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Outreach, Wildlands Updates Kyla Isakson Outreach, Wildlands Updates Kyla Isakson

Hats Off to Tower Fest

On Saturday, October 8, the D.W. Field Park Association, a nonprofit organization dedicated to celebrating D.W. Field Park, brought back the annual Tower Fest after a 2-year Covid hiatus, with great success! Tower Fest is a celebration of community located at the well-known lookout tower in D.W. Field Park, formerly the highest point in Brockton.

On Saturday, October 8, the D.W. Field Park Association, a nonprofit organization dedicated to celebrating D.W. Field Park, brought back the annual Tower Fest after a 2-year Covid hiatus, with great success! 

Tower Fest is a celebration of community located at the well-known lookout tower in D.W. Field Park, formerly the highest point in Brockton. This free festival has plenty to do for all ages, with pony rides, pumpkin painting, a bake sale, balloon animals, music with the Rose Conservatory, and of course, climbing to the top of the tower. This year, Wildlands Trust was invited promote the D.W. Field Park Initiative, of which the Association is a key partner. 

Wildlands’ goal at Tower Fest was to pilot our newly completed community survey about D.W. Field Park. Our goal in surveying the community is to learn how people are using the park currently, what kind of improvement projects would be important to park users, and what access barriers there might be for both users and non-users. The survey is live online now at wildlandstrust.org/dwfieldpark in English and will soon be available in Portuguese, Haitian Creole, Cape Verdean Creole, and Spanish. 

Director of Special Projects Rachel Calderara had a great time chatting with community members and encouraging survey takers to spin the prize wheel. We want to thank the City of Brockton Department of Parks and Recreation, the Fuller Craft Museum, and the D.W. Field Park Association for donating prizes, which included a golfing gift card, free organizational memberships, and bake sale items. Wildlands threw in a few free memberships, Halloween candy, and some $5 Dunkin gift cards, and the prize wheel was a hit! Over 70 people completed the survey, so we’re off to a great start.  

If you live in Brockton or the surrounding towns and have a few minutes to tell us about your experiences at D.W. Field Park, please complete our survey at here. 

A big thanks to the Old Colony Planning Council for developing this survey with us!  

D.W. Field Park Initiative
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Outreach Kyla Isakson Outreach Kyla Isakson

Green Team 2022: Working Toward a Bright Future for D.W. Field Park

Nine teens out of over sixty applicants were hired for Green Team this summer to complete improvement projects at D.W. Field Park. Green Team emphasizes hands-on learning and community service in an outdoor, team-oriented environment sponsored and led by Wildlands Trust and Manomet.

Read Time: 3 min

By Rachel Calderara, Director of Special Projects

Nine Brockton-based teens joined the 2022 Green Team at D.W. Field Park this summer, a program sponsored and led by Wildlands Trust and Manomet to provide environmental working and learning opportunities for the next generation. Chosen out of nearly sixty applicants, the team of nine met over a two-week period to complete improvement projects at D.W. Field Park that benefit both people and nature. This is a small but powerful example of what the D.W. Field Park Initiative can accomplish with a community working towards shared goals and visions for a better future. 

Projects completed by the Green Team made the park a cleaner, more welcoming place for the community in just six short days. We hope you’ll swing by to enjoy the results of their hard work, which include: 

  • 8 new bird boxes built and installed at various locations around D.W. Field Park and the Brockton Audubon Preserve. These boxes provide habitat for Black-capped Chickadees, Eastern Screech Owls, and Great Crested Flycatchers, all of which have been identified in breeding bird surveys conducted by Manomet. 

  • 10 park benches and 9 picnic tables restored in the Oak St. picnic area and along the shores of Waldo Lake.  

  • Habitat surveys conducted along 2 transects, documenting plants and animals living in the park. The team’s observations contributed to large-scale surveys conducted by Manomet. 

  • 2 miles of trails at Brockton Audubon Preserve trimmed and widened to improve access for recreation. 

  • Gardens at the Oak Street parking lot maintained with the Brockton Garden Club. The crew raked, weeded, and removed invasive vines. 

Green Team members also had the opportunity to meet various community leaders during their daily lunch break. We appreciate the following leaders for helping expand the team members’ horizons of career and community service possibilities: Joanne Zygmunt (Old Colony Planning Council), Evan Dalton (Manomet), Patrick Sullivan (Brockton Department of Public Works), Shirley Asack (Brockton City Council), Tim Carpenter (Brockton Department of Parks & Recreation), Sean Kent (Mass Audubon Museum of American Bird Art), Megan Shave (Brockton Department of Planning and Economic Development), Emilia Skogen (Manomet), Josephine Tagestad (Manomet), and Patrick Quinn (D.W. Field Park Association).  

