Showing posts with label Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Awards. Show all posts

Thursday, July 6, 2017

The LEAP Nomination Deadline is Fast Approaching!

You’ve driven by it...a yard that stands out! For good reasons! A yard that says, “We care about what happens downstream”.

It could be a yard that provides superb habitat for those butterflies, bees and critters that need nesting areas, food and forage.

Or perhaps it’s a property, maybe at a school, church or business that uses good ecological practices to manage stormwater.

Or maybe it’s your neighbor who you’d like to nominate.

We love to recognize the good efforts of citizens in our Watershed.

Time is short! Send us your recommendations for our 2017 Landscape Ecology Award Program NOW. Nominations are due July 15.


Please send us your recommended site(s) by emailing the addresses to Deb Barnes at deb.barnes@rwmwd.org If you have a contact name, email address or phone number for the property, please include that information.

The Landscape Ecology Awards Program recognizes landowners in the Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District, including private residences as well as public and commercial properties that use good management practices to preserve and improve water quality and natural resources.

The District's volunteer LEAP Team manages this program and conducts all judging.

One of several yards in White Bear Lake that won a 2016 LEAP Award.


























Connie Taillon accepts the award for the City of White Bear Lake
from LEAP members Dana Larson-Ramsay and Mark Gernes.



Landscape Ecology Awards are given annually at our Recognition Dinner in November. 

Visit the LEAP page on the District's website to see past recipients of the program.


Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Sue Fourniea: Champion for Young People and Water

By Randee Edmundson & Sage Passi

Sue Fourniea, St. Paul science teacher, along with Ames Lake colleagues, receive a Watershed Excellence Award for their years of engaging young people in watershed education and protection.

“We decided to do something that would bring our students together, using the geographical community we had in common to learn about the natural environment and the relationship humans have with their natural and neighborhood communities. As we conjured up these ideas of partnering, Jeff said, "and we have a great science teacher who is gonna love this! Her name is Sue Fourniea."  - Randee Edmundson


Sue Fourniea out on the trail at Ames Lake with former
Cleveland special education technology teacher Pam Bloedoorn.
These words shared by Randee Edmundson, science educator and RWMWD Citizen Advisory Commission member, were the beginning of an eight-year, cross-school environmental stewardship of Ames Lake watershed started by Sue, Randee and Jeff Theune, an eighth grade social studies teacher at Cleveland Quality Middle School in 1997. This accolade about Sue, was echoed by Randee Edmundson, who coordinated a “spoken word” performance and slide show with Ames Lake team colleagues during the Watershed District Excellence Awards ceremony last November to honor Sue for her many years of watershed service, collaboration and involvement with St. Paul youth in water and environmental related causes.



Sue gears up for a canoe trip starting at Lake Gervais.
Jerry Webster, a former Audubon volunteer, accompanied them.

Sue, a retired eighth grade science teacher, was presented with a Watershed District Excellence Award in Youth Engagement at the RWMWD Recognition Dinner this past November. Sue retired this past spring after forty years of teaching, twenty-three of the years were with St. Paul Public Schools.


Interdisciplinary Teams Partner with Mounds Park Academy


As a science teacher at Cleveland Middle School for seventeen years, Sue was part of an interdisciplinary team of teachers and students that came together multiple times a year to study and do service learning activities; first about rivers and then about Ames Lake and Phalen Lake on the East Side of St. Paul. In the early years this school teamed up with a private school, Mounds Park Academy, to engage young people in learning about local watershed issues.

 
Sue looks on as her students plant a tree on the edge of the site of Phalen Shopping Center
before the center was torn down for the Ames Lake Restoration in 2000.


 "Sue and I as science teachers wanted the students to come together in small, cross-school teams and do real science investigations that mattered in the community in which they lived. For Jeff, as a social studies teacher, and his wife Regina, a dramatic artist, it meant an opportunity to connect responsibly as citizens to the river we depend on, and to use the arts as a way to develop meaningful, functional relationships between strangers and with people you have preconceptions about in regard to socio-economic status, race, religion, gender or age. These preconceptions, they believed, get in the way of listening and solving mutual problems – maintaining a healthy environment on which all of us depend for survival." - Randee Edmundson describing their partnership


Beginning in the fall of 1997, Cleveland Quality Middle School and Mounds Park Academy based their studies at the Minnesota River. The following year they did a comparative environmental study at St. Anthony Falls on the Mississippi River and Lake Phalen. This earliest partnership involved eighty seventh and eighty graders (forty from each school). By the third year they had evolved into student teams that reflected different ways of thinking about the care and restoration of their neighborhood wetland, Ames Lake. Teams included: Water Quality, Ecology, Art and Design, Influencing Public Policy for Sustainability, and Media and Communications.
 
