Archive for October, 2006

Creatures of the Bronx River

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Captured Eel
The children shrieked when Brandon Ballengee held up the two-foot eel he had captured in the Bronx River, but when it slipped out of his hands back into a plastic box they wanted him to get it out and show it to them again.

The slippery eel, however, squirmed vigorously, refusing to be gripped once again by human hands. Brandon explained that the mucous covering that makes an eel slippery is a protective coating. If he handled it too much, the mucous would be rubbed off and the eel would die when returned to the river. He also said he was surprised to find an eel that size at Drew Gardens, because they usually kept to the ocean as adults.

Brandon, an environmental educator, had captured the eel in a long, brown net that he and an assistant stretched across the river during one of the series of workshops being sponsored by the Bronx River Art Center. This workshop, conducted Oct. 21 in Drew Gardens, featured studying creatures that live in the Bronx River.

The children learned that the long net Brendon used to capture the eel is called a seine, named after a river in France where it was first used. When he asked what the name of that river could be, he praised the child who guessed correctly that the river in question was the river Seine. Some college students he’d taught didn’t get that answer, he told them.

Earlier, some children had themselves caught baby eels along the river’s edge in small nets. They also scooped up scuds, tiny shrimp-like creatures, and small mollusks. In addition to using nets, children had an opportunity to cast for fish using fishing rods with reels. The rods were baited with worms the children had dug up in the compost heap and in garden beds.

I attended with workshop with my friend Sally, who was visiting me from Buffalo, N.Y. She grew up along a river in Illinois called the Fox River and was digging worms and wading in the river’s shallows from an early age. She enjoyed seeing the delight the children had in working with soil and water, especially how surprised and excited they were to find the worms. Some children had never had the opportunity to hold a worm in their hands before.

A teacher all her life, Sally was impressed with the hands-on educational process of the workshop illustrated by the worm-digging. “By having the children dig for worms in the composted matter, they could see how the compost gets broken down,” she said.

Sally called Brandon “a wonderful educator.” For instance, she was impressed with the careful and respectful way he handled the eel, and the way he explained “mucous” by comparing it to the mucous we all have in our noses and eyes. She liked the way he integrated new vocabulary into his talks, asking the children if they knew the words “predator,” “cannibal” and “carnivore.”

“During the day, I kept seeing what the Bronx must have been when it was farmland. I thought about the work it must have taken to reclaim Drew Gardens from an industrial junkyard to the beautiful little haven it is today. It lifted my heart that Bronx children got a chance to do things that I loved when I was growing up,” she said.

The concluding activity of the day was to have the children document the creatures of the river by drawing pictures of the eel and other creatures they had found. These will be kept at the art center as a basis for comparison the next time students explore the river to find out who is living there.


–Peggy Ray

Clearing Out Invasive Plants

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Some intruders are troubling the waters of the Bronx River and the lands around it, and restoration workers are devoted to cleaning them out. The intruders are invasive plants that are not native to this area. The workers travel the river on foot and by canoe, digging the plants out root and branch wherever they find them.

In a workshop held on Oct.16, Jennifer Plewka, the environmental educator for Phipps Community Development Corporation, explained how the invasive plants got here and showed students how they could help the workers clear some of them out of Drew Gardens. Ten-year-old Scott Mitchell helped her out by showing students how to use special tool she called a “root grabber” and he called a “picker.”

The first step was learning to identify the offending plants:

Japanese knotweed, a nice-looking plant that originally was brought to Europe from Asia to ornament gardens. Then it traveled here where it has become a pest. It establishes its dominance when dead leaves and stems around it spread a chemical in the soil that prevents other plants from growing.

Bindweed also came from Europe and Asia, probably arriving along with farm and garden seeds. It might also have been brought in as an ornament because of its pretty purplish white flowers and climbing vine. First noticed growing wild in California, it quickly became notorious as the worst weed in the western states.

The white mulberry tree was brought to this country from Asia in colonial times as a food source for silkworms. It became a threat when it started mixing with the native red mulberry tree, transmitting a root disease.

Purple loosestrife was growing densely along the river bank at Drew Gardens. This “beautiful killer,” which has lovely purple flowers in the summer, likes wet places and once it gets started crowds out all the local vegetation that wildlife depend on. It’s especially hard to get rid of because it can regenerate from any tiny piece of root left in the soil.

All the offending plants usually get started in polluted areas or places that have been disturbed by urban development, road-building and such. They can travel by air, in the water, or in soil that is moved from place to place.

After the students, who came from Bronx River Art Center after school programs, collected some specimens of the plants, Jennifer showed them how to preserve the specimens by layering them in sheets of newspaper and corrugated cardboard.

City that Drinks the Mountain Sky

Friday, October 27th, 2006

water

This is an invitation to a fun puppet interactive performance that tells the adventure of the water for the mountains to New York City.

Something’s Fishy In the Bronx River_November 18th 2006

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

workshop

Originally uploaded by Citizen Journalism_ecomedia.

Learn how to identify the fish living in the Bronx River.

Observe, sketch and photograh preserved specimens of local fish.

Information Jennifer Plewka 718-5428388 ext.11

Bronx River adventures!

