Michigan United Conservation Clubs (MUCC) On The Water (OTW) program has teamed up with the Eaton Conservation District, Charlotte Public Schools, City of Charlotte, and Well-Head Protection Team in beautifying your hometown river!
On Saturday, October 5th at 9 am volunteers will meet at Bennett Park Pavilion, we will then proceed to the worksite. Lunch will be provided by MUCC at noon and volunteers will receive a reusable water bottle and stickers to take home at the end of the event! Personal protective gear(such as gloves), buckets, trash bags, sunscreen, bug spray, trash grabbers, and waders will be provided on a first come first serve basis. There will be a water station so please remember to bring your own reusable water bottle! Please RSVP by September 27th. Call us at (517) 543-1512 x5 to reserve your spot!
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The Science Adventure Camp is an opportunity available to students entering 4th-6th grades in the 2019-2020 school year. At this camp, students will get fired up about science! The camp is open to students throughout Eaton County.
When: Tuesday, June 25th-Friday, June 28th Time: 9am-12:15pm (AM session) and 1-4:15pm (PM session) Where: Bennett Park, 1305 South Cochran Avenue, Charlotte, MI 49913 Based on the number of reservations, we are hoping to offer both an AM and a PM session. Students will need to check in 15 minutes prior to the session start time to pick up name badges and learn the site for the day. The event will run rain or shine. There are pavillions and Camp Francis available in the event of inclement weather. Topics include: geology, rocket science, ecology, biology, chemistry, and more! Cost for the full week is $15. To register for Science Adventure Camp, please go to https://www.eventbrite.com/e/science-adventure-camp-2019-tickets-53646148073?err=29 Join Barry Conservation District, Eaton Conservation District and Eaton County Parks for a fun outdoor water festival at Crandell Park! There will be bank fishing, free kayak and canoe rentals, water safety education, stone skipping contest, water and nature education fair, games and activities, local food vendors and more! Head over to https://www.facebook.com/events/1955820477870103/?active_tab=discussion for more information. The best way to support native wildlife is with native grasses and wildflowers! The Eaton Conservation District is hosting this years event at Woldumar Nature Center, 5739 Old Lansing Rd, Lansing, MI 48917. Order online and pick up at Woldumar or purchase the day of the sale.
No place to plant natives where you live? No worries! You can purchase a plant or a few and with the help of a Woldumar staff member and you can help Woldumar's native habitat! Pre-orders are due by May 24. To make an order and to see plant species available, please follow this link. https://www.eatoncd.org/plant-sales.html MAEAP Offering Free well water screeningThe Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program (MAEAP) Technician will be offering free well water screening for Eaton and Ingham county residents on private drinking water wells during tree sale pick-up on Friday, April 19th. The screening will be for nitrates/nitrites only. When: 8am-6pm: Friday, April 19th Where: Kardell Hall, Eaton County Fairgrounds: 1025 S. Cochran Ave. Charlotte, MI 48813 The Sample Information Sheet must be included with your water sample. The sample information sheet, along with sample collection instructions, can be found below. Please call Allie at the office at (517) 543-1512 x5 if you have any questions. ![]()
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Join the Mid-Michigan Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area at an invasive species workshop for Eaton County citizens!
Please RSVP for this event: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/eaton-county-invasive-species-landowner-workshop-tickets-55351263118 The free workshop will be held at the Eaton Township Hall in Charlotte, MI on Thursday, May 30th, from 6:00-8:00 pm. Coffee and light refreshments will be available. In this workshop, you will learn about some common invasive species in the area, what you can do to help manage them, and how to prevent them from invading your property and public lands. You'll also learn of upcoming conservation and invasive species stewardship events hosted by CISMA partners within Eaton County. The Mid-Michigan CISMA will be hosting a landowner workshop in each of its counties- Clinton, Eaton, Ingham, and Ionia. Please view our Eventbrite events page to view and register for a workshop in your county. If you have questions, please contact Erin Pavloski, Regional Invasive Species Coordinator of the Mid-Michigan CISMA, via email at erin.jarvie@macd.org. The Mid-Michigan CISMA is funded in part by the Michigan Invasive Species Grant Program (www.michigan.gov/invasives) UPDATE: MEETING HAS BEEN RESCHEDULED FOR WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2019
Do you KNOW your H2O? If you don't (or even if you do!), please join us for our annual meeting! We will have a night full of learning, laughter and a fantastic dinner. There will be district awards, silent auction and much more! We hear there may even be a little bit of trivia involved, brought to you by Environmental Sustainability Planner Cliff Wells of Tri-County Regional Planning Commission. When: Wednesday, February 6, 2019 from 5:30pm-8:00pm Where: Eaton Area Senior Center, 804 S. Cochran Ave., Charlotte, MI This is a free event and dinner will be provided at no cost. We ask that you please RSVP no later than February 1st. To reserve your spot, call the office at (517) 543-1512 x5 or email sue.spagnuolo@macd.org Don't forget: Elections are being held this year as well, so make sure you come out to support your favorite board members, read a little bit about each of them on our announcements page (scroll down) Can't make it to annual meeting? We have absentee ballots in our office. Call us for the information on absentee voting! As you all know, ECD will be electing two new directors to our board at our annual meeting on January 30th. As a resident of Eaton County, you have the ability to vote to elect our newest leaders in conservation. Read below to get to know who you're voting for:
