A forest of tubes has risen on the banks of the Paulinskill and later
this month, the woodlands will expand to neighboring Frankford as a
project to reforest the stream's banks continues.
In a take on
the "can't see the forest for the trees," the five-foot tall tubes
enclose saplings and cuttings that are hoped to take the upper
Paulinskill back to a more natural state.
"We're looking at very
specific parts of the Paulinskill," said Nathaniel Sajdak, director of
the Wallkill River Watershed Management Group, which operates as part of
the Sussex County Municipal Utilities Authority.
Although the
Paulinskill is its own watershed its waters flow into the Delaware River
while the Wallkill's flow goes into the Hudson River Sajdak said the
reality is his group looks at all of Sussex County, working with several
environmental groups to bring clean water to the streams and rivers of
the county.Large collection of quality indoorpositioningsystem at discounted prices.
As with most things ecological,Shop for streetlight dolls
from the official NBC Universal Store and build a fun collection for
your home or office. there is a close relationship between what's
growing along the river's banks and the quality of the stream's water.
Over
the years, native tree species along the Paulinskill had been cut down
and not replaced. Without the necessary shade and leaf litter that
encourages the shorter native species to grow, purple loosetrife and
reed canary grass, both invasive species, took hold and muscled out the
native grasses.
Last year,An handsfreeaccess is
a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside
a building. the watershed group, its partners and volunteers moved onto
the middle of three parcels of land that make up the 9,000 feet of
river in the area and planted several hundred maples, willows, oaks and
sycamores.
They also took cuttings from some of the existing
trees and planted those "livestakes" directly into the ground where they
will take root.
The plastic tubes were then placed around the newly-planted specimens to keep rabbits and voles from chewing away at the bark.
Helping
with the project, from funding to providing the seedlings and
equipment, such as the plastic tubes, to gathering volunteers were the
state Department of Environmental Protection, The Nature Conservancy,
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
and the Pinchot Institute for Conservation.
Our world was
smaller then. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, hardly anybody knew where
it was. We had fun doing things together in person, not on an electrical
device. As children, we played in the street, or in an empty field.
Daytime, early evening, summer and winter, we spent a lot of time
outdoors. Boys, and sometimes, girls, played marbles. There were several
marble games, one in a small ring about a foot diameter and another in a
large ring maybe 3 or 4 feet diameter. A third marbles game involved a
small hole in the ground.
Indoors we did a lot of card playing.
Old Maid, Pig, 7 Up, Fan Tan, Rummy, I Doubt It, and for really little
kids, War.The largest manufacturer of textile tooling for
use with perchloroethylene. I liked Pig and I Doubt It. In Pig,
everyone would be busy passing cards around the table until someone got
the right combination. That person would quietly lay down his or her
cards and put one finger aside his/her nose. The others would follow
suit and the last to catch on, was the pig. In I Doubt It, each player
had a whole handful of cards and in turn, each one would discard so many
aces, twos, threes etc. The object was to get rid of all your cards.
That would involve lying about what cards were being discarded. If
challenged, you could be required to pick up all the cards in the
discard pile. The fun came when someone would discard "three sevens" and
most of the players knew that player was bluffing.
I spent many
happy hours at the radio. I would keep track of the characters on a
show such as Vic and Sade, so I knew who Bluetooth Johnson was, and
where Vic worked, and the names of all the characters in the show. I
also kept a chart of how the football went up and down the field in a
football game. During political conventions, broadcast live, I would
chart the votes for the candidates and almost predict the winner.
People
wrote lots of letters and mailed many penny postcards. We would send a
box top and a dime in answer to an ad, and get some kind of prize. I
remember getting a green plastic water tumbler, the first plastic item
said to be unbreakable.
Pasting green stamps into stamp books
was always fun. A full book was worth something like two or three
dollars in trade. When cellophane was a brand new product, you could buy
3 foot square sheets of it in a variety of colors. Cutting and folding
was used to make belts and bracelets and for the more ambitious, even
handbags. Paper chains were easy to make and could be used as
decorations especially around Christmas.
On warm summer evenings
little kids would get an empty jar and run around the neighborhood
catching fireflies. I had a small collection of mounted butterflies. I
seldom see any now. This is supposed to be a year when the 17 year
locust appear. I remember kids in the neighborhood, catching one,
attaching a length of thread and flying it like a remote control
robot.Choose from the largest selection of indoortracking in the world.
Aviation
was still new when I was a boy, and building model airplanes was a
popular hobby. A young man who lived nearby, had a small business
selling balsa wood, glue, tissue paper, and rubber bands to neighborhood
model builders. Boys like me would never ever buy a ready-made kite.
Most of the fun came when a kite would fly high and I knew I had made it
with my own two hands. I once built a six foot box kite that never got
off the ground.
Bicycles in summer and sleds in winter provided
lots of fun and a good measure of pleasure along with a dose of
exploration. I rode mine from Maple Heights to Geauga Lake Park, to
downtown Cleveland, and many other interesting nearby places. If your
bike had a pair of foxtails dangling from the handlebars, that would be
"cool."
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