Linda Fried would like a WQM buddy to help monitor St. Vincent's Creek at St. Vincent's Park east of I-170 on St. Charles Rock Rd this week and on a regular basis.
Linda needs someone who can monitor during the week day. She is very confident in monitoring equipment, bugs & procedures; would just like someone along to lighten the load & for added personal security of both. Working alone is a drag. Linda is really cool. You'll like her.
Contact:
linda fried linda(removethisspambotblocker)friedster@gmail.com
Yeah, remove the two parentheses & removethisspambotblocker to make the email address work. There are robotic trolls that look for email addresses in blogs. This simple step should help linda keep her email less cluttered.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Monday, March 24, 2008
St. Charles County Operation Clean Stream
Register Now for Operation Clean Stream 2008!
On Saturday April 5, St. Charles County, Greenway Network, and the communities of Cottleville, Dardenne Prairie, Lake St. Louis, O’Fallon, St. Charles, St. Peters and Wentzville will work together with volunteers to remove trash from local lakes, streams and tributaries.
The last time OCS mobilized, roughly 300 volunteers pulled over 10,000 pounds of trash from Dardenne, Peruque, Belleau, Spencer and Cole Creeks.
Once again the Stream Trash ART (START) project will be a unique component of the cleanup. This project, created by Greenway Network project director Ralph Rollins, salvages metal pulled from the streams and reuses it to create welded works of art. Joseph Farmer, a St. Charles artist and member of Best of Missouri Hands, and a team of volunteers will be working on site at Quail Ridge Park. Working from materials found that day, they will create a sculpture that reminds everyone to keep our streams and rivers clean.
Families, organizations and individuals can register to help out by calling 636-949-7415. Participants registering by March 25 will receive a free Operation Clean Stream T-shirt. You can participate in your own city or let them know if you are willing to go where you are most needed elsewhere in the county. The day will start at 8:30 a.m. with registration at one of 5 pre-assigned rendezvous locations. Starting points include St. Peters City Hall, O’Fallon Civic Park, Barat Haven Trailhead on Henning Road, St. Charles City Hall and Quail Ridge Park. All participants can enjoy lunch starting at 11:30.
This community-wide event is sponsored by Missouri Stream Team, George Butler Associates, Brookside Environmental Services, Missouri Department of Conservation, the Natural Resources Conservation Service and Wal-Mart. If you would like to help, but are unable to participate in the actual clean up you can still contribute to this worthwhile project. Contributions can be made through Greenway Network at http://greenwaynetwork.org, email to info@greenwaynetwork.org, or by calling (636) 498-0772. See you at the creek!
On Saturday April 5, St. Charles County, Greenway Network, and the communities of Cottleville, Dardenne Prairie, Lake St. Louis, O’Fallon, St. Charles, St. Peters and Wentzville will work together with volunteers to remove trash from local lakes, streams and tributaries.
The last time OCS mobilized, roughly 300 volunteers pulled over 10,000 pounds of trash from Dardenne, Peruque, Belleau, Spencer and Cole Creeks.
Once again the Stream Trash ART (START) project will be a unique component of the cleanup. This project, created by Greenway Network project director Ralph Rollins, salvages metal pulled from the streams and reuses it to create welded works of art. Joseph Farmer, a St. Charles artist and member of Best of Missouri Hands, and a team of volunteers will be working on site at Quail Ridge Park. Working from materials found that day, they will create a sculpture that reminds everyone to keep our streams and rivers clean.
Families, organizations and individuals can register to help out by calling 636-949-7415. Participants registering by March 25 will receive a free Operation Clean Stream T-shirt. You can participate in your own city or let them know if you are willing to go where you are most needed elsewhere in the county. The day will start at 8:30 a.m. with registration at one of 5 pre-assigned rendezvous locations. Starting points include St. Peters City Hall, O’Fallon Civic Park, Barat Haven Trailhead on Henning Road, St. Charles City Hall and Quail Ridge Park. All participants can enjoy lunch starting at 11:30.
This community-wide event is sponsored by Missouri Stream Team, George Butler Associates, Brookside Environmental Services, Missouri Department of Conservation, the Natural Resources Conservation Service and Wal-Mart. If you would like to help, but are unable to participate in the actual clean up you can still contribute to this worthwhile project. Contributions can be made through Greenway Network at http://greenwaynetwork.org, email to info@greenwaynetwork.org, or by calling (636) 498-0772. See you at the creek!
Greenway Network events
Greenway Network, Inc. Sream Team 463 invites you to see what we are doing this year. Please go to our website, www.greenwaynetwork.org.
Larry Ruff
Larry Ruff
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Living Green In Watkins Creek Watershed
Lower east Watkins Creek north of I-270
There is a new Stream Team forming, and it already has many new members, 3 major stream cleanup events, 2 bush honeysuckle eradication sites, bank stabilization locations, one major phytoremediation effort, and some previous WQM sites that haven't been visited since 2003. There is also a beaver dam & lodge to be investigated.
We particularly need WQM folks who live in North St. Louis County to sign up and adopt a site. On the lower reaches, this stream looks like most Missouri streams. It's got limestone rock faces, some steep alluvial banks (high erosion & siltation) and lots of trash to be cleaned.
It crosses under Hwy I-270 twice and Hwy 367 once, picking up rock salt, leaky oilpan residue, and the usual crud. The 367 construction project loaded a lot of windblown silt, but that's over. In Aug 2004 there was a major (4600 gallons) ethanol spill directly into the creek, sterilizing everything downstream. There was a cleanup effort that ended in '06. There are benthic invertebrates and fish above the spill site, but we need particularly Intro & 101 trained teams to look for bugs asap. It is a very interesting & beautiful creek with a high likelyhood that we can clean it up & restore it to good health.
