Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Earth Day 2012: Stewardship Saturday at Tryon Creek

Thanks to Comcast volunteers for their stewardship efforts at Tryon Creek!


Start 'em young!
Ivy vines, you've been warned.
We love this young lady's stewardship ethic!
Thanks to volunteer efforts, these vines are no longer a threat to the trees of Tryon Creek
Three cheers for the Oregon Buddhist Temple Dharma School for their wonderful help!
We can't think of a better way to celebrate Earth Day than caring for Mother Earth

Volunteers make things happen at Tryon Creek. Saturday's "Spring into Action" work party in honor of Earth Day 2012 was no exception. Volunteers from Lewis and Clark College, Oregon Buddhist Temple Dharma School, and Comcast hit the ground running and removed a significant amount of ivy. Their energy and enthusiasm for caring for the forest was inspiring and was a great example of the good that can be accomplished when people work together.

Photo credit: Micheal Beard, Carol Gilden and Sarah Kreisman

(Visit www.tryonfriends.org to learn more about the Friends of Tryon Creek Stewardship Saturdays and volunteer programs.)

Thursday, April 19, 2012

"A Celebration of Crows"

Every year the Friends of Tryon Creek host a family event on Earth Day following an award ceremony for the winners of our Tall Tale Writing Contest. This year, the event theme is "A Celebration of Crows".

Why crows? They make frequent and familiar appearances in the English language in phrases such as crow's nest, as the crow flies, eat crow, and to crow about something. Crows are common in our global mythology and symbolize creation, death, the sacred, bad omens, lightness, darkness, cunning, trickery... the list is long and varied. Crows are fascinating and have captured our collective imagination for millenia.

Members of the corvid family, crows are prolific and found on every continent except New Zealand, Antarctica and South America. They produce a wide variety of sounds and are known to mimic noises made by other animals, including birds. They are predators and scavengers and prefer to eat on the ground. They are not picky - they will eat almost anything - but their typical diet includes worms and insects, seeds and fruit, garbage and carrion, and small animals and chicks they rob from nests. They are also family-oriented and live in mated pairs that form large families of up to fifteen individuals. Offspring typically remain with the family to help raise new nestlings.

Inspired by the crow's mystique, as well as its inquisitive and clever nature, the Friends of Tryon Creek have lined up a series of engaging and challenging family activities that will test your cleverness IQ to find out if you are as resourceful and sharp as our resident corvid. Join us at "A Celebration of Crows", a free, fun, family event, on April 22nd, at Tryon Creek State Natural Area, from 2 - 4 p.m. Pre-registration is appreciated: http://www.tryonfriends.org/programs/calendar-listings/icalrepeat.detail/2012/04/22/843/-/a-celebration-of-crows.html

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Celebrating spring and community at the 32nd Annual Trillium Festival

The Friends of Tryon Creek, in partnership with OPRD, kick off spring each year with the Trillium Festival and Native and Hardy Plant Sale. Now in its 32nd year, the festival and plant sale takes place the weekend before Easter. This year, the event landed on March 31st and April 1st.

Festival goers from around the region (and a number from out of state) paid homage to the beauty of the forest, enjoyed the happenings (an amazing plant sale, garden art, craft and edibles artisans, live music, guided hikes, children's nature activities... the list goes on and on), and celebrated the joie de vivre that comes from spending time with one's community in a natural space.

Many thanks to everyone who came to Tryon Creek and made the Trillium Festival a lovely experience for all.
Color blooms at the Native and Hardy Plant Sale

Families enjoy nature activities in the classroom

Good clean fun (with a little dirt thrown in for good measure)!

A stroll in the forest

OPRD's Park Ranger Heather Durham shares information with the public

Belinda Underwood plays her lovely music

A big round of applause to festival sponsor Clif Kids! (Thanks also to the events' other sponsors: The Standard, REI, BES and the Oregonian)

An abundance of the Trillium Festival's namesake flower at the plant sale 

Visitors peruse the Spring Artisan Market

Friends Volunteer Bruce Rottink leads a guided nature hike

Many thanks to community partner PGE who shared great information about sustainable, renewable energy in our region

Community partner Master Gardeners shared their expertise with the public in the Nature Center