The Citizen Newsletter: Fall 2014
Transcription
The Citizen Newsletter: Fall 2014
INSIDE THIS EDITION Forest Preserve News...............1–6, 14, 16 Volume 32, Number 4 Will County Almanac................................7 Calendar of Events............................... 8–9 Event Locations.........................................9 Event Descriptions...........................10–13 Volunteer Information........................... 15 Forest Preserve District of Will County Fall 2014 Forest Preserve District Opens Fifth Dog Park More than 500 people helped the Forest Preserve District of Will County celebrate the “dog days” of summer on July 19 as the Rock Run Dog Park opened its gates to the public for the first time. All breeds of dogs – large and small – ran, frolicked, drooled and sniffed as they explored the District’s new off-leash dog park at the intersection of McClintock Road and Route 6, about 1.5 miles east of Interstate 55. The 7.5-acre dog park is the District’s fifth and the first one to be located in the city of Joliet. During Saturday’s ribbon cutting ceremony, Don Gould, president of the District’s Board of Commissioners, said the new dog park will be convenient for the residents of Channahon, Joliet and Rockdale, but all area residents are welcome to play with their pooches in the park. “This will benefit the people of Will County for many future generations,” he added. Other elected officials and dignitaries who attended the ribbon cutting were: Forest Preserve Board Commissioners Denise Winfrey, Herbert Brooks, Jr. and Ragan Freitag; Channahon Mayor Joe Cook; Troy Township Supervisor Joe Baltz; Joliet City Councilman John Gerl; Channahon Trustee Missey Schumacher; and dog park contractor John Simpson of Channahon-based Burla Construction. The event drew people from all over Will County and beyond, but those who came short distances were thrilled to have a new dog park right down the street. JoAnn Weaver said Rock Run Dog Park is only five minutes from her Rockdale home. She had been driving her dogs Jeffro, a terrier mix, and Lexi, a “big” Chihuahua, to the Messenger Marsh Dog Park in Homer Glen. “That was a solid half hour (drive),” she said. “With this one five minutes away, I’ll be bringing them twice a day. They need the exercise for sure.” Maureen Jurisic – who takes her dogs Abby, a dachshund, and Cody, a pug, to Hammel Woods continued on page 4 Forest Preserve Receives Grant for New Longhouse Hundreds of years ago, Native Americans created large communal dwellings by lashing logs together and covering the structures with bark and furs. These “longhouses” could house up to 20 families and were typically 80 feet long and 16 to 23 feet high and wide. In a quest to recreate those days and explain how they relate to the French fur trade along the Des Plaines River in Will County, the Forest Preserve District built its own 14-by-40 foot replica longhouse in 2003 at the District’s Isle a la Cache Museum, located at 501 E. Romeo Road (135th Street) in Romeoville. In recent years, the structure’s log posts and beams have become weathered, and the simulated bark panels have outlived their expected lifespan of five to eight years. Warping and cracking have resulted in water, animal and insect penetration of the structure. But a new longhouse is coming. In June, the Forest Preserve learned that it will receive a $270,000 state grant to replace and enhance the exhibit. The new longhouse will be built with man-made materials that are more weather resistant. The longhouse project is expected to be completed by the summer of 2016. “This grant allows us to replace an 11-year-old structure, something the District would not have been able to do otherwise,” said Lynn Kurczewski, the District’s superintendent of Public Programs and Education. The grant also will be used to add interpretive signs, utilities, and native trees and shrubs to the longhouse site and to make it more compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Some of the signs will be located in the longhouse’s Native American “Three Sisters Garden,” which will feature the “three sisters” crops of corn, beans and squash, as well as sunflowers and watermelon. The garden will become the backdrop for workshops on native agriculture, continued on page 5 Monee Reservoir Makes Top 100 List The Forest Preserve District of Will County’s Monee Reservoir was recently named as one of the “Top 100 Family-Friendly Places to Boat and Fish in the U.S.” by the Recreational TOP Boating and Fishing Foundation. Monee Reservoir was one of five Illinois sites to make the list. The Alexandria, Virginia-based Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation (RBFF) created the inaugural list as part of its “Take Me Fishing” campaign. To get on the list, lakes and rivers had to have familyfriendly locations and amenities in park settings, be well stocked with fish, and have plenty of places to cast fishing lines. “Anglers from around the U.S. cast their vote and thought these parks offered some of the best fishing spots,” according to RBFF’s Web site, www.takemefishing.org. The 46-acre Monee Reservoir – which was 100 ReconnectWithNature.org once used by a railroad to supply water to steam engines – is stocked with bluegill, black crappie, largemouth bass and channel catfish. Boat and fishing pole rentals are available, and the Visitor Center sells bait, tackle, fishing licenses and snacks. During the fishing and boating season, many special programs take place at Monee Reservoir including fishing derbies and kayaking and canoeing classes. Forest Preserve District officials said they were not surprised that Monee Reservoir made RBFF’s list. “Monee Reservoir is the jewel of our Forest Preserve network,” said Don Gould, president of the District’s Board of Commissioners. “It has so much to offer Will County residents.” Diane Carson, facility coordinator at Monee Reservoir, said the lake gets rave reviews from the continued on page 3 Forest Preserve District of Will County 1 WILLY’SWILDERNESS COMPOST IN A CUP LEAVE NO CHILD INSIDE INITIATIVE The experience of childhood continues to evolve. With so many cool gadgets, video games and other electronic entertainment, kids today have plenty of motivation to stay inside and stay sitting down. These structured indoor activities hinder creativity, imagination and physical activity. The Chicago Wilderness Leave No Child Inside Initiative was created to encourage healthy outdoor experiences and to promote the importance of interaction with nature throughout childhood. Playing outside has many physical and mental health benefits, which is one reason the initiative strives to motivate the next generation to spend less time inside. The Forest Preserve District of Will County supports the initiative by providing plentiful access to natural areas and by hosting outdoor programs yearround. The fun activities and information on this page also support the initiative by helping to spread the joy and benefits of playing outside with today’s youth. Please share this page with your children or other youngsters in your life to provide them an opportunity to learn about the natural world around them and to be inspired to spend more time outside. If you and your kids like this page or have fun stories about your outdoor experiences, let us know; we would love to hear from you! Send your stories and/or pictures to the Superintendent of Public Affairs at [email protected]. If we like what you send, we just might publish it in our next issue to share with our readers. n 2 Composting is nature’s way of recycling things into soil. Anything that was once living will decompose into compost. Finished compost looks like crumbly dark brown soil and smells like a forest floor. Making Your Own Compost in a Cup Decomposition: NATURE’S WAY OF RECYCLING Decomposition (de•com•po•si•tion) is the process of breaking down organic matter. Organic matter is dead plants and animals that are rotting or decaying. Mother Nature employs decomposers such as fungi, millipedes, slugs and worms to help out with this job. When eating the organic matter, the decomposers can turn it into vitamin-rich soil by passing it through their bodies. This is how the fall leaves disappear come springtime. Can you imagine how high the leaf layer would be without decomposers? n FUNKY FUNGI DID YOU KNOW? is estimated that the removal of SCAVENGER HUNT • Itdead material from forests can mean Do you know what fungi are? Fungi fall into a category of organisms that is separate from plants, animals and bacteria. This group includes yeasts, molds and the more familiar mushrooms. Try your luck at finding some of the different fungi that live outdoors in the form of mushrooms. See if you can find a variety of funky fungi that match the descriptions below. Check them off the list as you find them. Fungi: ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ ☐☐ Forest Preserve District of Will County with a skinny stem shaped like a ball that looks like a brain with spots on the top that is orange or red that looks like a shelf that is shaped like an umbrella with a snail or slug on it with a fat stem that is shaped like a cup n a loss of habitat of up to 20 percent of the animals in the ecosystem. • Standing dead trees are called “snags.” • Scientists who study mushrooms are called mycologists. • There are more micro-organisms in a teaspoon of soil than there are humans alive on the planet. n NATURE JOKES What do you get when you cross a millipede with a parrot? A walkie talkie! What do you call a rabbit with beetles all over it? Bugs bunny! Why do fungi have to pay double bus fare? Because they take up too mushroom! n Ingredients and Supplies • 16 oz. cup with holes in bottom • 1 large bowl • Organic compostable items (leaves, grass clippings, vegetable scraps, fruit peels, coffee grounds, etc.) • 1/4 cup of soil or dirt • 1-2 teaspoons of water • 1 piece of plastic wrap (enough to cover the top of the 16 oz. cup) • 1 rubber band • 1 large plastic spoon Instructions 1. Place your organized compostable items in a large bowl. Then, add 1/4 cup of dirt and 1-2 teaspoons of water. Mix together. 2. Next, take your 16 oz. cup with holes in the bottom and put 2 scoops from your bowl in the cup. Now, take your piece of plastic wrap and place it on top of your cup. Tightly secure the plastic wrap around the rim of the cup with the rubber band. 3. Compost piles need sun, shade, water and movement, so put the cup outside in an area that has sunshine for part of the day. 4. Your compost cup is now complete and the composting process is underway! It is time to let nature do its thing! 5. Every few days, add 1 teaspoon of water to your cup and give the contents a little “shake.” The water and movement will help the composting process. 