell a few tales of your own. Happy Spring!


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

High Times for Lazy Beds

At some point during the seventh decade of the 20th century, a revolution in gardening called the “NEW Biodynamic Deep Bed Method” was brought to the attention of those drawn to working in the earth. At first, the method, which involves considerable up-front manual labor to initiate, seemed to be just another over-compensatory reaction to the “machine age” that welled up from California, its place of origin. The basic gist was that by spurning polluting, gas-guzzling machines that require level ground and widely spaced rows of plants to operate, gardening could be accomplished intensively by the construction of raised beds of earth that are never trod upon and once built do not require annual plowing. Over the years, the numerous advantages of raised beds have been recognized as sound science. In reality, the method is not new at all. It was what most farmers and gardeners had been doing from the beginning of agriculture until they were coerced into trading their shovels and hoes for tractors and cellphones.

by Walter Plinske

that parallels the bed and by the accumulation of outside amendments. The length of the bed can be whatever suits the given site.

Whether in the Andes where ridged beds were called “wacho”, or in Ireland where the term was “lazy beds” (possibly from the English epithet for the potato, the “lazy root”), the beds had the advantage of warming up Wooden Raised Beds sooner in the growing season than the surrounding flatlands and walking paths. This was a major advantage in cold boggy places across a swath of Europe from Ireland to Poland where the height of the bed also provided drainage, which assures that plant roots do not become waterlogged. Recent research in Ireland suggests that the abandonment of lazy-beds just prior to 1845 helped potato blight to race It was along those places through the countryin lost antiquity, where Lazy Beds side, exacerbating the people first traversed and great Irish famine. This was because the later settled, that the natural template blight spores were less likely to germifor the raised bed was encountered. Be nate in the comparatively warm and dry they today called Amazon, Mississippi, top of a lazy-bed than in a level field. or Mekong; it was the river that yielded up a yearly deposit of rich sediment, Soil that is compressed by tractors, tiloften in the form of a long narrow raised lers, or human feet can cause difficulty bar. By often duplicated trials, these for water, air, and roots moving through mud bars were found to be ideal growit. This soil compaction can reduce crop ing sites for the many plants that were yields by 50 percent. Walking only on soon to be domesticated. In a conscious the path in a raised bed garden, howact of copying nature, raised beds were soon shaped by nascent farmers further away from the bodies of water that inspired them. Then as now, the beds would be no wider than four feet, allowing the center to be reached from either side without having to tread on the soil. The height of the bed was obtained by digging out the soil of the walkway Mud Bars 3

Wooden Raised Bed Diagram

ever, allows the soil to stay loose due to the action of roots, earthworms, and the addition of organic matter. Vegetables can be planted in beds at higher densities, spaced just far enough apart to avoid crowding but close enough to shade weeds and to limit moisture loss from the sun’s evaporative effect on bare soil. Gravity becomes an ally, not only in alleviating boggy conditions, but in reducing a common problem of alkaline soils. Saturated soils get a dose of lime, which raises pH, every spring via percolation. In a raised bed, gravity reduces percolation to a trickle from capillary action. Soil acidity can thus be maintained in the 5.8 to 6.8 pH range that vegetables prefer. Today the sides of raised beds are likely to be constructed of wood or stone, allowing the height of the structure to be as high as three feet. This allows access to the bed by even the handicapped. Pressure-treated lumber and used railroad ties are popular materials for constructing raised beds; however, because certain gardening groups have raised food safety concerns about older varieties of pressure-treated lumber that contain arsenic, a newer wood treatment such as alkaline copper quaternary (ACQ) is preferred. Creosote, which is used to preserve railroad ties, can cause injury to plants. The use of older, weathered ties decreases this liability. Naturally rot-resistant wood such as cedar is best. To more closely portray gardening of 132 years ago, the Heritage Farm kitchen garden will have a new look this year— lazy-beds! Come and check us out as we test the veracity of the above claims!


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

Click on program/icon for information and to register online.*

*To register online you must have a current SPD account with assigned PIN number. To create a new account, visit the registration desk at the CRC and verify residency. Non-residents may call Spring Valley to set up an account.