Cleveland students display the grocery carts they rescued from the bottom of Ames Lake.


Students Research Ames Lake Ecology and Water Quality 
Each year, this hand-selected group of seventh and eighth grade teams collected water samples at Ames Lake, Phalen Lake and the Phalen Wetland and compared their results. Sue and Randee led the Ecology and Water Quality teams respectively. Students did bio-monitoring, studied the restored wetland’s ecology and brought back macroinvertebrates to identify and classify in order to determine the water quality of their local water bodies. They shot photos cataloguing the native plants, created displays and kept records of their data for many years.
 
“Sue is the kind of lady to keep you on your toes. I wanted to learn from her since I heard of her when I was in the seventh grade. She was academically tough for a reason and preparing us for college. She expected nothing less. A proud physical feature of her was her height which was measurable to many of her Hmong students. Sue Fourniea was why her students focused on academics, because she cared. Outspoken, committed and brilliant - she is part of the foundation to my fortress.”  - A quote from one of Sue's students

Sue helps her science students identify macroinvertebrates.


"The Ames Lake project has allowed me to teach the way that works best for me and for our students. Our students need self-confidence, a reason to be in school, to resolve differences and negotiate with all people. They feel that they have a hand in making an impact on helping their neighborhood environment become a better place."  - Sue Fourniea   


A Shopping Center Transformed Back to Ames Lake

Cleveland students plant prairie plugs in the upland area around Ames Lake in 2000.


The ecology team studied the diverse plants in the Ames Lake restoration for many years.


Sue could be academically challenging, but she also used her sense of humor to engage students in learning. Here’s a poem she wrote about herself in order to share some vocabulary words about the macroinvertebrates that live in Ames Lake.

 
Sue's Sue-ism









T

Getting to Know the Neighborhood

The Ames Lake teams did a yearly round robin tour, interviewing and getting acquainted with community leaders in the east St. Paul neighborhood including district council representatives, community organizers, city staff and elders who lived in a high rise apartment complex across from Ames Lake.

The Influencing Public Policy for Sustainability
teams led outreach and educational and arts activities in the community. All Cleveland student teams also participated in the restoration of the wetland and prairie habitats around Ames Lake in 2000.
Karen Swenson, Eastside Neighborhood Development
Corporation, explains why the neighborhood decided to tear
down the Phalen Shopping Center and restore Ames Lake.
 

Chuck Repke, Executive Director of District 2
Community Council, brainstorms with Cleveland students.
 
Aloun Phoulavan , Cleveland art teacher reflected on their collaboration.
"I remember the trash piles! Oh, the things we used to find. Thanks, Sue, for adding garbage collector and conservationist to all of our resumes. Sue was really driven and had such vision. Every time I have the opportunity to drive or bike by Ames Lake I think of her determination and I hope the students who participated still feel pride in the beauty of what they all accomplished."
 
Sue Fourniea and students from her water quality team display their trash collected at Ames Lake.





 
 A Symbol Emerges


Alloun's students preparing the mold of the heron sculpture casted by local artists. This project reflected the creative teamwork of artists and the community.

Cleveland art teacher Alloun Poulavan led the Art and Design teams. These students worked with the community to create a sculpture at Ames Lake that would reflect both nature and the neighborhood. After three years of prototypes, fundraising and negotiations, all stakeholders agreed on one of the student prototypes. A brass heron sculpture is installed by the shore of Ames Lake near Phalen Boulevard with this stone inscription.

This Great Blue Heron sculpture, created by students at Cleveland Junior High School, is our gift to Ames Lake Neighborhood. May it inspire environmental consciousness in the community, a sense of ownership and appreciation of our wetlands.






After the brass heron was complete, students held a community dedication ceremony and installed the sculpture on the edge of the Ames Lake wetland.