Debra Montgomery: Hello, I am Debra Montgomery, a 30-year resident of Carmel Township in Eaton County. I'm a retired School Social Worker and a graduate of Michigan State University Master of Social Work program. I work part time for Vern Stephens owner of Designs by Nature and operate a native plant nursery out of my home. I have a strong interest in learning about natural communities, ecology and wildlife preservation. I have received a certificate of completion in permaculture from Cornell Extended learning Program and the Finger Lake Permaculture Institute. I have completed the Master Gardener and the Master Naturalist program through the MSU extension. To increase my knowledge of lakes, streams and watershed functions I have completed the Michigan Lakes and Streams Leadership Institute and am a Michigan Certified Natural Shoreline professional. I completed the Conservation Steward program which emphasizes knowledge of Michigan Natural Features Inventory: including prairies, woodlands, and water ways. These varied classes provided me exceptional exposure to the varied conservatories, parks, and native areas of this state and an understanding of the work needed to restore and protect these unique communities. I regularly attend conservation/wildlife conferences, workshops, and trainings. The topics include invasive species identification and removal, creating gardens with native plants to promote pollinator and wildlife value, and community organization. I am a member of the Red Cedar Wild Ones, Wildflower Association of Michigan, Michigan Nut Growers Association, and Michigan Nature Association. I readily volunteer my time to promote conservation projects. Recent volunteer activities include the planting of native gardens: at the Eaton Conservation District office, Calvin College Eco-preserve, Eaton Rapids, and a shoreline restoration in the Village of Sparta. I have partnered with Trout Unlimited, the Plaster Creek Stewarts and Michigan Audubon. I have participated in several native plant sales, partnering with various conservation districts and other native plant organizations. I am a trustee for Carmel Township and a board member/secretary for the Charlotte Area Recreation Coop. I would like to use my passion and knowledge of the natural communities to promote the restoration and protection of Eaton Counties natural resources. If elected, I will be an active, well-informed, and enthused member of the Eaton Conservation District board, assisting their efforts to support area residents in creating, caring and connecting to their native space. Timothy Sabourin: Tim Sabourin is a recently retired supply chain manager from two fortune fifty companies. Mr. Sabourin has duel bachelor degrees in Geography and Environmental Science from Grand Rapids Aquinas College. Tim currently serves as a member of the Windsor Township Planning Commission. He shares his passion for reading by delivering books to the homebound. Tim's other interests include hunting, fishing, golf, geology, antiquing, and creating wildlife habitat on his Windsor Township homestead. Tim's current objectives are looking for opportunities to preserve our natural environment while learning from and educating others. Holly Schaeffer: Holly Schaeffer was born and raised on the shoreline of CT, where her dad taught her appreciation for the outdoors and raising food, and mom taught the value of food preservation. Her interest in plants followed her journey to college. She attended the University of Maine-Orono, where she earned her B. S. in Biochemistry and did research on potato anaerobic stress. She then continued researching plant environmental stress physiology at Michigan State University, where she earned her Ph. D. in Plant Molecular Genetics. After brief postdoctoral experiences in AZ and OK, she returned to MI doing pesticide residue analysis on apples, and earned her secondary science teacher certification. Holly has taught at the secondary and post-secondary level for the last 20 years in the mid-Michigan area and has worked with several state and university groups developing science curriculum based on the science standards including the Next Generation Science Standards that serve as the new MI science curriculum. She currently teaches Environmental Biology at Lansing Community College. While Holly's professional efforts have focused on science education, she also has a strong drive for serving her community, including time as a firefighter, Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), American Red Cross local and national disaster volunteer and instructor, American Red Cross and American Heart Association first aid and CPR instructor, Science Olympiad and Science Adventure Camp volunteer, and participates in a number of organizations, giving presentations at annual conferences. She has also served as the chair of Promotion and Education with the Eaton County Farm Bureau for the past ten years with projects ranging from elementary poster contests to the petting barn at the Eaton county 4H fair. Holly lives with her husband, Ken Poff northwest of Charlotte, on 115-acre MAEAP-verified Frog Heaven Farms, where they raise honeybees and greenhouse crops in addition to a corn-bean rotation of field crops. Last year, the produce and honey were sold at the Vermontville farmer's market, which Holly coordinated. Holly Schaeffer was born and raised on the shoreline of CT, where her dad taught her appreciation for the outdoors and raising food, and mom taught the value of food preservation. Her interest in plants followed her journey to college. She attended the University of Maine-Orono, where she earned her B. S. in Biochemistry and did research on potato anaerobic stress. She then continued researching plant environmental stress physiology at Michigan State University, where she earned her Ph. D. in Plant Molecular Genetics. After brief postdoctoral experiences in AZ and OK, she returned to MI doing pesticide residue analysis on apples, and earned her secondary science teacher certification. Holly has taught at the secondary and post-secondary level for the last 20 years in the mid-Michigan area and has worked with several state and university groups developing science curriculum based on the science standards including the Next Generation Science Standards that serve as the new MI science curriculum. She currently teaches Environmental Biology at Lansing Community College. While Holly's professional efforts have focused on science education, she also has a strong drive for serving her community, including time as a firefighter, Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), American Red Cross local and national disaster volunteer and instructor, American Red Cross and American Heart Association first aid and CPR instructor, Science Olympiad and Science Adventure Camp volunteer, and participates in a number of organizations, giving presentations at annual conferences. She has also served as the chair of Promotion and Education with the Eaton County Farm Bureau for the past ten years with projects ranging from elementary poster contests to the petting barn at the Eaton county 4H fair. Holly lives with her husband, Ken Poff northwest of Charlotte, on 115-acre MAEAP-verified Frog Heaven Farms, where they raise honeybees and greenhouse crops in addition to a corn-bean rotation of field crops. Last year, the produce and honey were sold at the Vermontville farmer's market, which Holly coordinated. |
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