6. Check it every few days to see if the items have composted yet. n COLORING CORNER Did you know that mushrooms can be all sorts of colors? Some are white or brown, some are blue or purple, some are red with white polka dots, and others, like the jack-olantern fungus, can even glow in the dark! Create your own special color combination by coloring the mushrooms. The Citizen - Fall 2014 The Bees are Back at Plum Creek Nature Center Plum Creek Nature Center in Beecher is all abuzz about bees. After being without a live bee exhibit for a little more than a year, the Nature Center now has a new, thriving exhibit that is entertaining and educating visitors once again. “We’re very, very excited to get our bees back because they were a popular exhibit,” said facility coordinator Bob Bryerton. “It was a big part of the Nature Center that was missing.” A bee hive exhibit was first displayed at the Forest Preserve District’s Nature Center about five years ago. “For the first two or three years, it was really cool,” Bryerton said. “We learned so much by having the hive here.” The bees were encased in clear plastic so Nature Center visitors could watch the insects work as they filled the hive with honey and zipped outside through a PVC pipe to find more nectar and pollen. But the educational experience turned sour when small hive beetles struck and wiped out the bee colony. “I don’t know how they got in, but they got in,” Bryerton said. “Two to three times we put bees in and small hive beetles destroyed them.” So Bryerton and his bee advisers Top 100 List continued from page 1 public. And Monee Reservoir staff work hard to offer quality programs and services that appeal to diverse interests, she added. “We want to create generations of people who love boating, fishing and outdoor recreation as much as we do,” she said. Four other Illinois sites made the list: Starved Rock State Park on the Illinois River at Utica, Chain O’Lakes State Park at Spring Grove, North Point Marina on Lake Michigan and Johnson-Sauk Trail State Park Lake near Kewanee. All four sites are managed by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. For more information about Monee Reservoir, visit ReconnectWithNature.org or call 708.534.8499. The preserve is located at 27341 Ridgeland Avenue in Monee. For the complete “Top 100 Family-Friendly List of Places to Boat and Fish in the U.S.,” visit www.takemefishing.org. n ReconnectWithNature.org put their heads together to find a solution. That’s when beekeeper Mike Rusnak of Glenwood decided to come up with a new display that would better prevent small hive beetle infestations. The new hive also is clear, so the bees are again visible to visitors. But this time, there is a large open space that the bees can fill as they grow in numbers. This reduces the stress on the initial bees that populate the exhibit. “They will only build in the open area when they are ready,” Bryerton said. Also, the bee exhibit is covered with fabric when the Nature Center is closed or no one is visiting the hive. That, too, lessens the stress on the resident bees. Rusnak’s design included a small piece of wood with a crevice that was placed in the new hive. If small hive beetles show up, they will nestle in the crack and be visible right away, Bryerton said. “So far, we haven’t been able to see any, which is good,” he said. If another infestation does strike, beekeeper Rusnak – who has achieved an advanced level in the University of Florida’s Master Beekeeper Program – has a replacement bee exhibit waiting in the wings. Instead of an opaque PVC pipe like the first bee exhibit, the current exhibit has a clear plastic pipe that shows worker bees flying in and out of the hive as they gather pollen and nectar. The bees take the nectar and pass it back and forth from mouth to mouth. As some of the water evaporates, it mixes with saliva to make honey that is stored in honeycomb cells, Bryerton explained. Bees that are successful in finding pollen outside do a “waggle” dance when they return to the hive, he said as he pointed to bees wiggling their waggles in the exhibit. But the dance isn’t just for fun. There is a message in the movement. “She is basically giving other bees directions to the pollen,” Bryerton explained. The hive is made up mostly of female bees who do all of the work. “Drones are the males,” Bryerton said. “They don’t do any work. They’re just there to mate with the queen.” Bees also make bee bread out of the pollen and a special royal jelly to feed the queen, who is marked with a splotch of green paint on her back so Nature Center visitors can find her in the hive. What started with a couple of hundred bees in mid-May grew to well over 1,000 specimens by July. Bryerton said visitors now make a beeline to the hive as soon as they enter the Nature Center. “They marvel at what’s going on here,” he said. But there is just one more problem with the fascinating bee hive now that it’s up and running. “It’s easy to get caught up watching them but eventually you have to pull away,” Bryerton said of the show the bees put on every day. The bees aren’t the only new creatures at the Nature Center. A newly arrived bearded dragon named Dani also has taken up residence at Plum Creek. She joins Bud, a ball python; Smash Box, a three-toed turtle; and an aquarium filled with pond creatures, including a crayfish, snails and a leech. Outside, the Nature Center is teeming with birds. Because it features live creatures, Plum Creek Nature Center is a popular stop for adults and children alike who want to learn more about the animals and insects around us. “Having these types of displays gives visitors a chance to view animals up close in a safe setting,” Bryerton said. “Seeing bees or a snake outdoors can be a frightening experience for some. Once Nature Center visitors get a chance to really look at the animals and learn about them, it helps build an understanding and appreciation. This takes away some of the fear and creates a better connection with nature.” n “Cruise the Creek” Rolls On for Sixth Year Summer has passed. The days carry a hint of cool weather, and nature is signaling the transition to fall. It is the perfect time of year for a relaxing bike ride. Join hundreds of other bicyclists for a leisurely roll through New Lenox, Mokena and Frankfort when “Cruise the Creek,” a free, family bike ride, returns for the sixth year on Saturday, October 4, from noon-4 p.m. at Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Barrens in New Lenox. This year’s event offers a 6-mile ride that loops the Hickory Creek Bikeway and Old Plank Road Trail, and returns riders to the starting point at Hickory Creek Barrens. The course carries riders through forest, wetland and prairie landscapes. This event is open to all ages, though individual riders should be at least 11 years old. Wearing safety helmets is strongly recommended, and participants should bring drinking water. Check-in for pre-registered riders will begin at 11:30 a.m. The first 500 pre-registered guests to check in will receive a free event T-shirt. On-site registration will also be available, but will not begin until noon. Same-day registrants are not eligible for an event T-shirt. Throughout the four-hour OCT 4 program, activities will be ongoing at Hickory Creek Barrens. Music, children’s activities, a petting zoo, inflatables, pumpkin painting and the roasting of s’mores over an open campfire are among the attractions. Food will also be available for purchase. Participants can preregister for the ride by visiting ReconnectWithNature.org or by calling 815.727.8700. “Cruise the Creek” is made possible by the following generous event sponsors: JULIE, Inc.; Bill Jacobs Auto Group; BMO Harris Bank; Enbridge Energy; CITGO Lemont Refinery; Saratoga Food Specialties; CARCARE Collision Centers; Exelon Generation; ExxonMobil Pipeline; TransCanada; and Canadian National Railway Company. Like many Forest Preserve programs, “Cruise the Creek” is a perfect family outing. So join in the fun and pre-register for this free event! n Forest Preserve District of Will County 3 Bike Trail Update Presented at Plainfield Library Ever since the first shovelful of dirt was turned for the Old Plank Road Trail in the mid-1990s, the Forest Preserve District’s regional trail network has been expanding. As the trail system keeps rolling along, more and more of the paths are heading toward a central hub, said Ralph Schultz, director of Planning and Operations for the District, during a program called “Exploring Will and DuPage County Bike Trails” held July 17 at the Plainfield Public Library. “One of the keys to our trail system in Will County is that the nexus of all of our trails is in downtown Joliet,” Schultz said. In the past, the trail hub was centered at the Joliet Public Library, but now it’s moving to the new multimodal transportation center that the city is creating at Union Station, Schultz said. Street signs in downtown Joliet direct bicyclists to trail connections in all directions. The Old Plank Road Trail flows west into Will County from the south suburbs of Chicago. The Wauponsee Glacial Trail stretches north from the Kankakee River in Custer Park. The I&M Canal State Trail travels east from Grundy and LaSalle counties. The DuPage River Trail system heads south from DuPage County. And the Centennial Trail wends its way south from Cook County. “We’ve just about got every county covered and pretty soon we’re going to have Kendall County, too, with some of the work we’re doing in the far western region of Plainfield and south of Aurora,” Schultz told the crowd of parents and children who gathered for the program. The trail system wasn’t built by the District alone, he added. Many other governmental entities helped create the network, which includes 127 miles of paved or crushed limestone paths owned by the District. And most of the trail projects included state grants and contributions from other agencies. “We rely on municipalities, we rely on the state,” Schultz said. “We rely on a lot of local partners. And those partnerships change over time. Sometimes it’s a cash contribution. Sometimes it’s a land contribution. Sometimes it’s us doing something for somebody else or vice versa.” The 21-mile Old Plank Road Trail (OPRT), which runs from Park Forest to Joliet, was the District’s first regional trail. Planning started in the 1980s, but it took a long time to become a reality. “We didn’t actually acquire any of the land until the early 1990s,” he said. “And we didn’t move the first shovelful of dirt until around 1995.” The District, which owns 11.6 miles of the OPRT, participates in a management commission with other municipal owners. The group works to make the trail consistent for bikers and hikers as they travel through the different communities. “We tried to develop the trail as one cohesive trail so that our riders and visitors don’t see differences as they go from east to west or west to east,” Schultz said. The city of Chicago Heights is planning to build a new section of trail that will push the OPRT east past Western Avenue to the Forest Preserve District of Cook County’s Thorn Creek Trail. That link will allow trail users to hop onto the Burnham Greenway Trail in Chicago. During the library program, Schultz also touched on other trail projects that are either underway or in the planning stages, including: Plum Creek Greenway Trail: A 2-mile extension of the trail through Plum Valley Preserve is in the planning stages as part of a new access area and dog park development in Crete Township. Plum Creek Greenway Trail allows for pedestrians, bicyclists and equestrians. Veterans Memorial Trail: The District is nearing completion of a 1.5-mile segment of the Veterans Memorial Trail linking Centennial Trail to International Parkway along the Veterans Memorial Tollway. This extension provides a vital link to the region’s bicycle trail network. The District is currently in the engineering phase for the remainder of the trail between 127th Street in Lemont and Route 6 in New Lenox. DuPage River Trail: The District recently completed a 1.9-mile extension of the trail in Hammel Woods in Shorewood. Engineering plans are being drafted now to extend the trail to link it with the Rock Run Greenway Trail along the south side of Black Road. Also, engineering is underway for an extension of the DuPage River Trail in Naperville from Knoch Knolls Park to 95th Street. This connection will link the District’s Vermont Cemetery Preserve to the DuPage River Trail via the Tall Grass Greenway Trail. Whalon Lake: The District is in the engineering phase for two trail connections that will link Whalon Lake in Naperville to the Bolingbrook Park District’s Hidden Lakes Trout Farm and the DuPage River Trail south of the river and another that will link the preserve to an existing bicycle lane on Royce Road in Bolingbrook. The connection to Hidden Lakes will also provide access to