The WQM team is being headed by veterans Bob Dye (Friends of Fox Creek, Coldwater Creek WQM) and Claire Schosser (River des Peres Watershed, and a LOT of other Teams) and we could really use your help. Bob & Claire are both residents in the watershed.
This team is so new it doesn't have a number yet, so to join please go to:
and insert "Living Green in Watkins Creek Watershed" as the Team Name.
For contact you can either add your own name, or insert "Tom Ball", "Bob Dye", "Kelly White" or"Claire Schosser". We will have separate contacts for Cleanup events, native plantings & etc. but we need a strong WQM team for this hurtin' stream.
Major cleanups are planned for 4/2, 4/8, 4/12 (with Trailnet) and 4/26 (with Water Festival at Hazelwood East HS). Email thomas.ball@sbcglobal.net if you are interested in this Stream Team.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
ST2991-- Retour a La Barque 4/5/08 WQM
Water Quality Monitors from ST 2991- Friends of La Barque Creek will be collecting data in a massive bio-blitz on Saturday, April 26th. This is a return to 10 existing monitoring sites, with hope for a couple more that haven't been sampled in a few years. We already know we are down, at least, three Level 2 monitors and could use some help. La Barque Creek Conservation Area is about 4 miles SE of Eureka (109>ff south to f>Doc Sargent Rd> Valley rd).
Contact Tom Ball ( home: 314-962-1241 ) or Bob Coffing to arrange to participate in monitoring this pristine creek before the bugs bloom. Lunch will be provided.
Contact Tom Ball ( home: 314-962-1241 ) or Bob Coffing to arrange to participate in monitoring this pristine creek before the bugs bloom. Lunch will be provided.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
ST 2991- Friends of La Barque Creek
photo by botanist, Jack Harris, WGNSS
On March 1st and March 13th, ST 2991 hosted a terrestrial snail survey at the La Barque Conservation Area with members of the MDC Master Naturalist program, The Webster Groves Nature Study Society and local residents. 15 volunteers participated.
The survey has, thusfar, yielded identification of 25 known species of terrestrial snails and a number of bryophytes. Snail identification is being mastered by Ron Oesch (orange hat above), including miniscule specimens found in soil samples using a compound binocular microscope. Specimens range from 1.2mm to 17mm. For an interesting photo primer of Missouri snails see Larry Watrous's site at: http://www.lwatrous.com/missouri_mollusks/landsnails/photo1.htm
and for a taxonomic listing of Missouri mollusks with references & distribution database :
http://www.lwatrous.com/missouri_mollusks/
You can see the tabulated data collected thusfar including photos, and a calendar of future surveys at: http://www.labarque.org/index_files/page0028.htm
Spend some time looking around. This is an amazing website that focusses on La Barque Creek Watershed.
The survey will be ongoing until June, with the next survey collection scheduled for Saturday, March 29th from 9am to 3pm at the La Barque CA parking lot. They are requesting volunteers. Bring a lunch, a garden trowel, an old (large) pill bottle and clothes you can get down on the ground with. Or just come, its a great time.
Botanist, Nels Holmberg (tall greybeard in center above) is identifying the bryophytes and coordinating volunteers with Bill Coffing. Let them know if you're coming.
The result also included sightings of at least 3 white spotted, "western slimy" salamanders and 6 red back salamanders.
Plethodon albagula- western slimy salamander
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Caudata
Family: Plethodontidae
Genus: Plethodon
Species: Plethodon cinereus
4 front toes, 5 hind toes. This one is in the "red-back" phase. The redback salamander is referred to as northern, southern or eastern; I suppose depending on what part of the country you hail from.
It appears that Amren UE has a tentative decision to costruct a new high voltage transmission line (now known as "the blue line" through the eastern part of the watershed. The plan will include a 100' clearcut buffer area that will crisscross the Hilda Young CA, crossing the existing high voltage line, and connecting the Eureka and Cedar Hill power stations. You can see a detailed photo map of the plan and other interesting details about this pristine watershed at http://www.labarque.org/ Mitigation plans for degradation of the watershed are referred to, but unknown at this time.
Eastern Missouri Stream Teams Water Quality Monitoring blogsite
The purpose of this blog is to provide a place where trained Water Quality Monitors in the Missouri Stream Team program can post calendar items, requests for assistance from Stream Team AmeriCorps or other WQMs, site descriptions, WQM data results (if you like), pictures of your activities, or to muse and speculate with others about water quality in your watershed.
It is my hope that this site will attain a critical mass of germaine and relevent posts so that inactive water quality monitors can more easily find opportunities to use the skills the've learned at the WQM workshops, and that WQMs with active investigation sites can solicit help when wanted.
Know that you can post pictures, but that many folks may have painfully slow internet connections and that the larger the file size the longer it takes to load. The stonefly picture below is a thumbnail. If you click on it, you'll get the 1.42 megabyte jpeg. Cool, huh? Got a bug you don't know? Post it here. Maybe we can help.
This site will be monitored by current and past Missouri Stream Team AmeriCorps Assistants in the St. Louis region. It is intended as a communication vehicle for all WQMs in Eastern Missouri-- principally in Mark Van Patten's region, which extends from Lincoln county to the bootheel.
Depending on use and abuse (if we get SPAM postings, for instance) the security rules for posting to the site may change. More later.
To post to this blog you need a Google login identification and password. If you don't have one you can get one for free by clicking "sign in" in the upper right. Clicking the "create blog" button above will allow you to create your own blogsite for your own purpose-- it is not for posting to this one. It gets easy with experience. Welcome to the brave new world of "blogging".
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