"$500,000 to Realize Our Dreams"

During the recognition dinner, Randee recalled the next phase of the project Sue was advocating,

The next three years we had $500,000 to realize the dreams we imagined - multiple partners including dramatic artist specialist, technology specialist, Harding High School, Cleveland Quality Middle School who would do the Ames Lake Project by designing actions and projects to address neighborhood needs. Then we would add another grade level to the process at B. C. Elementary to raise the younger students to learn the foundation of ecology and living systems at Belwin. Each year the new students built on what was learned and created by the students the year before.
“In the fourth year of the All-Ames Lake Partnership, Sue came to me and said 'We’ve got to write this Federal Environmental Magnet grant proposal offered through SPPS.' Together we got our teachers and principals to generate their parts needed and we submitted a proposal. The next three years we had $500,000 to realize the dreams we imagined - multiple partners including a dramatic artist specialist, a technology specialist, Harding High School, and Cleveland Quality Middle School who would do the Ames Lake Project by designing actions and projects to address neighborhood needs and adding another grade level to the process at Battle Creek Elementary, to raise the younger students to learn the foundation of ecology and living systems at Belwin. Each year the new students built on what was learned and created by the students the year before. " - Randee Edmundson


Jill Danner





Jill Danner, RWMWD Citizen Advisory Commission member and retired teaching assistant at Harding High School, recounted one of her fond memories of the project during the Recognition Dinner. She credits Sue's creativity and fun-loving personality in making the Ames Lake project successful.








“Sue was always willing to support whatever crazy idea Randee, Steve and I came up with. Sending teams made up of one high school student, one middle school student and one elementary student into the woods in February to start a fire sounded like a great idea. It was so fun we did it two years. Sue has been a great supporter. She is fun to be around." - Jill Danner

Liz McCambridge

"Sue was my Rock"

Liz McCambridge, social studies teacher at Cleveland Quality Middle School, led the Influencing Public Policy for Sustainability Ames Lake Teams.

Liz shared her thoughts,

“I have had the most rewarding, inspiring, fun years in my twenty years of teaching and being a team leader in the Ames Lake Project. The students have been motivated, awesome learners who have taught me more than I have taught them. And you, Sue, were the glue that held it all together. You were my rock. By-the-way, we were asked what word comes to mind when we think of you and that would be "honorable."








Dramatic Artist Jayy Dubb Joins the Team

When Randee became the coordinator for a new federal grant project, she asked for a recommendation for a dramatic artist from Jeff Theune's wife Regina, an artist who had worked with Cleveland on the first phase of the Ames Lake Project. 

Regina's first recommendation was James Williams (Jayy Dubb) who has a life-long history of working with youth and was instrumental in using dramatic arts in order to change relationships between students, teachers, community partners and nature for the Ames Lake Project.

Sue's water quality team dramatizes their experiences at Ames Lake collecting macroinvertebrates.


Jayy Dubb used theater games to find common ground, be curious about the unknowns in a relationship and take greater risks. His work helped everyone, students and teachers, share productively in the work and to create dramatizations each year that reflected their relationships and experiences in the program. His inspirational words have culminated in the teams' honoring storytelling.


Jayy Dubb coaches teams to help them reflect on their experiences.


Jayy Dubb (aka James Williams) has a long professional history of working in theater. This history includes The Kennedy Center, Off Broadway and Chicago, The Guthrie, The Penumbra, Park Square, Pillsbury House and other theatres in the US and Tanzania. He has used theater arts with incarcerated youth to write, create and perform their own stories in Minneapolis through the Pillsbury House Theater community programs. He has also worked with Minneapolis Washburn High School and St. Paul Central High School Public School Theater. 

Currently, James Williams is playing the part of Gloucester in King Lear at the Guthrie Theater through April 2, 2017. To learn more about Jayy and his theater collaboration, watch for a future article in the Ripple.
"Be alive to the new thing. To work out the next step. That's the ultimate goal. Because then you understand there always is the next thing. That you're never through learning. That you don't know all the facts. You haven't read all the books. You don't know all the stories, because there is a next thing that happens. There is a new thing that can come if you're present in the room, and you're always challenging, and you're looking for the new thing -- the next thing automatically comes." - Jayy Dubb's advice to the Ames Lake Team

And, sure enough, the "new thing" came along for Sue Fourniea.