the Hidden Oaks Nature Center operated by the Bolingbrook Park District. n Fifth Dog Park Opens continued from page 1 OCT Dogs in Costumes? You Betcha! The kids have their Halloween costumes and are ready to hit the streets for sweets. But what about the family pet? Your beloved canine can also join in the fun and dress up in an imaginative costume at the fifth annual “Howloween Hoopla” on Saturday, October 25. This free program will be held at Whalon Lake Dog Park in Naperville from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Festivities will include costume contests with prizes, doggy games and free giveaways. On hand will be 4 25 dog rescue organizations, pet vendors and pet services. Demonstrations, such as agility or obedience, will also be a part of the program. “Howloween Hoopla” will be held inside the free-run Whalon Lake Dog Park on uneven, natural terrain. All dogs must be leashed while outside the dog park. A dog park permit is not required for this program, but all other ordinances apply. For more information or if you are an interested vendor, call 708.534.8499. n Forest Preserve District of Will County Dog Park in Shorewood – said she will now head to Rock Run Dog Park as well. “I like it,” the Joliet woman said of the new dog park as her two canine companions sniffed around the pavilion area. “It’s very nice. I’ll just come down Houbolt Road and hit both of (the dog parks).” Jurisic and Weaver both said they liked the fact that one of the Rock Run Dog Park’s three 2.5acre enclosures is for small dogs that weigh 35 pounds or less. The second enclosure is for big dogs and the third will be used to rotate the fields, so the turf can rebound from canine cavorting. “The separate areas for big and little dogs is probably the best idea,” said Melissa Brown of Joliet, who brought her German shepherd, Nala, to the dog park opening. “It’s nice to let your dog run free.” Kris Schrader of Morris said her German shepherd, Sadie, loves the socialization factor, too. “I think this is great because they can get off the leash and check out other dogs,” Schrader said. “She loves it. She gets very excited just trying to get out of the car.” In addition to Rock Run, Messenger Marsh and Hammel Woods, the District also has dog parks at Whalon Lake in Naperville and Forked Creek Preserve in Wilmington. Permits, which are required for dog park use, may be purchased in person at Plum Creek Nature Center in Beecher, Isle a la Cache Museum in Romeoville, Monee Reservoir in Monee or Sugar Creek Administration Center in Joliet. Permit applications may also be submitted by mail along with payment. Applicants may register up to three dogs. All dogs must be current on rabies vaccinations. For more information on the Forest Preserve District’s dog parks or to obtain a dog park permit application, call 815.727.8700 or visit ReconnectWithNature.org. n The Citizen - Fall 2014 Enjoy Winter Activities in the Forest Preserves Will we get a lot of snow this winter? If we do, you don’t want to be stuck inside all season! Visit one of the preserves to hike, cross-country ski or snowshoe on a crisp winter day. Sledding and ice skating are available at some preserves too, so there is no excuse to sit inside and complain about the weather. Get out and enjoy the season in the preserves. The sled hill at Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve will open for the season on Monday, December 1, providing conditions allow for sledding. The sled hill opens at 9 a.m. and closes at sunset throughout the winter season. Come out to swoosh down the hill on a snowy day. Bring your own plastic or inflatable sleds to use on the hill, or rent a giant inner tube at Plum Creek Nature Center for $1/tube. Take a break from the cold to warm up in the Nature Center by the fire and enjoy a cup of hot chocolate, available for purchase. Also check the calendar for a “Twilight Tubing” program, when regular sledding hours are extended into the evening. Got ice skates? Ice skating is available on a pond at Goodenow hot chocolate or cider, which are available for purchase. Monee Reservoir is also host to the annual “Musher Mania.” In 2015, it will be held on Saturday, January 10. This program is a great way to enjoy the outdoors, learn about the sport of mushing and the Iditarod race, and see dog sled demonstrations. For more information on the Forest Preserve’s winter activities, contact Plum Creek Nature Center at 708.946.2216 or Monee Reservoir at 708.534.8499, or visit ReconnectWithNature.org. n Grove starting Monday, December 1, when conditions allow for skating. Skate rentals are not available. Have your own skis or snowshoes? Snowshoeing and cross-country skiing are available on many preserve trails when conditions allow. For a complete list of locations, visit ReconnectWithNature.org. Snowshoe rentals are available at Monee Reservoir in the Visitor Center. Try something new this winter and burn up those calories by snowshoeing on the two miles of trails in the preserve, and then warm up in the Visitor Center with coffee, Forest Preserve District Enlarges Teale Woods The Forest Preserve District’s smallest developed preserve just had a growth spurt. A land acquisition approved by the District’s Board of Commissioners on July 10 will enlarge Teale Woods Preserve, which is located along Historic Route 66 in Joliet. The 0.43-acre parcel purchased by the District is positioned along North Broadway Street and is surrounded on three sides by the preserve. “The new property will allow the Forest Preserve District to provide off-street parking for preserve visitors, and it also will serve as a trailhead for the Broadway Greenway, which is owned and managed by the City of Joliet,” said Marcy DeMauro, the District’s executive director. Teale Woods is the northernmost terminus of Joliet’s Broadway Greenway, which is a linear city park located between Broadway Street and the west bank of the Des Plaines River. The one-mile Broadway Greenway runs between Ruby and Theodore streets. Teale Woods Preserve was named after naturalist Edwin Way Teale, who was born in Joliet in 1899 and was a champion of small “wild” areas in cities. The preserve affords city residents a breath of fresh air in an urban area surrounded by residential and commercial developments. The District purchased the 14-acre preserve – which is located south of Theodore Street and east of Center Street – in 1994. Teale Woods features a 0.3-mile paved trail that runs from Theodore Street to Broadway Street and provides access to open lawn areas and seating. n Grant Received for New Longhouse continued from page 1 food preservation and preparation, and seasonal events tied to planting and harvesting. The addition of utilities to the longhouse will improve ventilation and lighting. It will also enable year-round programming. Interior seating will be expanded and will be more accessible. Also, the campfire circle will be upgraded to provide permanent seating and enhanced accessibility. “Since 2003, the longhouse has been an integral part of our educational field trip program,” Kurczewski said. “More than 4,000 students visit the longhouse each school year to learn about Potawatomi life during the late 1700s.” ReconnectWithNature.org The longhouse is an essential component of Isle a la Cache Museum’s interactive experience, which offers visitors an adventure in 18th century history, when the “Illinois Country” was home to French voyageurs and native Potawatomi. The Museum is one of 47 Illinois museums that will receive a portion of the $20 million state capital investment grant, which is part of the Illinois Jobs Now construction program. “Museums play a vital role in telling us about our world and who we are, where we’ve been and where we’re going,” Governor Pat Quinn said in a press release announcing the grants. “These investments will help museums attract even more visitors, boost tourism, create hundreds of jobs and help preserve our history for generations to come.” Two other Will County facilities also were awarded grants. Bird Haven Greenhouse in Joliet will receive $741,000 to install a glass ceiling, shade cloth and new growing houses. Hidden Oaks Nature Center in Bolingbrook will receive $104,500 to construct a wood pavilion with a fireplace, tables and seating. n Forest Preserve District of Will County 5 “Woods Walk” Challenge OCT Runs through October 31 31 There’s still time to take part in the 14th annual “Woods Walk” challenge, which is designed to introduce participants to the beauty and variety of Forest Preserve District trails. The challenge runs through the end of October. Ten different trails make up this year’s list, and the challenge is to hike at least seven of them by October 31. Completing the challenge earns a collectable medal that can be attached to a walking stick, hat or backpack. A second special gift will be awarded for those who complete all 10 trails. For a list of this year’s “Woods Walk” trails and their locations, please visit ReconnectWithNature.org. “Woods Walk” participants can download a Travel Log at ReconnectWithNature.org. Travel Logs can also be obtained by calling 815.727.8700 or by visiting one of the following Forest Preserve Visitor Centers: Sugar Creek Administration Center in Joliet; Isle a la Cache Museum in Romeoville; Monee Reservoir in Monee; or Plum Creek Nature Center in Beecher. Complete the online Travel Log submission form to have your reward(s) mailed to you, or return your Travel Log to one of the Visitor Centers to receive your reward(s) in person. The collector’s medal (and the special gift for those who walk all 10 trails) will be mailed to those who send in their Travel Log by mail or submit it online. At the culmination of the program, a special reception will be held for “Woods Walk” participants on Saturday, November 8, from 9-11 a.m. at the Sugar Creek Administration Center, 17540 W. Laraway Road, in Joliet. This will be an opportunity for participants to turn in their completed Travel Logs, enjoy refreshments and meet other Woods Walkers. As part of the “Woods Walk” program, a nature photo contest offers prizes for the top three pictures selected by a panel of judges. Up to five photos can be submitted and will be judged on focus, lighting, composition, impact, creativity and storytelling. Simply bring a camera along on your walks and capture images that catch your creative eye! The first-place photo winner will receive a digital photo frame, the secondplace winner will receive a backpack, and a travel blanket will be awarded to the third-place winner. Photos can be submitted as .jpg or .gif files on the Forest Preserve’s online upload tool at ReconnectWithNature.org/ Photo-Contest through October 31. Photos submitted for the contest will be published on the Forest Preserve’s Web site and on the District’s Flickr page. They could also be featured in District publications. Enjoy the fall beauty and brisk air as you discover the uniqueness of each Forest Preserve District trail in this year’s “Woods Walk” program. Chances are that you will be so taken with the experience, you will look forward to next year’s challenge! n Sounds of the ’50s, Cars from the Past Attract Record Crowd A gathering of nearly 3,000 people came to tour a classic car show and relax to music from the 1950s at the Forest Preserve District’s “Music at McKinley Outdoor Concert and Car Show” on August 16. This year’s attendance was the largest for the annual program, now in its third year. McKinley Woods – Kerry Sheridan Grove in Channahon provided the setting for this late summer night’s event. The car show, which opened the evening’s program, also set a record with the number of classic cars displayed by proud owners. Approximately 180 vintage autos from all eras of American carmaking were on exhibit. Ron Hahn of Channahon brought his shiny “hugger orange” ’57 