Teacher’s Workshop: Botany for the Elementary Classroom

Saturday, April 21 • 9:00A-4:30P & Sunday, April 22 • 11:00A-5:00P Learn ways to bring the fun of science inquiry to your students through hands-on investigations, writing, literature and games. $140 (National-Louis or Aurora University graduate credit available. CEUs, CPS Lane credit and CPDUs available) Additional workshops are being developed. For up-to-date information, visit www.parkfun.com/Spring-Valley/programs.

Nature’s Night Life - ADULTS ONLY!

Sugar Bush Fair Schaumburg Park District's

Friday, March 30 • 7:00-9:00P Friday, May 4 • 8:00-10:00P Start your weekend with a relaxing and enlightening evening walk at Spring Valley.

Presented by

Perk Up! Coffee 101

Sunday, March 4 • 1:00-3:00P Bored with the cold, dull winter days? Perk up and come to Heritage Farm to learn about and taste different coffees!

Free Admission! Maple Sugaring-Originally published by Currier & Ives

Saturday & Sunday, March 17 & 18 Enjoy a pancakes breakfast with real maple syrup, sausage, juice and coffee. See authentic demonstrations of maple syrup production, a pioneer sugar camp, children’s puppet show, hayride and sales of syrup and other goodies. Click here for more information.

Plein Air Painting

Saturday, April 14 • 9:00A-2:00P Meet and paint with other plein air painters at Merkle Cabin.

ADULT

Power Vegetable Gardening

Saturday, May 5-12 • 10:00A-1:00P The course covers site selection, soil preparation, fertilization, watering, pest control and harvest.

Harper College & Spring Valley

Register through Harper College or call 847/925-6707. Class held at Spring Valley.

Blacksmithing for Beginners

Restorative Yoga at the Cabin

Saturday, April 28 • 1-4P Discover the timeless and practical craft of blacksmithing. Course: LEI0078-001

Friday, March 23, April 13 & 27 • 6:30-7:30P Recharge the body, mind and soul in a soothing, stress-free environment.

Home Composting

Vegetable Gardening in Small Places

Saturday, April 21 • 9-11A Discover solutions for many of the commonly assumed problems associated with composting. Course: LLG0064-001

Landscaping with Native Plants

Saturday, April 14 • 9A-Noon Discover the beauty and environmental benefits of using native plants in home landscaping. Course: LLG0062-001

Traditional Home Brewing

Saturday, June 2 • 4-6A Learn about the art of home brewing of beer, as practiced by this area’s German settlers. Course: LEI 0079

Cheese Making

Sunday, March 25 • 12:30-4:30P Make hard and soft cheeses while learning the history and science of one of our favorite foods.

Get Out and Paint

Saturday, March 10 • 9:00-11:00A Learn the basics of painting including equipment, easels, locations to paint and more.

Free - Going Wild in the Tame Garden Tuesday, April 10 • 7:00-8:00P Saturday, April 14 • 9:00-10:00A Become familiar with area native plants and learn ways of incorporating them into the home landscape.

Journey of the Universe

Friday, April 27 • 7:30-9:00P This video guides you through time and space, sharing a view of the cosmos based on creativity, connection and interdependence.

Saturday, April 29 • 10:00A-Noon Learn tips and techniques for making the most of limited space to grow sweet, crunchy vegetables.

All Ages Free - Heaven’s Watch

Sat., March 10 • 8:30-10:30P............ Mars Sat., April 14 • 9:00-11:00P............. Venus Sat., May 12 • 9:30-11:30P............. Saturn Join Chicago Astronomical Society as they set their telescopes for a peek at the night skies.

Breakfast with the Birds

Saturday, May 12 • 7:00-9:00A Enjoy an early morning walk to look for Spring Valley’s colorful migratory birds.

Free - Spring Bird Count

Saturday, May 5 • 7:00A-5:00P Help count birds during the Audubon Society spring bird count.

Sundown Supper on the Farm

Saturday, April 28 & May 19 • 4:30-7:30P Help with evening chores, make supper and get a chance to watch the sunset.

Summer Camps at Spring Valley Spring Valley offers a variety of summer camps (full and half-day) for children 5-15 years old. For more information, call 847/985-2100 or click here.


