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Archive: July, 2009

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Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Camping at Locust Lake (DCNR photo)

Although I haven’t done it for a few years, I love camping. (As in tent camping. Not bringing along a whole trailer-full of energy-sucking amenities.) And seeing as how it’s so green, I just might get back to it. Just think: No hotel room to cool or heat. Evenings by lantern-light. Low-impact activities like hiking, watching the stars and telling outrageous stories. And, for many, NO TV!!! I love the feel of the air, the sound of the wind in the trees, the glow of the moon.

But some camps can be greener than others, and the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources has some thoughts. It is setting up demonstration “green” campsites at state parks this summer. How green do they go? Each has a tent and sleeping bag made from recycled materials, a fuel efficient cooking stove, an LED flashlight, solar charger and reusable batteries, reusable cook set, solar camp shower, non-toxic bug repellent, bear-proof food container, a clothes line and reusable marshmallow sticks.

I can attest to those solar showers. I’ve used them on boats, and they can sure absorb a lot of heat over the course of a sunny day.

Here are more tips from the DCNR:

* Look for a campsite that is already established, more than 200 feet from a water source, and stay off plants as much as possible.
* Use re-usable plates instead of paper.
* Take along re-usable water bottles. If you use commercial bottled water, make sure to recycle the bottles.
* Use biodegradable camp suds for dishes and your body.
* Avoid dumping soapy water on plants because the soap could kill them.
* Recycle aluminum cans because burning them in a campfire will release chemicals that pollute the air.
* Leave in place any plants, fossils, flowers or other things that you find.
* Keep campfires in rings or use a cook stove instead.
* Use local firewood instead of carrying it with you as some unwanted invasive pests might hitch a ride.
* Tie a clothes line from tree to tree; bring along hot dog sticks instead of breaking off tree branches; set your lantern on the table instead of putting a nail in a tree to hang it.
* Do not feed wildlife.
* Dispose of trash properly or take it with you when you leave and recycle it when you get home.

In a fit of pique, I have deleted the DCNR's last tip, which is to be considerate of others when using cell phones. How is THAT "green?" It's just being polite. Skip the cell phone altogether, I say. Give the world a break from blather and yammer.

And here's another tip: Don't bring your own firewood. You may inadvertently transport an invasive insect or plant disease along with it.  

The demonstration locations:
* July 17-20: Cowans Gap State Park, Fulton County
* July 24-27: Ohiopyle State Park, Fayette County
* July 30 - Aug. 3: Laurel Hill State Park, Somerset County
* Aug. 7- 10: Parker Dam State Park, Clearfield County
* Aug. 14- 17: Worlds End State Park, Sullivan County
* Aug. 21-24: Hickory Run State Park, Carbon County
 

Posted by Sandy Bauers @ 4:06 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Thursday, July 2, 2009

There’s more news on the red knot front.

When we last left the subspecies, a good number of those leaving the Delaware Bay in late May had reached optimum body weights, priming them for reproductive success when they reached the Arctic.

I wrote about that development here.

Now, the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network has chimed in with an article that contains more good news.  In the spring, researchers documented a phenomenal feat: “Two individual knots stunned everyone by being seen in Florida by Pat and Doris Leary only 13 days after they were last seen in San Antonio Oeste, Argentina. The straight-line distance (which would involve an undocumented crossing of the Andes) would be about 7,800 kilometers; a more likely coastal route would involve traveling some 10,000 kilometers. This is the first hard evidence that knots move north without significant stopovers and is the result of intensified banding and resighting efforts made at an international scale over recent years.”

Then, on Delaware Bay, “Luís Benegas of Argentina, working with Allan Baker and Patricia González, resighted “B-95,” the same adult red knot he banded in Río Grande, Tierra del Fuego (Argentina), in 1995! B-95 is now at least 17 years old and continues to inspire us—and our supporters!”

But, alas, the news from up north has not been as good.

The Winnipeg Free Press noted last month that winter still gripped the Arctic, and migratory birds were unable to breed. “Prolonged cold snowy conditions in the Hudson Bay area are expected to obliterate the breeding season for migratory birds and most other species of wildlife this year,” the reporter wrote.

“According to Robert Jefferies, professor emeritus of botany at the University of Toronto, the last time there was a late spring in northern Manitoba, in 1983, there was a total reproductive "bust" in lesser snow geese. Most species of birds did not nest at all.”

So, as usual, the plot thickens....
 

Posted by Sandy Bauers @ 2:16 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
About Sandy Bauers
Sandy Bauers is the environment reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where she has worked for more than 20 years as a reporter and editor. She lives in northern Chester County with her husband, two cats, a large vegetable garden and a flock of pet chickens.

GreenSpace - her column about how to reduce your carbon footprint in everyday life - appears every other Monday in Health & Science.