Feeds:
Posts
Comments
20140904_095709_resized

Smiles from Jerry Dollinger of the Gulf Coast chapter, Chris Kneupper of the Cradle of Texas chapter, and Ray Rottman and Nancy Saint of the Galveston Bay Area chapter of Texas Master Naturalists light up a cloudy summer day.

The wetland plant nursery at Exploration Green conservation area is up and running! We held our first volunteer morning on Thursday, September 4, with the able assistance of the Texas Master Naturalists. We loved the cooler overcast weather, even if it meant waiting out a 20 minute tropical downpour. About a hundred sprigs each of Maidencane (Panicum hemitomon)and Marsh hay cordgrass (Spartina patens) were potted up and added to the nursery ponds you can see in the background here.

The nursery will provide plants for the stormwater-cleansing wetlands planned for Exploration Green. These stormwater wetlands will be a model for naturally managing water pollution in our region.
Thursday mornings in the nursery will be a regular event and will be open to all interested volunteers in October. Contact Mary Carol Edwards for more information.

20140728_094232

The stormwater wetland at Exploration Green in Clear Lake City will require about 30,000 native plants for the park’s first phase. Fortunately, we can grow our own! For that, we need a nursery. Here are some views of the wetland plant nursery as it is being built.

20140715_095911

Framing out the tanks. There are ten total, and each tank will have three compartments.

 

20140722_114448

A bed of sand in each tank keeps the bottoms level.

 

20140728_094748

The heavy duty pond liners are going in today.

Although excavation for the lake in Phase 1 hasn’t started yet, the planning has been in full swing for months.  We’ll be collecting and growing plants in the nursery so that all the plants have been propagated and grown by the time we need them.

Watch for an invitation to the Open House when the wetland nursery is complete in August!

For more on Exploration Green park, check out the website.

 

 As I am organizing for the upcoming Wetland Plant ID class, it strikes me that I have actually lost count of how many years we (“we” being Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service) have hosted this class.  This will be either the 10th or 11th class we have held to teach some of the basic plant family groups we utilize in our wetland restoration efforts.  It has always been a lab-oriented class with hands-on specimens that students can touch, examine and rip to shreds (per the instructor’s guidance).  In the last couple of years, we added a class to review botanical terminology which has been taught by our own Charriss York. Now students are less confused when Andy talks about the pedicels on the Sagittaria flowers and verifying if they are recurved or not to determine the difference between species.

Could you identify WHICH two species of Sagittaria (Arrowhead) are pictured here? You could after taking this class.

For Wetland Restoration Team members, the class comes as a welcome relief from the heat of the summer.  The class is a chance to sit indoors, use our heads and refresh our memories about the plants we handle regularly.  I always encourage folks to retake the class a couple of times–that way the information gets really “implanted”. 

If you are interested in taking the class, please contact Marissa at m-sipocz@tamu.edu.  Class size is always limited, and spots get claimed quickly.  Register early!!!

 

We’ve written much about how stormwater washes minute pollutants like bacteria, sediment, and compounds into the waterways. Now here’s something exciting that works on the big junk, too.

This ingenious example in Baltimore uses the power of the water itself…and the brainpower of a concerned citizen. Enjoy and be inspired.

wheel2-a391f226c29baee674af7553639c1bbfa8db7524-s6-c30

Source: NPR

Update: We are pleased to welcome Cody Watson as our new Admin Coordinator!

After nine years, our Administrative Coordinator Rhonda is moving on. Could you be our next admin person? Here’s the job description:

“The Texas Coastal Watershed Program, a unit of Texas Sea Grant and Texas A&M AgriLife Extension, Texas A&M University, in Clear Lake City (Houston), Texas, seeks a highly motivated and dynamic administrative assistant. The TCWP seeks a team player who is excited about supporting and being part of one of the most dynamic environmental outreach organizations in the State. The incumbent of this position will have a strong service orientation and an inbuilt focus on detail. High school diploma required, bachelor’s degree preferred. Experience with non-profits and grant management a real plus. High level of proficiency with standard office software required. Experience with account management preferred. Skills test will be required. Minimum 3 years experience. 3/4 time position.   Send resume to jjacob@tamu.edu.”