Accomplishments at Battle Creek Middle School

Sue's science students marched in the WaterFest Parade at Lake Phalen.

When Cleveland Middle School changed identity and became the upper campus of Farnsworth Aerospace, Sue and many of the teachers, moved on to other schools. Sue went to Battle Creek Middle School where she proved to be a powerhouse for Watershed District projects over the next eight years. 

At Battle Creek, Sue’s classes helped prepare for a Watershed District creek erosion project by cutting large quantities of buckthorn which were used to create brush bundles and then installed on a stretch of the creek, along with other native plugs in order to slow erosion.



 






Here Battle Creek Middle School students trim buckthorn growing alongside the creek.













Sue supervised students trimming buckthorn that would be used to create brush bundles for an erosion project.












Simba Blood, RWMWD Natural Resources Technician, helped students assemble buckthorn bundles. Sue filmed the process.















Battle Creek students worked with the Watershed District to install plugs with the brush bundles they created.











This Wasn’t the Only Project her Students Tackled

Students recruited a neighborhood homeowner and worked with her to build a rain garden in her yard. 

In later years, Sue's classes partnered with other science classes to construct two more rain gardens with residents in the neighborhood. In the spring her students crossed the bridge over the creek, performed site assessments on the property, then returned to excavate, build berms (some with rock walls) and plant these intensive projects. 

Her students also helped install shrubs and native grasses and forbs in front of the school.
 

 





Battle Creek students removed sod in a nearby residence in preparation for the construction of a rain garden.














These rain garden projects involved a lot of soil moving. Teamwork with many classes was necessary.













The final product was a rain garden that captured driveway runoff in order to protect Battle Creek's water.











Each fall Sue brought her classes to Battle Creek to do stream monitoring.

For the past two years her classes have also done storm drain stenciling in the neighborhood. 




Sue has a propensity for involving other science teachers and classes into projects and helping to grow the program at Battle Creek Middle School. The school is adjacent to Battle Creek and opportunities for engaging students continues to evolve.






Sue demonstrates the use of a Secchi Disk to measure Battle Creek's water transparency.

















Battle Creek eighth grade science students identify the macroinvertebrates that are
living in Battle Creek.



















Sue involved other classrooms into the creek bank erosion project.

Here students pound in live willow and red osier dogwood stakes as a way to help stabilize the bank.








Sue's Students Take on Global Issues

In addition to local efforts on water-based issues, during the 2011-2012 school year, Sue’s students took on a global issue by participating in Women and Water, a collaboration that culminated in a large-scale cultural event at the Regis Center for the Arts at the University of Minnesota along with multiple schools in the spring of 2012. Sue’s students worked with spoken-word poet and teaching artist, Tou Saiko Lee, to write and perform poems in response to serious issues about lack of clean water on a global level. 

Amanda was a student at Cleveland Middle School and a member of the Influencing Public Policy for Sustainability Ames Lake Team. She presented her poem and was part of a student panel at the National Science Teachers Association Conference in 2003.
 

Amanda's Poem
 The neighborhood, that’s what’s important to me
And what I want to do is influence policy.
I have fun while I work, I work in my group
To keep the ‘hood clean, we work as a troop.
Community builds when you care for a place
You work with your friends and you work face to face…
There is happiness, love, there is friendship, and trust.
Yes, community builds and it’s worth any fuss.
Of course, there’s the water…it’s our life… understand!
It controls what we do, so saving it’s grand!
The adults who are here must know how much they need
To lead kids to the water, and then let the kids lead…
For kids do what’s right, when the way is made plain
They will care for the land, plants, water and grain.
You must care for the land, if you care for yourself
You must get out and work, not stay on a shelf.
For you are the future, and your work will show!
It will keep the land safe it will help all things grow…
Keep up all your effort, keep it up with your might!
When you fight for the land, you are doing what’s right!
 
----------

Thank you to Sue for your incredible efforts at empowering youth to care about their environment!

 

 

Monday, January 30, 2017

Honoring Linda Neilson and the Ramsey County Master Gardeners

By Sage Passi

Linda Neilson receives the Citizen Engagement Award from Sage Passi at the Recognition Dinner.