Chevy to the show. “I found this one in the garbage, and I bought it for $300. It’s sitting pretty tall now,” he said as he showed off the beautifully restored classic. Board of Commissioners President Don Gould welcomed the crowd that spread out on blankets and lawn chairs around Four Rivers Shelter. He thanked the event’s many sponsors and introduced the evening’s performers, the Cadillac Casanovas. continued on page 14 ComEd Grant to Provide Prairie, Trail Enhancements A demonstration prairie will get some new species, and trails will be upgraded near the Forest Preserve District’s Plum Creek Nature Center thanks to a $10,000 ComEd Green Region Program grant that was announced in June. The money will provide new plants for the demonstration prairie in front of the Nature Center at 27064 S. Dutton Road in Beecher. The additional plant species will enhance interpretive opportunities for visitors and school groups as well as provide improved habitat for wildlife. The grant will also pay for asphalt trail improvements and woodland habitat restoration in the Snapper Pond Trail area in Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve. Trail improvements funded by the grant will enhance accessibility and will repair more than 2,000 square feet of asphalt. The grant will also 6 pay for paving of an existing 0.4-mile crushed limestone path that leads from the Nature Center to Snapper Pond Trail, as well as new trail signage. This newly paved trail will provide greater accessibility to users with limited mobility. The trail is an integral part of the 5.5-mile trail system at Goodenow Grove, which is adjacent to the Nature Center. A sign will Forest Preserve District of Will County be erected near the trailhead to recognize the ComEd Green Region Program for its contributions to the improvements. Habitat improvements include removing invasive species in the woodland trail corridor. Removing these species and promoting the growth of desirable native species in the prairie and woodland will improve its value as wildlife habitat. foot sled hill. Goodenow Grove is a dedicated Illinois State Nature Preserve due to the high quality of native flora and fauna found there. It is regionally significant for providing habitat for more than 20 species of reptiles and amphibians, including many endangered or rare species. It has a unique combination of high visitor usage and high-quality natural areas. The Nature Center received more than 10,000 visitors in 2013. The Forest Preserve Most of the work will be done this year, with some finishing District was one of 22 governmental entities to touches in 2015. receive a grant from the These improvements ComEd Green Region will enhance the visitor Program. The grants – experience and strengthen which were administered by the natural areas at these sites, which provide a variety Openlands, a Chicago-based of recreational opportunities, conservation group – are designed to reward efforts to including hiking, camping, plan for, protect and improve interpretive programs, equestrian and bicycle trails, open land in ComEd’s service area of northern Illinois. n picnicking, snowshoeing, skiing, ice skating and a 40- The Citizen - Fall 2014 WILL COUNTY NATURALIST’S ALMANAC AUTUMN’S CALENDAR OF EVENTS What does Mother Nature have in store for us in the coming months? In Will County, each season presents new and exciting opportunities to explore and understand our ever-changing landscape and its inhabitants. The weeks between the autumn equinox (September 21) and the winter solstice (December 21) can be marked by observing the changes that take place from day to day and week to week. Imagine creating a calendar of nature’s progress from summer’s end to winter’s onset in your own backyard. What are some of nature’s wonders that you can observe and record during this time of year? Leaf Turn Moving South Winding Down One of the most obvious and easily noted changes begins with the time of leaf turn, when the deciduous trees begin to show their autumn splendor. What causes a leaf to turn color? A leaf is green because of the presence of a pigment known as chlorophyll, which is abundant in the leaf’s cells during the growing season. The chloraphyll’s green color dominates and masks out the colors of any other pigments that may be present in the leaf. By late summer, as daylight hours shorten and temperatures cool, the veins that carry fluids into and out of the leaf are gradually closed off as a layer of special cork cells forms at the base of each leaf. As this cork layer develops, water and mineral intake into the leaf is reduced, slowly at first, and then more rapidly. As the green chlorophyll in the leaf is no longer replaced, other pigments in the leaf begin to show. Eventually, the leaf separates at the cork layer and falls to earth. Which trees are the first to change, and what colors do you witness? While maples are best known for their striking reds and bright orange blazes, take time to look around and see what other colors can be found on different trees and shrubs in your neighborhood. Certain colors are characteristic of particular species. Here is a list that highlights the variety of fall colors and the trees that display them: • Golden-yellow – aspen, birch, tulip tree, willow • Golden-bronze – hickory • Purplish-red – dogwood • Dark red – red maple, sassafras, scarlet oak, burning bush • Flame red and orange – sugar maple, sumac, Virginia creeper • Brick-red, brown or russet – oaks • Light tan – beech By late summer, several species of birds begin their annual migration to warmer climates for the winter. Birds such as flycatchers, warblers, swallows and swifts that feed primarily on insects and other invertebrates are the first birds to retreat to the south, where food resources are more plentiful. Watch for increased activity at your bird feeders or fruit-bearing shrubs as birds build their food reserves for the long flights ahead. You may notice increasingly large flocks of blackbirds – red-wings, grackles and cowbirds – moving across fields or gathering to roost in neighborhood parks. Skeins of geese and sandhill cranes can be heard cackling high overhead as they plow the skies to their southern destinations. Hawks and vultures gather from the north in large kettles, as they follow the air currents that speed them on their southward journey. Early autumn is also a time to watch for the sallying flights of butterflies. Many species are noted for migrating south, sometimes gathering in enormous numbers. While the monarch butterfly is the best known of this group of migrating insects, you may find fidgeting flocks of the gaudy red admirals. The butterflies you encounter now are probably from the season’s second or third generation. By late autumn, look for the first snowbirds to arrive. Dark-eyed juncos migrate from Canada and northern states to spend their winters in our more temperate regions. These and other seed-eating birds are able to endure the deprivations of winter and are a welcome visitor whose presence at our bird feeders brightens the cold months ahead. Autumn is the time to enjoy a final flourish of color and sound before the first frost arrives and winter settles in. The heady blooms of yellow goldenrods and purple asters linger, and cabbage butterflies become more reckless in their search for nectar. Cicadas die by summer’s end, while the katydids hold on for a few weeks longer. A nature walk to your local forest preserve reveals trails cluttered with hickory nuts and acorns, the splitting pods of milkweed, the soft heads of cattails breaking apart, and the bursting cigar-shaped seedpods of the jewelweed. Return to the trail a month later. What changes have occurred? By mid- to late autumn, the last wildflowers have all gone to seed, the tree canopy is bare of leaves and most songbirds have departed. At night, crickets fill in for the silent katydids. Squirrels are busy hoarding nuts for the winter, while skunks and woodchucks fatten up on insect larvae and grasses in preparation for hibernation. They will disappear into their wintering forest burrows by late November. White-tailed deer bucks polish their antlers on small trees and shrubs as their mating season reaches its peak. Late autumn brings wintry chill and the first snowfall. Many oaks and beeches will hold dead leaves on their branches through the coming winter. The rustle of their leaves in the wind is a sharp contrast to the quiet of snowy meadows. A new season begins. n ReconnectWithNature.org Forest Preserve District of Will County 7 CALENDAR of Events SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m-5 p.m. [p.12] Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Morning Bird Hike (PCNC) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Thorn Creek Garlic Fest (TCNC) Noon-3 p.m. [p.13] Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest (HCB) Noon-4 p.m. [p.10] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Riverview Farmstead Tour (RF) 9:30-11 a.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Nature Play Day for Parents and Tots! (PCNC) 10-11:30 a.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Magical Moon Night Hike (TCNC) 7:30-9 p.m. [p.11] Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Pelican Paddle (FR) Session 1: 10 a.m.-Noon Session 2: 1-3 p.m. [p.12] Autumn Night Hike (TCNC) 8-10 p.m. [p.10] 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Fun Frights by Firelight (ICM) 7-8:30 p.m. [p.11] Migratory Bird Hike (LR) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Junior Ecologists Club (TCNC) Noon-3 p.m. [p.11] 24 25 Recycle Your Bicycle (MR) 6 a.m.-5 p.m. [p.12] Living History Demonstration (ICM) Noon-3:30 p.m. [p.11] 19 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] 20 Celebrate Autumn Hike (PCNC) 10-11:30 a.m. [p.10] Fall Colors Hike (TCNC) 1-3 p.m. [p.10] 26 OCTOBER 21 27 28 Skulls and Bones (TCNC) Session 1: 1-2 p.m. Session 2: 2:30-3:30 p.m. [p.13] 2 3 4 29 Migratory Bird Hike (LR) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Howloween Hoopla (WLDP) 11 a.m.-3 p.m. [p.11] 30 31 5 6 7 NOVEMBER 10 11 17 18 12 13 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Nature Play Days for Parents and Tots! (PCNC) 10-11:30 a.m. [p.12] Searching for Marquette: A Pilgrimage in Art (ICM) 7-8:30 p.m. [p.12] 19 20 14 24 25 26 8 Migratory Bird Hike (LR) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Scout Day: Native American Skills and Culture (ICM) Noon-3:30 p.m. [p.12] Pie in the Sky Night Hike (TCNC) 6-8:30 p.m. [p.12] 15 Twine Bag Workshop (ICM) Noon-3 p.m. [p.13] Story of the Landscape Hike (TCNC) 1-3 p.m. [p.13] The Sandhill Crane Experience (PCNC) 1-7 p.m. [p.13] 21 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] 23 1 Morning Bird Hike (PCNC) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Hoosier National Forest Backpacking (PCNC) Depart at 8 a.m. Return at 5:30 p.m., November 3. [p.11] Junior Ecologists Club (TCNC) Noon-3 p.m. [p.11] Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Fall Nature Photography (PCNC) 8:30-10 a.m. [p.10] Living History Demonstration (ICM) Noon-3:30 p.m. [p.11] 16 23 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] An Afternoon with Friends of Thorn Creek Woods (TCNC) 1-3 p.m. [p.10] 9 22 Keep Your Eyes Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) on the Sky (FC-BL) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] 7:30-9 p.m. [p.11] 22 Holiday Recycled Crafts Workshop (FR) 9 a.m.