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

Sunset Fire and Picnic on the Prairie Saturday, April 14 • 6:00-8:30P This program provides insight into how important fire was—and still is—to natural areas.

Home School Naturalist Group Programs Spring Valley Nature Center and Heritage Farm is the perfect place for hands-on, exploration based science programs. Offerings change seasonally, so check the program guide regularly.

Up and At’em Animal Chores

Saturday, April 14 & May 12 • 7:30-9:30A Wake up and get outside to help with animal chores.

Spring 2012 topics: • Animal Adaptations – Learn what adaptations animals have to survive and see how long you would survive at Spring Valley if you had these adaptations. • Weather – Explore types of weather and build a simple tool to make your own weather predictions. • Mosses & Mushrooms – Create a spore print, go on a search for mushrooms and build your own moss filled terrarium.

Child and Parent All About Farm Animals

Tuesday, April 10-May 8 • 1:30-2:30P Junior farmers and their parents will learn all about the livestock at Heritage Farm.

Chocolate Bunny Building

Available every Spring: Gardening, Springtime Growth, Wetlands, Conservation in Action and Woodlands

Sunday, April 1 • 1:00-4:00P Relive history by making and decorating a chocolate bunny with your child.

For more information or to schedule a program, call 847-985-2100.

Mondays for Moms and Kids

Monday, March 26, April 23 & May 14 3:15-4:15P Moms, spend some Monday time walking and enjoying nature with your child.

Once Upon a Time in the Kitchen

Saturday, May 5 • 10:00A-1:00P Listen to classic tales and learn what your child’s heroes may have eaten.

Dolls, Dolls, Dolls

Sunday, March 11 • 1:00-3:30P Experience how girls in former years used their imagination to make dolls.

Farmer Boot Camp

Mon.-Fri., March 26-30 • 2:30-4:30P Get down and dirty as you help feed and care for the Heritage Farm animals!

Springtime Schaumburg Park District's

Saturday, April 21 • 10:30A-Noon Visit Spring Valley to create and then fly your kite.

Farm

$3 per person • $12 per family 3 yrs & under Free

S­­unday, April 22 • Noon-4PM

Photo by Len Anzelde, SAPS.

on the

Go Fly a Kite!

Spring brings new life and activity to the Heritage Farm. Activities for all ages include cow milking, plowing and blacksmithing demonstrations. Click here for more information.

Home for the Birds

Saturday, April 7 • 10:30A-Noon Design, construct and decorate a birdhouse for your favorite feathered friends.

Marvelous Mud

Saturday, May 12 • 10:30A-Noon Dig in to uncover the messy world of mud. Come prepared to get a little bit muddy!

Spring Discoveries FAMILY

The following programs have a special family rate. By registering ONE child, it is assumed that a minimum of two people (one adult and child) or a maximum of four people are attending. Do NOT register additional people, they may pay on the day of the program.

Natural Egg Dyeing

Saturday, March 31 • 10:30A-Noon Dye eggs using natural dyes and new techniques. Also decorate a basket to take your eggs home.

Night of the Frogs

Saturday, May 19 • 6:30-8:00P Ribbit! Croak! Peep! The evening chorus of frogs is a sure sign that summer is on the way.

Sundown Supper in the Sugar Bush

Saturday, March 3 • 4:00-6:00P Help tap some maple trees, gather sap and tend the boil down. Then enjoy a pancake ‘supper’ at the cabin with real maple syrup.

Teens Science & Nature Explorers

Wed., April 11, 25 & May 9 • 2:15-4:15P Middle school students will explore our planet through this program.

Youth Cooking and Candle Combo

Sunday, April 15 • 9:30A-12:30P Participants will dip a pair of candles to take home, build a fire and cook using a Dutch oven.

Saturday, May 12 • 4:00-5:00P Children will explore spring’s bounty and discover what may be hiding in unusual places.

Spring Valley Spring Break Camp

Mon.-Fri., March 26-30 • 10:00A-2:00P Campers will make crafts, play games and learn about the animals at Spring Valley.

Trees: Dead or Alive

Friday, April 13 • 5:00-6:30P Explore the differences between types of trees, and why each has a unique role in nature.