 
The Citizen Engagement Award, presented to Linda Neilson, Ramsey County Master Gardener, at RWMWD’s 2016 Recognition Dinner in November, like many of our Watershed Excellence Awards given to incredible people, programs and entities, is long overdue. This award recognizes an individual or organization that effectively facilitates citizen participation efforts to improve and protect water quality. Since 2005, the Ramsey County Master Gardener program has engaged a large group of volunteers in supporting the watershed in a myriad of different water and habitat improvement, education and stewardship projects.

 


Master Gardeners Rose Cherlin, Cees Duijndam, Linda Neilson and
Mary Knuth-Kedrowski gear up for seed-planting season at Farnsworth.


Linda Neilson and Master Gardeners have a Decade of Partnership with the District

For over ten years, Linda Neilson and the Master Gardeners have played a pivotal role in helping to establish and build this partnership. Linda's vision, dedication, knowledge, tenacity, attention to detail and commitment have helped shape this remarkable collaboration. She has gone far above being a typical volunteer by promoting and supporting watershed education, planning for and making projects happen, and helping train and engage a robust group of individuals. Her networking and teambuilding skills have resulted in increasing watershed awareness and the development of solid and growing volunteer and citizen involvement in the communities in the Watershed District.
 
 
Linda instructs Battle Creek Middle School science students
in sod removal at their residential rain garden project.


Linda and the dedicated efforts and commitment of her cohorts, school program coordinators, Ed Shinbach and Rochelle Robideau, and over sixty volunteers have helped this partnership become a dream-come-true for the Watershed District. Her participation, and that of her colleagues, has made it possible for the District to develop our classroom “greenhouse” operations and teach young people about the use of native plants in protecting water and improving habitats.



Nancy Nygaard helps students transplant seedlings.


Linda and other Master Gardeners have helped us design and install many demonstration residential, school and church rain gardens, implement native habitat projects and helped support our yearly public rain garden workshops.


Kris Baird, Rose Cherlin, Linda Neilson and Jodi Refsland-Wilson work on the design for Children's Discovery Academy butterfly and native shade garden.

Linda and Master Gardeners have also supported our shoreline and habitat restorations at Lake Phalen, Keller Lake, Phalen Golf Course, Keller Creek, Battle Creek, Casey Lake and Southwood Nature Preserve. These projects have brought beauty, biodiversity and water quality improvement to our community. They have also raised the public's awareness of how they too can increase biodiversity and improve water quality and pollinator habitats.


Laurie Holmberg assists students in planting along the Keller Lake shoreline.



Linda is extremely generous with her time and creative in finding resources

Each holiday season she brings bags of delicious homemade caramels for the staff and Citizen Advisory Commission members to enjoy. She has gifted us with a fancy new edger perfectly adapted to rain garden plantings and watering wands. Linda also brings us newspaper clippings, informational handouts and much more.


"How many shovels full of dirt do you need to remove in order to build a rain garden?"
- Linda Neilson


Linda is an Avid Nurturer and a Strategist

She has an eye on both the present and the future and able to see the connections between people and their community. She is good at grasping what people need to learn and understand, finding ways they can work together, expanding what they can accomplish, determining what it takes to involve them, and then developing plans to mobilize them and build on their capacity. Linda's vision has become the way of doing business with the Master Gardener Program and we are eternally grateful for all their assistance!


Master Gardeners review how to assess rain garden sites
and do infiltration tests.

What began as a small operation has grown greatly over the years. With the help of Master Gardeners we have been able to provide assistance for both small and large-scale projects in the community.


Merlin Schlicting assists Weaver fifth graders in planting their Clean Water rain garden in one of our large-scale projects.
 
Linda's Early Commitment to Water and Environmental Education

Linda began as a Master Gardener in 2005. Just one year after her internship was complete she signed up to be a school coordinator for the Ramsey County Master Gardener program. Together, Linda and other enthusiastic Master Gardener volunteers, including school co-coordinator Rochelle Robideau (right), teachers and students, working with the Watershed District were able to build momentum and start our first school yard habitat restoration project on American Indian Magnet’s school ground. At the time, this was a large-scale school undertaking for us. But it wasn't long before Master Gardeners were signing up for our next projects.


School Coordinator Rochelle Robideau teamed up with Linda and
other Master Gardeners to help American Indian Magnet School
construct a large-scale prairie garden on their school grounds.