-Noon [p.11] 27 28 29 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] 30 ReconnectWithNature.org 8 Forest Preserve District of Will County The Citizen - Fall 2014 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 1 2 3 4 6 5 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Keep Your Eyes on the Sky (FC-BL) 7:30-9 p.m. [p.11] 7 8 9 Sustainable Craft Series: Holiday Crafts (PCNC) 9-11 a.m. [p.13] 14 15 Living History Demonstration (ICM) Noon-3:30 p.m. [p.11] Animals in Winter (TCNC) 1-3 p.m. [p.10] 21 16 Morning Bird Hike (PCNC) 8-10 a.m. [p.12] Junior Ecologists Club (TCNC) Noon-3 p.m. [p.11] Twelfth Month Night Hike (TCNC) 6-8:30 p.m. [p.13] Holiday Nature Crafts (SCAC) 1-3 p.m. [p.11] 10 11 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] Nature Play Day for Parents and Tots! (PCNC) 10-11:30 a.m. [p.12] Voyageur Family Fun Night (ICM) 6:30-8 p.m. [p.13] 17 18 Wednesday Morning Walkers (TCNC) 9-10:30 a.m. [p.13] DECEMBER 22 23 24 25 12 13 Woodland Carols: Annual Food Drive (TCNC) Noon-2 p.m. [p.13] Adult Nature Series: A Walk With Thoreau (PCNC) 4:30-6:30 p.m. [p.10] 19 20 Caroling Campfire (PCNC) 6:30-8 p.m. [p.10] Native American Games Workshop (ICM) 1-3 p.m. [p.12] 26 27 Recycle the Holiday Spirit (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] Twilight Tubing (PCNC) 5-10 p.m. [p.13] 28 29 30 31 1 Recycle the Holiday Spirit (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] Recycle the Holiday Spirit (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] Recycle the Holiday Spirit (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] Recycle the Holiday Spirit (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] Located on Butcher Lane, south of Kahler Road, in Wilmington. Call 708.946.2216. • Keep Your Eyes on the Sky Four Rivers Environmental Education Center (FR) Located at 25055 W. Walnut Lane, McKinley Woods – Kerry Sheridan Grove at Blackberry Lane, south of Route 6, in Channahon. Call 815.722.9470. • Holiday Recycled Crafts Workshop • Pelican Paddle Hickory Creek Barrens (HCB) Located on Schoolhouse Road, 0.25 mile north of Route 30, in New Lenox. Call 815.727.8700. • Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest Isle a la Cache Museum (ICM) Located at 501 E. Romeo Road (135th Street), 0.5 mile east of Route 53, in Romeoville. Call 815.886.1467. • Fun Frights by Firelight • Living History Demonstrations • Native American Games Workshop • Recycle the Holiday Spirit • Scout Day: Native American Skills and Culture • Searching for Marquette: A Pilgrimage in Art • Twine Bag Workshop • Voyageur Family Fun Night Lake Renwick Heron Rookery Nature Preserve (LR) Located on Renwick Road, 0.5 mile east of Route 30 (Plainfield Road), in Plainfield. Call 708.946.2216. • Migratory Bird Hikes ReconnectWithNature.org 3 Recycle the Holiday Spirit Saturday, December 27-Saturday, January 10 (ICM, MR, PCNC & SCAC) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. [p.12] LOCATIONS Forked Creek Preserve – Butcher Lane Access (FC-BL) 2 Events are listed here by location, along with facility addresses and abbreviated codes for each site. Monee Reservoir (MR) Thorn Creek Nature Center (TCNC) Located at 27341 Ridgeland Avenue, west of Route 50 and south of Pauling Road, 2 miles south of Monee. Call 708.534.8499. Located at 247 Monee Road, in Park Forest. Call 708.747.6320. • Recycle the Holiday Spirit • Recycle Your Bicycle Plum Creek Nature Center (PCNC) Located at 27064 S. Dutton Road, 1.25 miles east of the intersection of Routes 1 and 394 on Goodenow Road, in Beecher. Call 708.946.2216. • Adult Nature Series: A Walk With Thoreau • Caroling Campfire • Celebrate Autumn Hike • Fall Nature Photography • Hoosier National Forest Backpacking • Morning Bird Hikes • Nature Play Days for Parents and Tots! • Recycle the Holiday Spirit • Sustainable Craft Series: Holiday Crafts • The Sandhill Crane Experience • Twilight Tubing Riverview Farmstead Riverview Farmstead Preserve (RF) Located on Book Road, south of Hassert Boulevard/111th Street, in Naperville. Call 815.886.1467. • Riverview Farmstead Tour Sugar Creek Administration Center (SCAC) • An Afternoon with Friends of Thorn Creek Woods • Animals in Winter • Autumn Night Hike • Fall Colors Hike • Junior Ecologists Club • Magical Moon Night Hike • Pie in the Sky Night Hike • Skulls and Bones • Story of the Landscape Hike • Thorn Creek Garlic Fest • Twelfth Month Night Hike • Wednesday Morning Walkers • Woodland Carols: Annual Food Drive Located at 17540 W. Laraway Road, in Joliet. Call 708.534.8499. Whalon Lake Dog Park (WLDP) • Holiday Nature Crafts • Recycle the Holiday Spirit Located on Royce Road, west of Route 53, in Naperville. Call 708.534.8499. • Howloween Hoopla Forest Preserve District of Will County 9 DESCRIPTIONS Programs listed here are intended for individuals and families. Organized groups should contact the Forest Preserve District at 815.727.8700 for information about group programming options. All facilities and events are fully accessible to all unless otherwise noted. In providing programs and services to the public, the Forest Preserve District will make reasonable modifications to ensure that all people have an equal opportunity to enjoy District offerings. Should you require modifications or assistive equipment to participate in a Forest Preserve program, please make your request at least 48 hours prior to the program. For more information, visit ReconnectWithNature.org/ADA. Adult Nature Series: A Walk With Thoreau Celebrate Autumn Hike Saturday, December 13 4:30-6:30 p.m. Sunday, October 19 10-11:30 a.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Plum Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 18 or older. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Free! All ages. Registration required: 708.946.2216. “The wind has gently murmured through the blinds or puffed with feathery softness against the windows, and occasionally sighed like a summer zephyr lifting the leaves along the livelong night.” One can't help but be drawn into to the imagery of the natural landscape in Henry D. Thoreau’s famous essay “A Winter Walk.” Thoreau was an artist, philosopher, and scientist of nature and all its wonders. Treat yourself to a relaxing hike through a wintry trail at Goodenow Grove, pausing to listen to selected parts of his essay along the way. You are invited to bring your favorite Thoreau essay as well! A warm fire and hot cocoa await upon return to the Nature Center. Hiking will be on preserve trails with both paved and natural surfaces, some which may be uneven. Enjoy the beauty of the fall season at Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve. Explore the autumn splendor while hiking and learning about the reasons for the seasons. We will have activities for the whole family to get personal with the trees and their leaves. Plus, get those creative juices flowing with a craft that will be worthy to hang on the fridge. Dress for the weather because this program will take place outdoors on uneven trails before returning to the Nature Center. An Afternoon with Friends of Thorn Creek Woods A Walk With Thoreau Autumn Night Hike Saturday, October 11 8-10 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 16 or older. Registration required by Thursday, October 9: 708.747.6320. Experience the smells, sounds and sights of the changing season by hiking Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve’s nighttime trails. No flashlights, please. Participants should be prepared to walk more than 2 miles outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Sunday, November 2 1-3 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! All ages. No registration required. Join other nature lovers for a fall hike, a program, refreshments and the Friends annual meeting. Bring someone new as a guest. New supporters, find out what makes Thorn Creek unique! Participants should be prepared to walk more than 1 mile outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Animals in Winter Sunday, December 14 1-3 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 8 or older. Registration required by Friday, December 12: 708.747.6320. Have you ever wondered how animals spend the winter? They may not have a cozy house and can’t make hot chocolate, but they have several adaptations that allow them to survive even our harshest Midwest winters! We will walk the trails searching for signs of animals preparing for winter. If you are so inclined, join us an hour earlier at noon to help sort and pack up the donations collected for the Rich Township Food Pantry. Participants should be prepared to walk more than 2 miles outdoors over uneven, natural terrain. Caroling Campfire Caroling Campfire Fall Colors Hike Sunday, October 19 1-3 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! All ages. Registration required by Friday, October 17: 708.747.6320. Walk the trails of Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve amid trees of all types transitioning from their summer green leaves to shades of red, yellow, orange, gold, russet and even purple – the colors of autumn. Discover not only why leaves change colors in the fall, but why different trees turn different colors. Participants should be prepared to walk more than 2 miles outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest Saturday, October 4 Noon-4 p.m. Hickory Creek Barrens Free! All ages. Pre-registration recommended: ReconnectWithNature.org or 815.727.8700. The sixth annual autumn family bike ride and festival is back! It begins with a 6-mile leisurely bike ride on the Hickory Creek Bikeway and Old Plank Road Trail. This course winds through a gorgeous backdrop of woodlands, wetlands and prairie, and consists of a paved trail and some sidewalks. After the ride, enjoy free family entertainment and activities, including a petting zoo and pumpkin painting. Food will be available for purchase. Pre-registration is recommended for the ride and is offered at ReconnectWithNature.org or by calling 815.727.8700. The first 500 pre-registered riders to check in at “Cruise the Creek” will receive a free T-shirt. Check-in for pre-registered riders will begin at 11:30 a.m., and same-day registration will open at noon. This event is open to all ages, but it is recommended for individual riders to be at least 11 years of age. All participants are encouraged to wear a helmet. Friday, December 19 6:30-8 p.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Fall Colors Hike Fall Nature Photography Sunday, November 9 8:30-10 a.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 16 or older. Registration required: 708.946.2216. "Take only pictures and leave only footprints!" First, we will start indoors to learn quick tips and tricks for nature photography. Then we will enjoy a morning hike while stopping along the way to photograph the fall colors of Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve. This program is recommended for beginners, and for technology ranging from smartphone cameras to digital SLRs. The program will focus on technique and composition, not camera operation. Indoor facilities are accessible; outdoor settings may take place on natural, uneven terrain. Free! All ages. Registration required: 708.946.2216. With the holidays right around the corner, get into the spirit at Plum Creek Nature Center! Bring the whole family for a night full of fun possibilities at this winter campfire. We will be singing holiday songs, telling stories and playing games. The night will end with delicious s’mores prepared over the open fire. Come dressed for the weather; this program will take place outdoors over uneven, natural surfaces. If inclement weather occurs, the program will take place indoors in an accessible facility. Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest 10 Forest Preserve District of Will County The Citizen - Fall 2014 Fun Frights by Firelight Howloween Hoopla Saturday, October 25 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday, October 17 7-8:30 p.m. Whalon Lake Dog Park Isle a la Cache Museum Free! All ages. No registration required. Free! All ages. Registration required: 815.886.1467. Stories, games and treats – oh my! This time of year we enjoy gathering around a warm campfire and sharing what is special about the season, whether it's scary fun or tasty goodness. Dress appropriately (with your favorite holiday costume and mask, if you like). Weather permitting, there is a short walk along a paved surface to the outdoor amphitheater where the program will be held. If the weather does not cooperate, we'll head indoors to an accessible facility for the festivities. Holiday Nature Crafts Holiday Nature Crafts Saturday, December 6 1-3 p.m. Sugar Creek Administration Center Free! Ages 5 or older. Registration required: 708.534.8499. This warm holiday program is inviting for the whole family. Learn a few ways to deck the halls naturally while sipping on hot chocolate and listening to carols. Bring friends and family for some cooperative crafting while enjoying some quality time together. Adults and kids alike will have their own nature crafting options from which to choose. There will be something for everyone to make and take home. All materials will be provided. This program will take place indoors in an accessible facility. Holiday Recycled Crafts Workshop Saturday, November 22 9 a.m.-Noon Four Rivers Environmental Education Center Free! Ages 16 or older. Registration required: 815.722.9470. “Deck the halls with cardboard boxes! Fa la la la la…” Join us for the annual recycled material arts and crafts bonanza. This year’s focus is on decorations and gifts made from cardboard and chipboard boxes and tubes. Start collecting cereal ReconnectWithNature.org Holiday Recycled Crafts Workshop boxes, corrugated cardboard and tubes of all sizes for these projects. Participants should bring their recycled materials, scissors and a ruler. All other supplies will be provided. This is an adult workshop. Projects vary in complexity and require the ability to manipulate scissors and small objects and to follow multi-step directions. These workshops are always a hit with our participants, so sign up today and start recycling! Registration is limited to 20 people. This program will take place indoors in an accessible facility. Come out to our annual Halloween dog extravaganza, guaranteed to be a howling good time! Bring your beloved companion or, if you are in the market for a furry friend, let a multitude of rescue organizations cater to your doggy needs. Festivities include a costume contest with prizes, pet vendors, many free pet services including nail clipping, microchipping, wellness checks and more. Don’t forget about the free giveaways, doggy games and food vendors! So come celebrate Halloween with your favorite four-legged friend. A dog park permit is not required to attend the day’s activities. All ordinances apply and dogs must be leashed. For more information or if you are an interested vendor, please call 708.534.8499. This program will take place in the dog park on uneven, natural terrain. Hoosier National Forest Backpacking Junior Ecologists Club Depart: Saturday, November 1 at 8 a.m. Return: Monday, November 3 at 5:30 p.m. Saturdays, October 18, November 1 & December 6 Noon-3 p.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 9-12. Registration required 2 days before each program date: 708.747.6320. Ages 18 or older; $143/person. Registration required by Wednesday, October 15: 815.886.1467. Join experienced naturalists for a backpacking trip in the Hoosier National Forest in Indiana's Charles Deam Wilderness Area. This 2-night, 3-day backpacking trip will include a unique wilderness experience while backpacking through scenic hardwood forests and along the shores of beautiful Monroe Lake. Experience primitive camping under the stars in this remote wilderness area. This program is for backpackers with some previous experience. Camping is in remote areas with no running water or restroom facilities. Trip costs include transportation, food and camping fees. Meals during travel time are not included in the cost of the trip. Participants provide their own backpacking gear, which includes a backpack, sleeping bag, tent and personal items. The Forest Preserve District will provide group gear such as stoves, water filters and cooking sets. Participants will be provided with a packing list. The group meets at Plum Creek Nature Center for a 5-hour drive to the trailhead near Bedford, Indiana. This trip requires sitting in a van for extended periods of time and group participation including carrying group equipment and meal preparation. Participants must be able to hike 5-8 hours a day over rugged, uneven terrain while carrying 40-50 pounds. Everyone must attend the pre-trip meeting on October 15 from 7-8 p.m. at Plum Creek Nature Center. Thorn Creek Nature Center Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve’s “Junior Ecologists Club” offers fun-filled nature activities each month for young people. Club members will uncover the mysteries of nature first-hand while exploring the preserve, working on projects and assisting with Nature Center programs. Each month, they will explore the woods, track seasonal changes and discover woodland plants and animals. Young people should be prepared to get muddy, wear boots and long pants, and bring a water bottle and insect repellent. Hiking is approximately 1 mile on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Keep Your Eyes on the Sky Tuesday, October 21 Wednesday, December 3 7:30-9 p.m. Forked Creek Preserve – Butcher Lane Access Free! All ages. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Here is an opportunity to get out your telescope and view astronomical objects in the fall skies. Bring your telescopes and take advantage of the darker skies this preserve offers. Staff will be on hand to help you locate a host of cool objects to view. Don’t have your own telescope? Don’t worry, you can come out and view through ours. This program is weather dependent and will be canceled if conditions are not suitable for viewing. Call 708.946.2216 for program status updates. This program will require a short walk from the parking area over mowed turf and uneven surfaces to the telescope viewing area. Living History Demonstrations Living History Demonstrations Sundays, October 12, November 9 & December 14 Noon-3:30 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum Free! All ages. No registration required. Before superstores and modern technology, people did get what they needed. In the 1700s, it just took a lot more work! The Isle a la Cache Brigade is a volunteer group that consists of re-enactors who represent voyageurs, courier du bois, French women, Métis and Natives. At any given “Living History Demonstration,” you may find musket shooters, cooks, seamstresses or craftsman sharing their talents. It’s history up close and personal! This program is offered indoors or outdoors on natural, uneven terrain, weather permitting. Indoor facilities are fully accessible. Magical Moon Night Hike Friday, October 10 7:30-9 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 16 or younger. Participants under the age of 8 must be accompanied by an adult. Registration required by Wednesday, October 8: 708.747.6320. Come walk the boundary between the natural and magical nighttime worlds of Thorn Creek Woods. The music and magic of Harry Potter’s Hogwarts will help you use your senses to unlock the woodland’s magical messages – rustlings, hootings, whispering water, scent of loamy soil, and flittering shadows in the forest. Join us for a spell! Participants should be prepared to walk more than 1 mile outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Forest Preserve District of Will County 11 Migratory Bird Hikes Migratory Bird Hikes Saturdays, October 18, October 25 & November 8 8-10 a.m. Lake Renwick Heron Rookery Nature Preserve Free! Ages 7 or older. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Nesting season has ended and the herons, egrets and cormorants have scattered, but many birds still find Lake Renwick Heron Rookery Nature Preserve a great place to hang out. Fall is an ideal time to view birds that use Lake Renwick as a stopover during migration. Many duck species can be spotted there, as well as pelicans, warblers, or even a passing osprey or eagle. Each week could bring different birds! The hike is approximately 1 mile in length and will take place on limestone paths. Dress for the weather and bring along your favorite field guide and binoculars. We will have a limited supply of binoculars to share. Morning Bird Hikes Saturdays, October 4, November 1 & December 6 8-10 a.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 17 or older. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Join us on our series of “Morning Bird Hikes” as we explore the woods of Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve in search of late migrants and winter residents. Each month will focus on a different bird group: October – wood ducks; November – dark-eyed juncos; and December – northern cardinals. Bring your binoculars and favorite bird field guide. Participants will enjoy a hike on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Come dressed for the weather. Indoor viewing of birds is possible after the program or in unfavorable weather conditions. Native American Games Workshop 12 Native American Games Workshop Saturday, December 20 1-3 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum Ages 8-16; $10/person. Registration required: 815.886.1467. Learn the history of several Native American games and toys and how to make them. Participants may choose to make one or more crafts, including a toy buzzer, a corn husk doll, a ring and pin game, and a dice game. This program will be held indoors in a fully accessible facility. Nature Play Days for Parents and Tots! Wednesdays, October 8, November 12 & December 10 10-11:30 a.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 1-5, accompanied by an adult. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Once a month, parents with young children can come out for a “Nature Play Day.” You and your child may participate in a hike, story, game, dancing or playing. There will be a variety of organized and free play activities. Activities are designed for ages 3-5 but younger children are welcome. Please dress for indoor and outdoor activities. Indoor facilities are accessible; outdoor activities may take place on natural, uneven terrain. Pelican Paddle Saturday, October 11 Session 1: 10 a.m.-Noon Session 2: 1-3 p.m. Four Rivers Environmental Education Center Ages 12 or older; $20/person. Registration required by Friday, October 3: 708.534.8499. Come on an adventure in kayaks as we pursue the pelicans at Four Rivers Environmental Education Center! Learn about river paddling and safety skills, and then discover these amazing animals in their natural settings. With certified kayak instructors, you will paddle the river waters and try to get a closer look at these unique birds as they rest during their trip from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. These prehistoric looking animals migrate through Illinois only twice a year, so don’t miss your chance to experience them while paddling. Don’t forget to bring your camera; you will want to take pictures! Outdoor activities may take place on natural, uneven terrain. Basic kayaking experience is required. Forest Preserve District of Will County Pie in the Sky Night Hike Riverview Farmstead Tour Saturday, November 8 6-8:30 p.m. Sunday, October 5 9:30-11 a.