&

Native Plant Sale Backyards for Nature Fair Sunday, May 6 10AM-2PM

Spring Valley Nature Center

This event features information on landscaping with native plants, composting, attracting birds, rain gardens, natural pest control, children’s activities and plant sale. Click here for more information. Co-sponsored by Schaumburg Community Garden Club


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

Emerald Ash Borer

Emerald Ash Borer

The Emerald Ash Borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire), a tree boring beetle from Asia, was accidentally introduced into southeastern Michigan in infested ash crating or pallets during the 1990s; however, the insect was not discovered until after it had already become well established and determined to be the source of ash tree deaths starting in 2002. Since then, the beetle has killed an estimated 30 million ash trees in Michigan alone with an additional 50–75 million in 14 surrounding states and adjacent parts of Canada. The potential threat is enormous with estimates of 7.5 billion ash trees throughout the United States. Its primary mode of transport throughout North America, beside natural dispersal, continues to be the movement of ash nursery stock, logs, and firewood. The adult beetle is bright, metallic green and measures about ½” long with a flattened back that can be described as bullet shaped. With closer examination, the wings can be spread apart to reveal the dorsal surface of the abdomen or back. This surface will be a bright metallic purplish/red color and possibly the simplest diagnostic character in distinguishing it from other native borers. Adult beetles are most active during the day from late May through early August, spending most of their time in the crown of the tree feeding on ash foliage (where they do little damage) for a week or two prior to mating. They generally travel less than a mile from the tree from which they emerged in search of a mate. After mating, the female will lay 60–90 tiny eggs within the crevices of ash tree bark. The eggs, difficult to find and

by Matt McBrien rarely seen, hatch two weeks later and the larvae immediately chew their way through the outer bark and into the tree. In its larval form, and the most destructive stage in its life cycle, the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) is hidden from view within the phloem of the tree. The phloem is the portion of the tree that transports sugars and vital nutrients within the tree and is located between the outer bark layer and the tough sapwood. EAB larvae feed beneath the bark for several weeks from late July through October. During this time, the larvae excavate S-shaped galleries or tunnels throughout the phloem, occasionally scoring the water transporting tissue of the xylem, disrupting the transport of nutrients and water within the tree. Fully grown larvae will overwinter and pupate within cells located in the outer sapwood or outer bark during April or May and emerge as adults to begin the cycle again. EABs attack only ash trees (Fraxinus spp), with green and white ash being the most common varieties throughout the Midwest (see ash tree ID guide). It is difficult to detect the early stages of infestation; however, there are certain signs and symptoms to be aware of. Woodpecker damage will be visible in the upper branches and limbs at first, gradually appearing lower along the trunk as the infestation progresses. Woodpeckers will feed on EAB larvae under the bark of ash trees resulting in light colored pink/orange patches along the normally grey weathered ash trunks. A weak thinning crown and branches with yellowing leaves, as well as suckers and bark splits, are also good indicators of underlying infestation. D-shaped exit holes showing where the adult beetle has emerged may be visible and, when found in large quantities, indicate that infestation has most likely already occurred. There is good news! Researchers from the USDA and APHIS have found both natural and imported predators to help combat and identify EAB infestations. Three exotic species of Asian wasps (Spathius agrili, Tetrastichus planipenni6

si, and Oobius agrili) have proven to be highly effective predators. The stingless wasps, ranging from ant size to that of a pin head, attack the larvae and eggs. One variety of native wasp (Cerceris fumipennis), a ground dweller, builds its nest in sandy packed soils similar to that of baseball fields. After incapacitating the borer with a sting, it is carried back to the nest where it is consumed by wasp larvae. The carcasses are deposited outside the nest and can serve as an early indicator of nearby infestations. Although it does not hold much promise in controlling infestations, it does provide an excellent bio-surveillance tool. There are a variety of insecticides that can be used to protect individual trees and control small populations of EAB, but they are not 100 percent effective and can be quite costly. TREE-age is a trunk injected insecticide whose application is required every two years. It has had good success in healthy trees with no infestation and has sustained already infested trees with little decline. Costs per injection vary greatly, but are generally in the 15 dollar per diameter inch range. For trees less than 8” in diameter, homeowners can apply a chemical called Imidacloprid (found at the local garden center) either as a soil drench or trunk/foliar spray. You should consult a certified arborist or municipal forester for recommendations before any treatment is done. The USDA has recently expanded the quarantine area to include the entire state of Illinois with confirmed infestations in 20 counties and dozens of communities including Schaumburg, Hoffman Estates, and Elk Grove Village. If you suspect an EAB infestation in your area or need help identifying an ash tree, follow the instructions in the link provided: http://www.agr.state.il.us/eab/How_to_submit_ sample.htm (Sample) http://www.stopthebeetle.info/Identify_Ash_Tress. pdf (Ash ID) http://emeraldashborer.info/files/E-2938.pdf (Signs and Symptoms) http://www.agr.state.il.us/eab/PDFs_for_web/ Insecticides/Homeowner_treatment_guide.pdf (Treatment Guide)


