Huyck Preserve And Biological Research Station
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Environmental Defenders LOVE Nature!

11/29/2016

 
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Calling all users of the Huyck Preserve (even those of you who still resit becoming members)! Become a defender of the environment by donating to the Huyck Preserve.

Here's the deal, we are doing awesome things here at the Huyck Preserve making big splashes in the community. This holiday season, we have put a call out to Environmental Defenders for donations to help us continue to protect over 2,000 acres. We are committed to providing green spaces for wildlife and access to all those looking to connect with nature. If you are reading this blog, you are likely familiar with all the Huyck Preserve offers, but if you are still looking for concrete reasons why protecting the Huyck Preserve is important, read on below:

First, we have 12 miles of well-maintained trails. These trails, dare I say it... yes, I will... are the best trails in the Capital Region if not the state or the northeast. If you can find a better trail, please let me know. I will go find it, hike it, grumble about being slapped in the face by trees, spend twenty minutes looking at a map because I lost the trail markers (yes, I am that person), and probably nit pick every time I have to clamor over a tree or get my feet wet. Oh sure, there is a time an place for roughin' it, but here is where you come when you want to commune with nature and not channel your inner Bear Grylls. I am talking about a space where you can hear birds singing and see woodland creatures with out the backdrop of concrete.   The Huyck Preserve is a place where you look up in the summer and and it's green and in the winter a frosty white with no roads or cars to be seen or heard. Thus, when you come to the Huyck Preserve you can let go of all your worries, act like a kid, "oooh" at the wildlife, and just relax. Of course, there are some, who are not the relaxing kind, and I direct those curious visitors to our other programming. Dying to know about mushrooms? We have a hike for that. Thinking of living off (your own) land? Hike for that. What about if you are just into woodworking and suddenly think, "You know, I should know more about trees"? Hike for that too. I'm just saying, we have a lot of hikes throughout the year. I find myself wandering the icy cold trails at night during full moons in the winter.  Who will be joining me on January 13 and February 11 for our next two night hikes? RSVP below.

Second, we are all about connecting children to nature. I have been accused of being education-centric. In reality, kids in the wild catching crayfish or just exploring make for fantastic pictures. Not only is breathtaking nature in the frame but you also get curious and gleeful faces. In the office, we naturally gravitate towards those memories when we make photo-collages documenting the year. Pictures aside, our education programs are super cool. We pride ourselves on making education at the Huyck Preserve learning-oriented. Yes, just exploring is fun but it is so much more meaningful when found salamanders are assigned names and students are able to learn a bit about their biology. And kids want to know why salamanders are moist and sticky, why you are more likely to find them under rocks and logs, and what they eat. They are amazed to discover these tiny little creatures are able to return to the same rock in the forest even if you move them several meters away. Our school field trip programs are especially important as supplementation to science programming in the classroom. We work directly with teachers to offer field trips that build upon classroom lessons so that ideas like conservation, preservation, and stewardship can become a reality.  

Third, we educate more than kids here at the Huyck Preserve. At our core is the Huyck Preserve's research station and our research program. We not only do our part to monitor some of the invasive species moving into the area but we also support field-based research studies conducted by researchers from around the world. To visiting researchers we offer a base of operations including avenues for sharing ongoing research with the public. Every summer we present a slate of new research talks as part of our Thursday Night Lecture series and Science Symposium. Some of these speakers present on work happening at the Preserve. Just this year our series included a presentations by a SUNY Cobleskill group investigating our Preserve as a reintroduction site for a locally extinct burying beetle. Other researchers, like this year's Science Symposium's keynote on infectious diseases, have been invited to share their cutting-edge work first-hand with the Huyck community. 

Finally, for those who really are, just into saving the wild. I present to you a slide show of the Rensselaerville Falls across time and seasons. In these dramatic photos take a moment to see how much the falls have changed over the years. Note how the forest has grown in around the falls creating the lush green we see today. It is the continued support of people like you that has allowed nature to reclaim the Rensselaerville Falls so that they may be enjoyed in their true glory fall, winter, spring, and summer. If you love the falls, be and Environmental Defender, and donate to the Huyck Preserve today.

As always, can't wait to see you out on the trails,
Dawn


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Contact

Address:
P.O. Box 189
5052 Delaware Turnpike
Rensselaerville, NY 12147
Phone:
(518) 797-3440
Email:
info@huyckpreserve.org
Donate

Stay Connected!


All pictures copyright Huyck Preserve unless otherwise noted.
  • Home
  • About
    • Visit
    • Facilities
    • Our History
    • Board of Directors >
      • Board of Directors Policies
      • Board of Directors Manual
    • Preserve Staff
    • Strategic Plan & Financials
    • Newsletter archive
    • Wish List
  • Conservation
    • Stewardship and Management Plan
    • Species Lists
    • Ecological Monitoring and Management Alliance (EMMA)
  • Education
    • School Programs
    • Summer Programs
    • Homeschool Program
    • Science Videos
  • Research
    • A Field Guide To A Field Station
    • Conducting Research at the Huyck Preserve
    • Staying at the Field Station
    • Huyck Research Grants
    • Odum Internship
    • Scientific Advisory Board
    • Papers & Research Reports
  • Recreation
    • Hiking
    • Lake Myosotis
    • Winter Sports
  • Get Involved
    • Join Our Mailing List
    • Upcoming Events
    • Become a Member
    • Volunteer
    • Citizen Science - Phenology Trail
    • Employment
  • Donate
    • Annual Appeal