Friday, October 20th, 2006

October 21: Living with Nature: A Resource Fair for Local Action
Exhibitors will share great ideas and hands-on activities for conserving resources, living sustainably, and protecting the biodiversity of New York’s metropolitan region. 10:00 am to 5:00 pm, American Museum of Natural History, Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall, first floor. Free with Museum admission.

October 22: Tour De Bronx
Bicycle 25-mile or 40-mile route through the Bronx. Bronx River Alliance will host a Muskrat Cove start (8:30am). Register and learn more online: http://www.transalt.org/calendar/tourdebronx/index.html

October 27: Bronx Green Roof Tour
BOEDC is conducting a tour of seven Bronx green roofs. Reservations are required. Contact Kate Shackford, Director of the Bronx Initiative for Energy and the Environment: 718.590.3498

November 4: Hunters Moon Paddle
Paddle the Bronx River estuary, then enjoy a moonlight party along the river. To register, visit http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=742 or contact Michael Hunter at 718-430-4677.

December 6: Bronx River Alliance Ecology Team Meeting.
For more information, contact teresa.crimmens@parks.nyc.gov

December 11: Bronx River Alliance Assembly
Evening event at the Bronx River Art Center (1087 Tremont Avenue). For more information, contact Michelle Williams at 718-430-4636 or michelle.williams@parks.nyc.gov

Alive Along the Bronx River_Environmental Workshop

Friday, October 20th, 2006

Flyer for Workshop

Bronx River Bees: Working for You and Me

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

beehives
On the table at the West Farmer’s Market at Drew Gardens, you will find small plastic bears filled with honey made by our own Bronx River bees. They live on Franklin Avenue in hives kept by Roger Repohl in the Genesis Park Community Garden next to St. Augustine church and in the churchyard.

I was curious about these bees, so I visited Roger on one of the last warm days of October. The bees were buzzing around busily, bringing in some last minute nectar before the winter closes in. Once the weather gets cold, bees stay inside, clustering together and vibrating to keep each other warm.

Roger told me there are about 60,000 bees in each of his three hives. Pretty scary, huh? But not to worry. They are not going to come after you. Honey bees are only interested in flowers, not in people. They will not bother you unless you step on them when they are sipping nectar from clover or if you get too near their hive. Do not mistake them for those yellow and black wasps that ruin your picnic by settling on your hamburger or soda can. Those are yellow jackets, not honey bees, which are brown and black and have a wider abdomen than wasps.

I got to taste some honey produced by these bees. They roam around in a three-mile radius from their home, gathering nectar from flowering trees in the spring, clover in the summer, and wild flowers like goldenrod and asters in the fall. The honey made in each season has a slightly different flavor. The spring honey has a light minty taste. The summer version tasted to me like clover honey, while the fall harvest seemed richer but not as sweet. I liked the fall honey the best.

I worried a bit about exploiting these good workers who pollinate our gardens and trees, giving us honey and wax, but Roger assured me that bees make lots more than they need. He leaves plenty of honey (about 100 pounds) in each hive for the bees to live on over the winter. Although people used to steal honey by destroying hives and even killing bees (making the surviving bees pretty angry), modern methods are gentler. Roger showed me wooden trays he inserts into the hives that the bees obligingly fill up with honey. He claims they aren’t much disturbed when he opens the hives and removes them.

People have been going after honey for as long as we know about. Pictures of bee hives have been found in Spanish caves dating back 8,000 years. And honey never spoils. If you happened to find some that was 8,000 years old, it would still be good to eat. Archeologists once found a honey pot from ancient Egypt containing crystallized but still edible honey.

Roger’s honey is definitely a treat. He keeps bees for the satisfaction it gives him to learn about these fascinating creatures, and we get to enjoy the product. For more information you can reach Roger by e-mail at repohl@att.net.

–Peggy Ray

Thumbnail linked to a video in a pop-up window

Saturday, October 14th, 2006

indian dance test

click here to download

Video in an pop-up window with code created using the video pop-up maker

The video and the photo can be uploaded using the regular uploader. We have to know the urls.

This is a little wizard that writes the code for you to generate pop-up windows with embedded videos. Paste in your video URL, give it a title, and paste an image URL if you’d like. Then copy and paste the
generated code into your blog entry — Shazzam!

The code generated will launch a small pop up window with your video embedded. Its still a little experimental, but basically works with most video types that play using Quicktime or Windows Media plugins.

Video uploading-test and link to pop-up window

Saturday, October 14th, 2006

uploaded

example of uploaded video with the VideoPop plugin. It is an uploader from the manage link in the dashboard. Creates a text link to a javascript generated pop-up window.

TEST to post mp3 in the blog with this player

Thursday, October 12th, 2006

I installed a plugin that allows us to post (upload) mp3 directly to the site and play them with this player.

Test using Aretha Franklyn’s Think


Test from a file uploaded to the Prelinger Archives

The birth of the telephone
Spoken by: Thomas A. Watson, assistant to Alexander Graham Bell
Recording date: c. 1914
Location: Edison motion picture film studio, Bronx, NY
Record format: Edison Kinetophone cylinder
Record number: 257 B-2 (D-B2 Bell)
NPS object catalog number: EDIS 4634
Note: The motion picture element of this sound film is believed lost.

Use the url to rite this code in the post:

//* “



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