Volunteer News S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2

Dates to Remember

Volunteer Want Ads

If you are interested in helping with any of the following activities, please call Judy at 847/985-2100 or e-mail her at juvito@parkfun.com.

Conservation Workdays

Friday, March 9 & Sunday, April 29 Come out and spend the morning helping us with a conservation project. We’ll supply the tools; you supply the hands to use them. We’ll be working 9am-Noon on March 9 and 9am-1pm on April 29.

Sugar Bush Set-Up

March 15 Can’t help at the Sugar Bush Fair, but still want to be part of it? Join us the Thursday before the event to help set-up. We have a variety of activities which need to be done. Come at 10am and stay for all or part of the day!

Sugar Bush

March 17 & 18 It’s not too early to start thinking about the Sugar Bush Fair. If you think you’ll be available to help, please give me a call. Shift time is 8am12:30pm. Remember – there’s a free pancake breakfast for all volunteers!

Annual Heritage Farm Volunteer Meeting at the Nature Center

Saturday, March 24, 10am-12pm (followed by potluck lunch) If you volunteer in any capacity at the Heritage Farm or just want to find out about volunteer opportunities there, you are invited to this annual volunteer get-together. Attendance by all volunteers involved with interpretation, livestock care, and kitchen gardening is strongly encouraged. Staff will fill you in on the plans for the Farm for 2012. After the meeting, feel free to socialize and get to know fellow volunteers while enjoying a potluck lunch provided by volunteers and staff. Come and help kick off the Farm’s

upcoming volunteer season! Please RSVP to Judy Vito by March 21, noting if and/or what you will be bringing to share at the potluck.

Farm Spring Cleaning Workday

March 31 Come out and help spruce up the Farm in preparation for its open season. Hands are needed to help clean buildings, prepare the kitchen garden, repair fencing, and other odd jobs. No need to be a farm volunteer to participate. We’ll be starting at 9am. Lunch will be provided.

Springtime on the Farm

Sunday, April 22 Volunteers are needed to help our guests experience a busy spring on the Farm. Help prepare the fields and gardens for planting, do some spring cleaning 1880s style, or assist with children’s activities and food sales. The event runs from noon to 4pm.

Garden Training

Friday, April 27 Whether you’re a garden volunteer or an interpreter, come out and get information concerning the kitchen garden at the Heritage Farm: what’s being planted and where, how and why varieties were chosen, scheduling for its maintenance throughout the summer, etc. We’ll be meeting from 5:30-7pm.

7

• Sat., March 3................8am-Noon

New Interpreter Training • Fri., March 9.................9am-Noon Conservation Workday • Mon., March 12............1-4pm Handy Crafters Meeting • Thurs./Fri., March 15 & 16....10am-3pm Sugar Bush Set-Up • Sat./Sun., March 17 & 18......9am-Noon Sugar Bush • Sat., March 24..............10am-Noon Annual Farm Kick-off Meeting • Sat., March 31..............9am-1pm Farm Spring Cleaning Workday • Mon., April 9..................1-4pm Handy Crafters Meeting • ., April 18.............6-8pm Volunteer Reception at Chandlers • Sun., April 22................Noon-4pm Springtime on the Farm • Fri., April 27..................5:30-7pm Garden Training • Sun., April 29................9am-1pm Conservation Workday

