Valley Sentinel 10-19-2023

Page 1

Spring Green, Wisconsin

Thursday, October 19, 2023 | Vol. 4, No. 19 FREE, Single-Copy

Inside this edition

Savanna Institute: open house and more

Spooky Season Special Section

Musician in Residence: recap and video

Pages 1, 9, 11

Enclosed

Pages 1, 8

Savanna Institute promises (agroforestry and silvopasture) fun, profit and—perhaps—to save the planet

Alex Prochaska, Editorial Intern

Visitors gazed in awe at rows of chestnut saplings and a flock of sheep at the Savanna Institute’s Spring Green Campus. The institute held an open house event recently, offering the public freshly-pressed apple cider, live music and a chance to learn about agroforestry and silvopasture. “We help people integrate tree crops on their farms in ways that are both profitable for the farmer and beneficial for the ecosystem,” explained Renee Gasch, assistant communications director at the Savanna Institute. The Savanna Institute is a non-profit based in Wisconsin and Illinois which helps people in the midwest adopt agroforestry, a form of agriculture combining crops and/or pasture with the cultivation of trees. Why trees and why now? Trees are very beneficial to the oak savanna ecosystem that covers the upper Midwest, said Gasch. “They filter and absorb water during heavy rain, provide pollinator and wildlife habitat to restore biodiversity, and drawdown

Photo by The Savanna Institute A speaker shares during the recent Savanna Institute open house in Spring Green. carbon from the atmosphere—an important solution for climate change,” explained Gasch. Gasch also touted trees’ role in preventing wind and soil erosion in fields or along

field edges. “Plus, if they plant fruit, nut or timber trees, farmers can add another potential income source to their business,” said Gasch. “Trees make farms more resilient, and it is important in a changing

climate with volatile commodity markets that farmers add resiliency to the food system.” The institute runs a research and education campus in Spring Green, where the open house was recently held. “Our research program at the Spring Green Campus is particularly unique,” Gasch said. “We’re building a germplasm repository for tree crop breeding at a scale that doesn’t really exist anywhere else in the country.” The institute says the importance of dynamic crop breeding cannot be overstated. An agroforestry educator with the institute gave the example of black currants, a fruit incredibly popular and profitable in Europe. In 1912, the U.S. banned it. Back then, the U.S. had a massive white pine industry, because white pines were used to make paper products. The pines often got infected with white pine blister rust, a plant disease which relies on black currants as a host. Black currants were banned to save the white pine industry.

continued on page 9

Indiana musician creates new songs, friendships during residency The Spring Green Musician in Residence Program Musician Joshua Powell readied the audience for a story-filled night at the Spring Green Musician in Residence finale show, “I’m just so grateful for this experience and for all the people I’ve met…so get ready, it’s going to be an emotional night.” Joshua Powell, a singer-songwriter from Indianapolis, wrapped up his twoweek Spring Green residency with a performance at The Shitty Barn that was filled with both personal stories from his career and reflections on experiences in the River Valley area. Currently in its sixth year, the program has evolved. “The last few years we’ve tried to allow the musicians to have more unscheduled

space during the two weeks to take care of themselves and their career,” says Residency manager Kim Nolet, “and I think that’s coming through in these finale shows. They really have that intense personal feel. We’re getting a show that nobody else is getting.” Nolet reflects that when the program first started, the musicians were booked for a lot of performances and creative engagements, “and that was probably a bit too selfserving. We wanted and needed to build community awareness and support, but the musicians were bearing the brunt of that. The more recent performers who are invited into the program have benefited

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Photo by Rob Steffen Musician in Residence Joshua Powell performing at the Shitty Barn.


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