Friday, July 27, 2007

Last 160 acres on Mt Ashwabay

Your help is needed to acquire and protect the last 160 acres on Mt Ashwabay (shown in orange on this map).

Thanks to a Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Fund grant, the last piece of Mt Ashwabay can be protected with your help! Your donation will be matched 1:1 up to $100,000 to purchase this land for wildlife habitat, forestry and Nordic ski trails.

The option top purchase expires at the end of September. 80% of the funds have been raised! The BRC is working with Bayfield County and the Ashwabay Outdoor Educational Foundation to raise the remainder of the match required by the grant.

You may donate on line at our website and read more details here (click on Projects box in lower left corner).

Monday, July 16, 2007

Knotweed Results

Gene Brevold was one of seventeen people who helped cut and remove Knotweed (Elephant Ears)in Bayfield last Thursday. The plant is highly invasive and grows into a huge jungle in just a few months.

The treatment involved cutting the hollow stems and treating with a concentrated glycophosphate herbicide. For details on how to control this non-native plant, see the Homeowner's Guide to Knotweed.

Thanks to all the volunteers who helped with the work and the sponsors: Apostle Islands Realty, National Park Service, Northwoods Cooperative Weed Management Area and Travel Green Wisconsin.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Knotweed Woes

Help control this invasive plant in Bayfield on July 11

9:00 a.m. Morning seminar indoors on Japanese Knotweed and its effect on our landscape and economy

Free lunch for participants thanks to Travel Green Wisconsin Program and area businesses.

1-3:30 p.m. Outdoor field work to remove Japanese Knotweed on the Brownstone Trail and other public lands. Bring loppers and work gloves.

Call to register. Space is limited and registration is required. There is no cost for this event. Please contact Ruth Oppedahl 779-5263 or email ruth@brcland.org to register or for more information.

Monday, July 2, 2007

Big Ravine Trail Improvements


Kenny Dobson is donating 70 yards of clean, sand fill on the Big Ravine Trail section off Martin Road. Those who hike the trail may recognize the huge pond that forms in the spring in the middle of the trail near the intersection fondly remembered as the "Fridge Trail". Luckily the fridge is no longer guarding the water monitoring well, thanks to clean-up work by Tim Hartnett, and now you will be able to walk down the trail instead of skirting way around through the woods.

C&W Trucking will cap the filled area with Brule Blue gravel which packs up nicely. They will also create a swale that will drain the area better. Many thanks to Kenny and to Phil Peterson who grabbed the opportunity of free fill material!