Soon after this first school yard habitat restoration project, others schools wanted to participate, including St. Peter Catholic and L'Etoile du Nord Schools.


Ed Shinbach helped mobilize students to build a rain garden
after the school completed this large-scale hillside restoration at L'Etoile du Nord.
 
Many habitat and rain garden projects were accomplished simultaneously with team support at schools in our District. We were learning together and building a growing enthusiasm and concern for water.

Learning to Teach Kids and Adults the Steps of Rain Garden Design and Construction 

Integral in that process were site assessments, exploring types of soil conditions and measuring infiltration rates. Rain gardens became king-of-the-hill in our public outreach. With no one around during the summer and so many school projects to maintain, we learned it was more practical to take our school rain garden operation offsite to residences where homeowners could take care of their own gardens.


Master Gardeners tour some of the smaller rain gardens built by
students and homeowners with Master Gardeners support.

 
These "practice rounds" ushered in an era of demonstration rain gardens at private residences around the District. Linda worked with us to develop a hands-on training process for both Master Gardeners and homeowners. From here we developed our rain garden training series, “Stopping Water Where it Drops”. These public workshops evolved into a partnership with Maplewood Nature Center and with sustained support by Master Gardener volunteers who helped homeowners start designs for their projects.
 

Linda Has Empowered Youth to Take on the Battle with Buckthorn

Another intensive project that Linda and Master Gardeners worked on with middle school students was buckthorn removal along Battle Creek. The buckthorn in the woods adjacent to Battle Creek School was out of control. What could they do about this tenacious problem? They focused on reducing the spread of this invasive species in targeted areas and then used the harvested buckthorn for a shoreline restoration project with the guidance of the Watershed District's natural resources staff.


"The Master Gardener posse readies weapons for buckthorn destruction."
- Linda Neilson

Buckthorn buster, Linda Neilson, on duty!


Planting through erosion fabric along Battle Creek requires serious concentration.


Master Gardeners Return to Engage with New and Ongoing Projects

Master Gardener interns try our projects early on and then often return to work with us when they are official Master Gardeners.

Over sixty volunteers have worked on projects designed to engage youth and residents in projects hat infiltrate rain water, stop erosion, remove invasive plants, restore habitats and shorelines, enhance pollinator habitats, enhance or create demonstration native plantings and gardens, educate citizens, increase the community’s awareness and openness to BMPs and provide education at WaterFest and other Watershed events.


Left: Jan House helps do setup for a school shoreline planting along Keller Creek.
Right: Nancy Nygaard checks to make sure plants are securely planted in the ground.
 
Linda has Expanded her Work to Become a Master Water Steward

In order to carry on with her advocacy and hands-on involvement in the community with watershed-related outreach and in-the-ground projects, Linda completed the Master Water Steward Training in 2016. She helped initiate and support an infiltration capstone project in the Bennett Lake Subwatershed in Roseville with another Master Water Steward, Hallie Finucane and hopes to continue engaging residents in that community. Linda remains very active on our Watershed District Citizen Advisory Commission. We look forward to continuing this collaboration!


Linda Neilson advises Roseville resident, Anne Haugan,
about plant choices as part of her Master Water Stewards'
capstone rain garden project.

 
Ramsey County Master Gardeners' Achievements
 in Partnership with RWMWD

An
* indicates projects Linda was involved in and/or took a leadership role.


Church Rain Garden Projects at Nine Sites

Design assistance and/or construction and education for church rain garden projects at First Covenant*, Cross Lutheran*, Our Redeemer Lutheran*, Hope Lutheran, First Hmong Assembly of God, Prince of Peace, Redeeming Love*, Lakeview Lutheran,* and Grace Lutheran*

 
Linda helped create the design for a large section of Cross Lutheran's "mega"
rain garden in Maplewood that infiltrates parking lot runoff. Here she
 measures and paints the zones for different plants that the congregation will install.
 

Formed a church rain garden advisory team in 2013 to assist with Legacy funded projects*

 
 
Roger Hintze divides sedges during Prince of Peace Church's
rain garden installation. Roger played a pivotal role in engaging
his church in this Clean Water stewardship project.
 