Welcome New Volunteers…

• Daryle Drew • Jeff Huebner • David Kives • Becky Nelson • Jim Rubly

Happy Birthday to… March 1 3 4 5 8 12

John Curin Melina Lynch Kevin Kaitis Karen Kusek Judy Velan John Witkowski Jenny Greco Austin Tipper

April

1 Ellie Vogel Andrew Awdziejczyk Daryle Drew 10 Carol Cellini 11 Duane Bolin Jerry Brandes 12 John Walsh

3 Alan Kraus 1 17 Barb Muehlhausen 23 Christine Curin 28 Bob Pautsch 30 Amy Vito 31 Ann Schooley

4 Patty Ochs 1 17 Ryan Ochs 19 Bill Bidlo 20 Jerome Dvoratchek 24 Charlie Loh 29 Mike Lynch


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • Vo l u n t e e r C a l e n d a r

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

March 2012 Wednesday

Thursday

1

Farm Open March 17 & 18 10am-1pm

Friday

2

Cabin Closed Bold indicates volunteer activities Italics indicates programs which may be taken as complimentary by volunteers See “What’s Happening” for program descriptions

4

•Perk Up! Coffee 101 1pm

5

11

6

12

Handy Crafters Meeting 1pm

7

13

8

18

19

20

9

Conservation Workday 9am

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

14

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

Sugar Bush Fair 9am

3

New Farm Interpreter Training 8am •Sundown Supper in the Sugar Bush 4pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

•Dolls, Dolls, Dolls 1pm

Saturday

15

Sugar Bush Set-Up 10am

Schaumburg Community Garden Club 7pm

21

•Heaven’s Watch 8:30pm

16

Sugar Bush Set-Up 10am

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

22

10

•Get Out and Paint 9am

17

Sugar Bush Fair 9am

St. Patrick’s Day

23

24

Annual Farm Volunteer Meeting 10am

•Restorative Yoga 6:30pm

25

•Cheese Making 12:30pm

26

•Mondays for Moms and Kids 3:15pm

M-F

27

•Spring Valley Spring Break Camp 10am

28

29

30

•Farmer Boot Camp 2:30pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

8

•Nature’s Night Life 7pm

31

Farm Spring Cleaning Workday 9am •Natural Egg Dying 10:30am


S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • Vo l u n t e e r C a l e n d a r

Sunday

1

•Chocolate Bunny Building 1pm

Monday

2

Tuesday

April 2012

3

Wednesday

4

5

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

8

9

Handy Crafters Meeting 1pm

15

•All About Farm Animals 1:30pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Going Wild in the Tame Garden 7pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

Easter •Cooking and Candle Combo 9:30am

10

16

17

•All About Farm Animals 1:30pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

22

Springtime on the Farm Noon

23

•Mondays for Moms and Kids 3:15pm

24

•All About Farm Animals 1:30pm

29

Friday

6

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

12

13

Schaumburg Community Garden Club 7pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

•Trees Dead or Alive 5pm •Restorative Yoga 6:30pm

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Volunteer Reception at Chandlers 5:30pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

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•Science and Nature Explorers 2:15pm

•Science and Nature Explorers 2:15pm

•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6:30pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 8pm

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Saturday

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•Home for the Birds 10:30am

Passover

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•Weekly Yoga at Cabin 6pm •Weekly Yoga at Cabin 7:30pm

Conservation Workday 9am •Vegetable Gardening in Small Spaces 10am

Thursday

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•Up and At ‘Em Animal Chores 7:30am •Plain Air Painting 9am •Going Wild in the Tame Garden 9am •Landscaping with Native Plants 9am •Sunset Fire on the Prairie 6pm •Heaven’s Watch 9pm

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•Home Composting 9am •Go Fly a Kite 10:30am

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•Blacksmithing for Beginners 1pm •Sundown Supper on the Farm 4:30pm

•Restorative Yoga 6:30pm •Journey of the Universe 7:30pm

Farm Hours: Mon-Fri 9am-2pm • Sat/Sun 10am-4pm Cabin Closed Bold indicates volunteer activities Italics indicates programs which may be taken as complimentary by volunteers See “What’s Happening” for program descriptions

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S p r i n g Va l l e y • N a t u r a l E n q u i r e r • M a r c h / A p r i l 2 0 1 2 Spring Valley • Schaumburg Park District • 1111 East Schaumburg Road • Schaumburg, Illinois 60194 • 847/985-2100

Vera Meineke Nature Center

Schaumburg Rd.

