Is your stream getting deeper or wider? Are you losing some of your land every time it rains? Have you wondered why your streambanks are changing so rapidly and what you can do about that?
Join Penn State Extension for the Backyard Stream Repair Series focused on repairing your backyard stream.
Each session will present a step-by-step DIY process for homeowners and landowners. The techniques are meant to be simple and affordable, and the benefits are wide-ranging.
Participants will have the chance to interact live with our experts and ask questions, or can watch recordings at your own pace.
Participants will also receive a complimentary copy of our full-color manual, Simple Solutions for Your Eroding Backyard Stream and secure an invitation to future hands-on field workshops, open only to webinar registrants, which will be offered across Pennsylvania (as in-person events are possible and sites permit).
Who is this for?
-- Landowners with a stream on their property
-- Those interested in streambank repair
What will you learn? Backyard Stream Repair can lead to:
-- Improved bank stability and reduced erosion, saving property from washing away
-- Added aesthetic property value
-- A new sense of place and reduced noise
-- Less cost and need for mowing, watering, and fertilizing
-- Intercepted and reduced water pollution
-- Available habitat for many types of wildlife (butterflies, hummingbirds, frogs, dragonflies, and more)
A variety of professional education credits are available for this webinar series.
The sessions will be held from 2:00 to 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays on August 27 & 29 and September 3, 5 & 10.
Click Here to register and for more information.
For more information on other educational opportunities, visit the Penn State Extension website.
Related Articles - Watersheds:
-- PASA Sustainable Agriculture, Keystone Ten Million Trees Partnership Giving Away 100,000 Trees [PaEN]
-- Penn State Ag Progress Days To Feature 400+ Commercial & Educational Exhibits; Field Demos; Forest Management; Stream Buffers Tour In Centre County Aug. 13-15 [PaEN]
-- PA Organization For Watersheds & Rivers Celebrate Successes Spotlight: Neshaminy Watershed Assn. Is Back And Better Than Ever In Bucks, Montgomery Counties [PaEN]
-- Registration Open! For Acid Mine Drainage Passive Treatment Course Set For Sept. 17-19 In State College [PaEN]
-- Allegheny County Conservation District Releases Updated Development, Stormwater Data; Sept. 24 Workshop On Stormwater Trends [PaEN]
-- Penn State Extension Master Watershed Stewards Now Signing Up Volunteers For Training Sessions [PaEN]
-- What’s The Future Master Watershed Program By Penn State Extension, DCNR? How Can I Start A Group? [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- The Allegheny Front: States Like Pennsylvania Struggling To Access, Spend Federal Funds For Abandoned Mine Cleanup And Redevelopment
--- The Allegheny Front: Chalfant Run In Allegheny County Getting Federal Help To Clean Up Its Abandoned Coal Mine Pollution
-- Centre Daily Times: Plans For 1,000 Acre Ampliform/Project14 Solar Energy Project On Abandoned Mine Lands In Rush Twp., Centre County Move Forward, Questions And Concerns Remain
-- StateImpactPA: PA Waterways Contribute To Chesapeake Bay Earning Its Best Grade In Over 2 Decades In This Year’s Report Card
-- Scranton Times: Chesapeake Bay, Its NE PA Watersheds Of The Susquehanna, Lackawanna Rivers Show Improved Aquatic Health
-- The Daily Item Editorial: Progress Is Certainly Good, But Work Remains In Chesapeake Bay Watershed
-- York Daily Record - Brian Whipkey: Chop And Drop Projects Are Happening Across The State In Wild Trout Waters, Here’s Why
-- Erie Times: NOAA Seeks Advisory Council Members For Proposed Marine Sanctuary In PA Portion Of Lake Erie
[Posted: July 18, 2024] PA Environment Digest
No comments:
Post a Comment