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Riverview Farmstead Preserve Free! Ages 10 or older. Registration required by Thursday, November 6: 708.747.6320. Free! All ages. Registration required: 815.886.1467. Join us for a meandering hike through Thorn Creek Woods while we unravel some mysteries of life in the cold. Then we’ll return to the Nature Center for a slice of homemade pie. Rain, snow, or Moon shine, this program will be held, so be sure to dress for the weather. Participants should be prepared to walk more than 2 miles outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Recycle the Holiday Spirit Saturday, December 27 – Saturday, January 10 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum, Monee Reservoir, Plum Creek Nature Center and Sugar Creek Administration Center This year, give the Earth a gift by recycling your Christmas tree! Every year, millions of Christmas trees end up in landfills. However, you can give your tree a second life by recycling it with the Forest Preserve. Your trees will take a new life “path” by becoming mulch used on our trails and for landscaping. Please remove all tinsel, lights and ornaments before dropping off your tree. The drop-off locations will be in designated parking lots of the Visitor Centers listed above. This program is for individual households; no commercial tree surplus, please. Recycle Your Bicycle Wednesday, October 1– Sunday, October 12 6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monee Reservoir Free! All ages. No registration required. This program is designed to practice environmental stewardship while helping others. What a win-win! Monee Reservoir will collect bicycles to be given to local recycling centers that refurbish them for youth or individuals with disabilities. Bikes can be in any condition: brand new or beyond repair. Be green – reduce, reuse, recycle! Let the Forest Preserve be an avenue to make that happen, especially to benefit someone in need. Join us at Riverview Farmstead Preserve as we explore our agricultural heritage. An early settlement farm, Riverview Farmstead was home to three generations of the Thomas Clow family. Today, the Forest Preserve District is working to preserve the remaining buildings, including the Settlement House, Limestone House and Timber Frame Barn. This program takes place on natural, uneven terrain and limestone paths. Scout Day: Native American Skills and Culture Saturday, November 8 Noon-3:30 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum Free! Recommended for Scouts ages 8-12, accompanied by parents or Scout leader. Registration required: 815.886.1467. If you are a Scout or Brownie, join us for a program focusing on the Native American heritage of northern Illinois. Discover how the Potawatomi lived in the wilderness. Visit a longhouse to learn about the daily life of the Potawatomi, play Native American games, share in stories that incorporate a Native American language, and use primitive techniques for fire-making. Part of this program will be outdoors, so please dress for the weather. Hiking on paved and non-paved trails is involved with some natural, uneven terrain. Searching for Marquette: A Pilgrimage in Art Thursday, November 13 7-8:30 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum Free! Ages 15 or older. Registration required: 815.886.1467. Through monuments and artwork, Ruth D. Nelson’s Searching for Marquette: A Pilgrimage in Art retells the story of the 17th century French Jesuit missionaryexplorer Father Jacques Marquette, the celebrated surveyor of the Mississippi River. His expedition down the Great River was only part of the Marquette legacy, which began on the southern shore of Lake Superior and ended on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. Searching for Marquette follows his journey through today’s cities and towns in Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Arkansas to uncover French relics, Native American royalty, and hearty settlers in a drama of faith, the fur trade, and the future of America’s heartland. This program will take place indoors in an accessible facility. Pelican Paddle The Citizen - Fall 2014 Thorn Creek Garlic Fest Twine Bag Workshop Saturday, November 15 Noon-3 p.m. Saturday, October 4 Noon-3 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum Thorn Creek Nature Center Ages 16 or older; $20/person. Registration required: 815.886.1467. All ages; $5/car or $1/bicycle. No registration required. Scout Day: Native American Skills and Culture Skulls and Bones Sunday, October 26 Session 1: 1-2 p.m. Session 2: 2:30-3:30 p.m. Sustainable Craft Series: Holiday Crafts Sunday, December 7 9-11 a.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Plum Creek Nature Center All ages. Participants under the age of 6 must be accompanied by an adult; $5/person. Registration required by Friday, October 24: 708.747.6320. Free! Ages 18 or older. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Kids of all ages can bone up on their artistic skills and anatomical knowledge at Thorn Creek Nature Center. Local artist Patricia Moore will guide them in a Halloween art experience using bones as subject and medium. Skulls, antlers and the macabre remains of the animals of Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve – deer, raccoons, voles and other wildlife – will be on display for aspiring artists to examine. Participants can draw them in the vibrant colored surrealistic style of Georgia O’Keefe or in the somber tones of an 18th century naturalist. Each participant will leave the session with an artwork suitable for framing or display. All materials will be provided and refreshments will be served. This program will be held in an accessible facility. Don't throw that away! We can recycle, reuse and change that into something fun and easy for the winter holidays. During this program you will learn how to make gifts, decorations and cards using recycled materials. Enjoy the winter by staying warm and getting creative. A list of items to bring will be provided one week prior to the program. This program will take place indoors in an accessible facility. In 1957, May Theilgaard Watts, a naturalist at the Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois, wrote the enchanting book Reading the Landscape. She wrote, “there is good reading on the land... The records are written in the forests, in fencerows, in gardens, in tree rings.” Join us on this fall hike to read the landscape of Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve. Participants should be prepared to walk more than 2 miles outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. ReconnectWithNature.org Saturday, December 6 6-8:30 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 10 or older. Registration required by Thursday, December 4: 708.747.6320. The Sandhill Crane Experience Saturday, November 15 1-7 p.m. Plum Creek Nature Center Ages 18 or older; $15/person. Registration required: 708.946.2216. Sandhill cranes are one of the most primitive birds alive today. With a wingspan of 5-7 feet, this bird cuts a striking image while soaring high above during its annual fall migration. The program begins at the Plum Creek Nature Center where we board a chartered bus that takes us to Jasper Pulaski Fish and Wildlife Area near Medaryville, Indiana. Historically, large numbers of sandhill cranes gather there to feed and rest during their migration. Bring binoculars and a camera for this unforgettable experience. The viewing area is outdoors and is accessible. Fees include travel expenses, snacks and experienced guides. Thursday, December 11 6:30-8 p.m. Isle a la Cache Museum The 18th century French fur traders worked in teams called brigades to transport their goods across the vast wilderness of North America. Could your family navigate the grand lakes and mighty rivers? Could you barter with the Potawatomi for supplies? Find out how good of a brigade your family is in a series of fun games and trivia inside the Isle a la Cache Museum. The Museum is a fully accessible facility. Wednesday Morning Walkers Wednesdays, October 1–December 17 9-10:30 a.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Free! Ages 13 or older. Registration required 2 days before your first walk. Saturday, December 27 5-10 p.m. The Sandhill Crane Experience Voyageur Family Fun Night Free! All ages. No registration required. Twilight Tubing Saturday, November 15 1-3 p.m. Free! All ages. Registration required by Thursday, November 13: 708.747.6320. Twelfth Month Night Hike Winter nights are especially magical when the trees are bare and the air is crisp. There are a lot of interesting things going on at night that you can’t experience in the daytime. Be sure to dress for the weather. Participants should be prepared to walk over 2 miles outdoors on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Bring a donation to kick off our annual food drive for the Rich Township Food Pantry. Story of the Landscape Hike Thorn Creek Nature Center Celebrate the wonders of the garlic bulb and the world of organic growing. Come taste different varieties of garlic, and gather information on garlic, its uses, planting techniques, organic gardening and garlic cooking. All garlic is organically grown on Thorn Creek’s historic farm and many refreshments include organic garlic in them! Enjoy demonstrations on garlic preparation and try your hand at garlic braiding. Organic garlic bulbs of more than 30 varieties will be for sale. Parking is located in the field across from Thorn Creek Nature Center. Bring the entire family out for a day of fun! This program is mainly held indoors in an accessible facility and may include hiking for approximately 2 miles on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Naturally, you’re looking for a craft workshop and, naturally, you want to make a holiday present for yourself or a friend. The best of both worlds, modern and historic, can be had during this class! You can learn how to make a traditional hemp-twine bag, and keep the loom to make more whenever you wish. Our instructor, Susan Minor, is a historical re-enactor whose passion is Native American crafts, naturally! This program will be held indoors in a fully accessible facility. Plum Creek Nature Center Free! (Tube rental $1/tube.) All ages. No registration required. With nothing but Moon glow to light your way down the sled hill at Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve, you won't want to miss this special opportunity to tube after hours. Inner tubes will be available to rent for $1, with a valid driver’s license or photo ID. You can also bring your own sleds (no steel runners, snowboards or steerables, please). A warm fire will await you as you take a break to re-energize and sip some hot chocolate. The Nature Center offers hot chocolate for purchase, but hot water will be available if you bring your own packets and cups. This program is weather dependent and may be canceled if conditions are not favorable. Please call 708.946.2216 for program updates. This program takes place outdoors and requires an uphill climb on snow-covered turf. Follow the forest’s seasonal changes, enjoy light exercise and experience nature first-hand on 2 miles of Thorn Creek Woods Nature Preserve’s winding trails. Trails can be wet or muddy, so please wear sturdy shoes. Hiking is on natural surface trails across uneven terrain. Woodland Carols: Annual Food Drive Saturday, December 13 Noon-2 p.m. Thorn Creek Nature Center Ages 12 or older; $10/person or 1 bag of groceries/person. Registration required by Thursday, December 11: 708.747.6320. Start your holiday season off right by giving to others at Thorn Creek Nature Center’s annual food drive music event. Savor all-you-can-eat homemade soup while listening to seasonal musical selections by popular area performers. Bring a bag of groceries and the program fee will be waived! All donations and proceeds will be given to the Rich Township Food Pantry. This program will be held indoors in an accessible facility. n Forest Preserve District of Will County 13 Musher Mania Returns for 21st Year Save the date for the 21st annual “Musher Mania!” Although January might seem a distant thought, it will not be long before the holidays are over and winter has settled in. The kids are spending much of their time indoors, storing up youthful