N Plum Grove Rd.

The earth-sheltered visitor center provides an introduction to Spring Valley’s 135 acres of restored prairies, woodlands and wetlands and three miles of trails. The center contains natural history exhibits that change seasonally, a demonstration Backyard for Wildlife, an observation tower, classrooms, an extensive library, gift sales area and restrooms.

Vera Meineke Nature Center

Volkening Heritage Farm

Step back into the past for a look at Schaumburg as it was in the 1880s – a rural German farm community. Help with seasonal farm chores, participate in family activities and games of the 1880s, or simply visit the livestock and soak in the quiet. Authentically dressed interpreters will welcome and share activities with visitors throughout the site.

Volkening Heritage Farm 135 acres

HOURS Nature Center Grounds & Trails...............Open Daily...............8AM-5PM Volkening Heritage Farm Grounds..........Closed......................Dec.1-March 1 Nature Center/Museum Hours: Year Round.............Daily*.......... 9AM-5PM Farm Interpretive Program Hours: Nov. - March............Open for Special Events April 1 - Oct. 31.......Sat/Sun....... 10AM-4PM Tue-Fri........ 9AM-2PM Mon............ Buildings Closed

Spring Valley is a refuge of 135 acres of fields, forests, marshes and streams with over three miles of handicappedaccessible trails, a museum featuring natural history displays and information, and an 1880s living-history farm. Spring Valley is open to the general public. Admission is free.

Unless otherwise noted, all programs are held rain or shine. Participants should dress appropriately for weather conditions.

*All facilities closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day

Environmental Outreach Program

Spring Valley Birthday Parties

We’ll bring our outreach program to your site. Topics include forests, worms, spiders, mammals, owls, food chains, food webs, wetlands, and the water cycle. Students will participate in hands-on activities, songs, and games. Topics may be adapted to students in grades one through six, and are correlated with Illinois State Standards.

Looking for a unique, fun, and educational venue for your child’s birthday? Spring Valley is the answer! Two party themes are available. A hayride can be added for an extra fee. Call Spring Valley for more information.

Spring Valley Firepit and Shelter Rentals

Make your next scout group, business or family gathering something special! Spring Valley offers the use of a picnic shelter and fire pit in a wooded setting near the Merkle Log Cabin. Use of the site includes firewood, trash/recycling receptacles and benches, as well as picnic tables. No alcohol or amplified music permitted. Restrooms are available at the Heritage Farm or Nature Center, a 5–10 minute walk. The adjacent Merkle Log Cabin contains a restroom and may be rented for additional fees.

Programs at Spring Valley

School, Scout and adult groups are encouraged to take advantage of Spring Valley’s Environmental Education Program. Programs change seasonally and are geared for specific age groups. Correlations to the state standards and activity sheets are available on the SPD website, www.parkfun.com. Learn local history with a visit to the Heritage Farm. Elementary and high school students recreate farm life in the 1880s with Hands on History; second graders experience it through Heritage Quest. Children from the age of four through second grade will learn about food, farmers, and farm animals in Farms and Foods.

Hourly use fees: Residents:.............. $25

Civic groups:...............................$25

Non-residents:....... $40 Corporate/business groups:.......$55

Scout Badges

We offer many opportunities for scouts. Our programs will help with your badge, pin or patch requirements. Call for more information or stop in for a brochure.

Spring Valley Mission Statement:

Spring Valley’s mission is to educate area residents regarding the natural and cultural history of the Schaumburg area and how people have and continue to interact with and upon the landscape.

Schaumburg Park District BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS:

Natural Enquirer STAFF: Mary Rice Editor

Mike Daniels Sharon DiMaria David Johnson George Longmeyer Bob Schmidt

Judy Vito Volunteer Coordinator Dave Brooks “In this Issue...”

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR:

Scott Stompor Graphic Artist

Jean Schlinkmann

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Schaumburg Park District Website: www.parkfun.com

E-mail:

springvalley@parkfun.com

Member:


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