Homeowner Education and Assistance 


Developed a training process for Master Gardens for site assessments, rain garden design and construction with mentoring teams*

Provided consultation for residents at the District’s annual 'Stopping Water Where It Drops' rain garden training series*


Assisted Casey Lake residents in their Clean Water Grant rain garden projects in 2014*




Ed Shinbach and Barbara Le Tourneau, Ramsey County Master Gardeners, engaged with a team of  many Master Gardeners who helped Casey Lake neighborhood residents plant their curb-cut rain gardens.



Restoration and Rain Garden Projects Involving Students Since 2005

Assisted classes in the Phalen Shoreline Restoration in 2005-07*, the Casey Lake Restoration, the Battle Creek Shoreline Restoration*, the Keller Shoreline Restoration in 2012-13*, the Keller Golf Course Restoration in 2013-14 and in the Keller Creek restoration project in 2015-16*

 
Master Gardener Donna Andersen assists students with
the Keller Creek shoreline restoration project
.


Assisted students in the Southwood Nature Preserve Prairie Restoration in 2016 and the field day in 2015*


Master Gardener Joe Baltrukonis assists St. Peter fourth graders with a
  native habitat planting at Southwood Nature Preserve in North St. Paul.

Master Gardeners helped students at seven schools grow over 1,200 plants for the project.

Worked with students to assist homeowners in conducting site assessments.*


Ok students ... it's time for some rain garden math.

Worked with homeowners to develop planting designs.*

 
Barbara Brockway consults with homeowners on their rain garden.

Built demonstration rain gardens at eleven neighborhood sites*


Here's a rain garden a couple of years after its creation
by Battle Creek Middle School students and Master Gardeners.

Schoolyard Demonstration Projects

Master Gardeners engaged and helped educate classrooms at eighteen schools while working on watershed projects in the district for the past eleven years. Here are some of their accomplishments on school grounds.


Rochelle Robideau helping students plant seeds




Helped students plant and grow seedlings under the lights at eleven schools for watershed projects for the past eleven years*







Don Vegoe and Betsy McNulty assist Farnsworth
students in planting native shrubs next to their building.





Provided assistance in creating and maintaining schoolyard demonstration projects listed below:



  • Farnsworth Aerospace - Design and creation of native gardens at both campuses*
  • L’Etoile du Nord - Hillside restoration and rain garden*
  • Battle Creek Middle School – Battle Creek Shoreline Restoration and buckthorn removal and schoolyard gardens*
  • Mounds Park Academy - Wetland buffer, rain garden basins, buckthorn removal*
  • American Indian Magnet – Prairie garden design and planting*
  • Harding High - Courtyard garden*
  • Achieve Academy - Rain garden
  • St. Peter School – Design, planting and maintenance of large native garden*
  • Children’s Discovery Academy – Design and planting of butterfly and shade garden*
  • Willow Lane Elementary - Hillside project*
  • Level Up Academy - Demonstration native garden
  • Clean Water Legacy - Rain garden plantings at three schools in District 622; Maplewood Middle School, Weaver and Harmony Learning Center



Donna Andersen admires the completed rain garden at
Weaver Elementary with the fifth graders who helped plant it.


A special thanks to these key Ramsey County Master Gardeners


We especially want to thank and acknowledge three Ramsey County Master Gardeners who play key roles in the Watershed collaborations: Ed Shinbach, Rochelle Robideau and Jamie Aussendorf. 




Ed Shinbach is one of two school coordinators for the Master Gardener Program. Ed recruits and posts all of our volunteer opportunities on 'Sign Up Genius' and is in regular contact with the Watershed District regarding volunteer opportunities.








Rochelle Robideau is the other school coordinator. She has run the school “greenhouse operation” for many years. This operation runs from December to mid-April and includes seed stratification, planting and transplanting with classrooms, supervising and training volunteers, interacting with teachers and students, transporting materials, providing reports and staying in contact with the Watershed District in order to insure everything runs smoothly in twenty-five classrooms. 





Jamie Aussendorf is the Ramsey County Master Gardener Program Volunteer Coordinator who provides program support, communications and encouragement.






The Citizen Engagement Excellence Award is both an individual award for Linda and an appreciation and acknowledgment to the entire Ramsey County Master Gardener Program!

Thank you all! We couldn’t do this without all of you!