energy that begs to be released. How about coming out to this free family outing that will get them outside playing with other children and marveling at one of nature’s most beautiful breed of dogs, the Siberian husky? The Forest Preserve District offers such an opportunity when “Musher Mania” returns on Saturday, January 10 from noon-4 p.m. at Monee Reservoir in Monee. The Siberian Husky Club of Greater Chicago is once again partnering with the District to highlight the sport of “mushing,” or dog sled racing. Come learn about Siberian huskies, the Iditarod and the sport of mushing. You will then get to see these highly trained dogs in action during dog run demonstrations held throughout the program. And there’s more! Take part in a “human mushing” activity and snowshoe races. Have your picture taken with a sled dog, watch an ice sculpture take shape, make s’mores over a campfire and enjoy hot food and treats that JAN will be available for purchase. Come inside a warming tent to thaw out from the cold. Here you can talk to a husky rescue group and pet a husky puppy. “Musher Mania” will be presented with or without snow cover on uneven, natural terrain. In the event of no snow, mushing demonstrations will be provided with wheeled sleds. Please leave your own dogs at home. Embrace the winter by attending one of the District’s most popular annual programs. Your children will be talking about their adventure for days afterward. n 10 Music at McKinley continued from page 6 The three-piece cover band played classics from the birth of rock ’n’ roll, and delivered three hours of ’50s favorites from such artists as Chuck Berry, Johnny Cash, Buddy Holly, Carl Perkins and, of course, “the King” Elvis Presley. This year’s concert concluded with a fireworks show. For 20 minutes, bombs exploded in air producing a myriad of reds, greens and whites which danced across the night sky in a dazzling display over the preserve. The idyllic setting – the pavilion surrounded by towering trees, with the Des Plaines River flowing by – is a special attraction of “Music at McKinley.” The magnificent venue certainly plays a role in the program’s year-by-year growth in attendance. So, too, is the free admission. Assisted by the program’s sponsors, all of this nighttime entertainment drew families of grandparents, parents and children to enjoy themselves without cost. For the past two years, Frank and Karen Norem of Joliet rode their bikes along the I&M Canal State Trail from their home in Joliet so they could tour “Music at McKinley’s” car show. But this year they drove so they could stay past sunset for the music. Frank said when he heard there would be “rockabilly” tunes, “I said, ‘I have to go to that!’” Jay and Sylvia Smeets of Shorewood attended the event for the first time this year. 14 Forest Preserve District of Will County “We’re here just to enjoy something different, something new and the weather on a beautiful night,” Sylvia said as she strolled through the car show with her husband. JULIE, Inc. was the concert and car show’s title sponsor. Others who generously supported “Music at McKinley” were Bill Jacobs Auto Group; BMO Harris Bank; Enbridge Energy; CITGO Lemont Refinery; Saratoga Food Specialties; CARCARE Collision Centers; Exelon Generation; ExxonMobil Pipeline; TransCanada; Canadian National Railway Company; Dollinger Family Farm; Darryl A. Dupre, Inc.; I-55 Auto Salvage; Physicians Immediate Care; Providence Bank; AT&T; Kavanagh Grumley & Gorbold, LLC; Integrity Restoration, Inc.; Voyager Media; Wight and Company; Elite Rehabilitation Institute; and Three Rivers Construction Alliance. n The Citizen - Fall 2014 Volunteer Spotlight ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– “A civilization flourishes when people plant trees under whose shade they will never sit.” – Greek Proverb ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– A concern for the environment brings many volunteers, staff and other supporters to the Forest Preserve District, and that is especially true of this edition’s “Volunteer Spotlight.” Richard Wachenheim came to the District more that 20 years ago with a passion for education and the preservation of natural areas. His entire career and much of his personal time have been devoted to being a steward of the Earth. Wachenheim was employed as a crew leader in the District’s Natural Resource Management section. He also served as a volunteer liaison for the District’s public and corporate workdays, Eagle Scout projects and group projects. He received the District’s Lifetime Achievement Award in April 2014, and retired from the Forest Preserve in June. While Wachenheim could have retired to pursue personal goals, he instead filled out a volunteer Richard Wachenheim application with the District and went through the interview and orientation process. When asked why he wanted to volunteer, he replied that the answer was simple: He wanted to ensure that his more than 20 years of work continues. With the same determination that propelled him to effectively manage the Forest Preserve’s Resource Management volunteers, Wachenheim as a volunteer himself will undoubtedly continue to assist the District as a Regional Steward. He already has spent many hours as the volunteer steward at Alessio Prairie, Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve, Whalon Lake, Kankakee Sands Preserve, Isle a la Cache and sections of Old Plank Road Trail. He also volunteers at select Resource Management workdays. For more information on the Forest Preserve’s volunteer program, call 815.722.7364. n Volunteer at National Public Lands Day National Public Lands Day (NPLD) provides an opportunity for volunteers to join together across the nation and work towards the common goal of improving our public lands. NPLD began in 1994 with three federal agencies and 700 volunteers. This year, approximately 120,000 volunteers are anticipated to volunteer to improve 1,500 public land sites – federal, state, city and county lands – in all 50 states of the nation. All who participate in NPLD build upon the magnificent and lasting Resource Management Workdays Feel the crisp autumn air. Fall is upon us. Before the weather changes and winter beckons, enjoy a few more hours outdoors at a Resource Management Workday. Volunteers at these workdays assist the Forest Preserve to preserve and maintain Will County’s natural areas. They also have an opportunity to meet some of the most caring people who believe strongly in investing time and energy in preserving some of the most beautiful ecosystems in the area. Resource Management Workdays are held on Saturdays and Sundays from 8 a.m.-noon. A District representative is at each workday to coordinate the day’s activities. Tools, gloves and water are provided. Please dress for the weather. You may also want to pack a snack. Groups of 10 or more will want to register by calling 708.479.2255. This ensures that there are enough tools for everyone to participate. Workdays include brush cutting and removal. n Sunday, October 5 Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Junction (Mokena) Saturday, October 18 Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Barrens (New Lenox) Sunday, October 26 Joliet Junior College (Joliet) Sunday, November 16 Kankakee Sands Preserve – Shenk Grove (Braidwood) Other Upcoming Volunteer Opportunities Interested in assisting with District events? Volunteers are needed for the following opportunities: Saturday, October 4 Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Barrens (New Lenox) Noon-4 p.m. Whalon Lake (Naperville) 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, November 29 Hickory Creek Preserve – Brightway Lane (Mokena) Saturday, December 13 Kankakee Sands Preserve – Shenk Grove (Braidwood) Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Junction (Mokena) ReconnectWithNature.org seeds will be planted in areas where the brush has been cleared at the workday. The amount of seed that is collected during an event such as this is equal to a month’s worth of weekends for the District’s Resource Management staff to collect! “When people leave the workday, we hope that they will understand the value of restoration management,” said Renee Gauchat, the Forest Preserve’s volunteer supervisor. Participants will meet in the parking lot of Isle a la Cache Museum, located at 501 E. 135th Street (Romeo Road), 0.5 mile east of Route 53, in Romeoville. All work tools will be provided. Volunteers should bring leather palm work gloves and a sack lunch. A guided hike will follow the day’s activities. For more information and to RSVP, call 815.722.7364 or e-mail [email protected]. n Saturday, October 25 Howloween Hoopla Saturday, November 22 Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Junction (Mokena) Sunday, December 14 legacy of the Civilian Conservation Corps to improve publicly held lands for the greater enjoyment and enrichment of all Americans. NPLD worksites can involve all sorts of activities including planting trees and flowers, building or repairing trails and bridges, removing invasive plants, collecting native seeds, improving wildlife habitat, restoring shorelines, installing bird boxes, stabilizing stream banks, painting picnic tables, and more. Volunteers can assist the Forest Preserve District of Will County at this year’s NPLD, to be held Saturday, September 27. Work will be performed at Isle a la Cache Museum and Romeoville Prairie Nature Preserve, both located in Romeoville. The workday will last from 8 a.m.-noon. Volunteers are needed to cut and stack non-native shrubs and to collect native grass and forb seed at the two preserves. Collected Saturday, January 10, 2015 Musher Mania Monee Reservoir (Monee) Noon-4 p.m. Call 815.722.7364 or e-mail [email protected] to start the volunteer process. n Forest Preserve District of Will County 15 Board of Commissioners PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE Forest Preserve District of Will County Mike Fricilone Kenneth E. Harris Suzanne Hart Robert Howard David A. Izzo Charles E. Maher Margo McDermed Donald A. Moran Walter G. Adamic Steve Balich Darren Bennefield Reed Bible Herbert Brooks, Jr. Liz Collins Mark Ferry Ragan Freitag PAID James G. Moustis Elizabeth J. Rice Jacqueline Traynere Tom Weigel Denise E. Winfrey Diane Zigrossi Donald Gould – President Joseph M. Babich – Vice President Stephen M. Wilhelmi – Treasurer Judy Ogalla – Secretary Marcella M. DeMauro – Executive Director JOLIET, ILLINOIS PERMIT NO. 168 17540 W. Laraway Road Joliet, Illinois 60433 Address Service Requested The Citizen is published quarterly by the Forest Preserve District of Will County. To receive this free publication, call 815.727.8700. Photo credits: Alan Bulava, Cindy Cain, Joel Craig, Barb Ferry, Karen Fonte, ForestWander, Lyndsey Harn, Kessner Photography, Laura Kiran, Jim Kloss, Glenn P. Knoblock, Lynn Kurczewski, Ron Molk, Adam Oestmann, Bridgette O’Halloran, Judith Wallace, Joe Wittenkeller ReconnectWithNature.org OCT 04 PREREGISTER NOW Saturday, October 4 Noon-4 p.m. Hickory Creek Preserve – Hickory Creek Barrens, New Lenox Pre-register now for “Cruise the Creek Bike Ride and Fest,” a family bike ride hosted by the Forest Preserve District. 16 Forest Preserve District of Will County This all-ages, family program is free of charge. • Children’s Activities • 6-mile Bike Ride • Petting Zoo •Music • Pumpkin Painting •Inflatables • Food for Purchase •S’mores The paved trail runs through terrain that includes scenic woodlands, wetlands and prairie, and consists of some sidewalks and hilly terrain. All riders should have their own bike, and are urged to wear safety helmets and to bring drinking water. To pre-register, visit ReconnectWithNature.org or call 815.727.8700. Hickory Creek Barrens is located on Schoolhouse Road, just north of Route 30, in New Lenox. n The Citizen - Fall 2014