The Green Team members deserve recognition for their eagerness to learn new skills, work together through the summer heat, and discuss important environmental and community topics. We can’t wait to see what’s next for this fantastic crew: Keira Williamson (14), Destiny Cater (18), Sylvie Staco (15), Edeh Ugbo (17), Julian Jerome (16), Sanaja Gomes (16), Dawn Centers (16), Jaydah Evora (15), Dillon Him (16). 

Wildlands Trust and Manomet hope to expand Green Team in the coming years. Please visit wildlandstrust.org/dwfieldpark and sign up to have email updates about the D.W. Field Park Initiative sent right to your inbox! 

Figure 1: Green Team poses with their completed bird boxes before installing them around D.W. Field Park and Brockton Audubon Preserve. From left: Keira Williamson, Destiny Cater, Sylvie Staco, Edeh Ugbo, Julian Jerome, Sanaja Gomes, Dawn Centers, Jaydah Evora, Dillon Him.

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Outreach, Plants & Animals Kyla Isakson Outreach, Plants & Animals Kyla Isakson

Native Plant Garden in Plymouth Dedicated to Deborah Wood Davis

Read Time: 3 min

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

On Saturday, July 9, at 10:30am, before the morning sun invited summer’s characteristic heat and humidity, approximately 70 community members gathered at Wildlands Trust’s headquarters on Long Pond Road to dedicate the property’s native plant garden to a longtime supporter of the Trust’s mission, Deborah Wood Davis.

Deborah Wood Davis married into the family of Howland Davis, the previous owner of the land that is now Wildlands’ Davis-Douglas Conservation Area. Her family recalls Deborah’s great affection for the area and, according to her daughter Caroline Chapin, she was excited by Wildlands’ mission and the way it drew the community together. So, when Deborah’s five daughters were looking for a way to honor their mother and the strong roots and connections she had established here, they came to Wildlands Trust.

Sarah Geer, one of those daughters, approached Wildlands’ President and Executive Director Karen Grey to discuss the idea at just the right time. Wildlands had been struggling with the desire to maintain some component of the property’s historic barn, but its crumbling foundation walls and the steep drop from ground level to its interior depth posed hazards that had to be addressed. Simultaneously, local landscape architect Love Howard had also reached out to Karen with the idea of designing a pollinator-friendly garden using native plant species that would support the local ecosystem, and she was looking for a location where she could bring the idea to life. The Davis family’s gift to honor their mother provided the needed support to begin the process of converting the unsafe barn foundation into a showcase garden and educational tool at Wildlands’ headquarters.

The project, according to Karen, “brought together need with opportunity and allowed us to make meaningful connections for people, which are always the best type of projects.” In the fall of 2020, after structural work was completed, the first plants were added by a group of volunteers—including some of Deborah’s daughters, Wildlands volunteer and Board Member Marilynn Atterbury, and others—under Love’s guidance. Today, Marilynn continues the work, along with Wildlands’ gardener Kim Goggin, carefully maintaining and enhancing what is often called “the foundation garden.”

On the morning of the dedication ceremony, the gardening team’s hard work and meticulous care were on full display for the large crowd that had assembled for the occasion. In what would have been Deborah Davis’ 100th year, according to Caroline, the family organized a mini reunion around the dedication ceremony, bringing all five daughters, spouses, children, and almost all of the grandchildren and great-grandchildren together in Plymouth—a gathering of community that would likely have brought the family’s matriarch great pleasure. Also in attendance were several of Wildlands’ staff members, Board members, and supporters. Karen Grey addressed the group with gratitude for all who contributed to the project, Sarah Geer shared reflections of her mother, and Love Howard described her inspiration and plan for the garden’s creation. As the ceremony concluded, with a comfortable breeze under bright blue sky, the flitting of bees and butterflies entertained visitors as they reminisced and explored the newly dedicated Deborah Wood Davis Native Plant Garden.

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Wildlands Shows Its Love for Wareham at Community Event

Read Time: 2 min

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

The coastal town of Wareham, home to Wildlands’ Great Neck Conservation Area, offers an array of outdoor recreational opportunities for both residents and visitors. So, when Wildlands Trust was invited to partner with the Wareham Land Trust, Mass Audubon, and Buzzards Bay Coalition’s Onset Bay Center to host a full day of free outdoor activities highlighting the area’s various opportunities to enjoy nature and support the environment, we were thrilled to accept! 

Funded in part by grants from the Wareham Cultural Council and Plymouth Cultural Council (two local agencies supported by the State's Mass Cultural Council), “Wild for Wareham” took place on May 7, at Buzzard’s Bay Coalition’s Onset Bay Center.  

Wildlands’ Programming and Outreach Manager, Claire Johnston, collaborated with staff from the event’s partner organizations, planning a day packed with activities. Among the offerings were: an intertidal beach exploration; programs about navigation, whales, insects, osprey, and coastal waterbirds; a salt marsh exploration; and a kayaking adventure.  Wildlands hosted two programs at Great Neck Conservation Area—an invasive plant identification and removal workshop, and a nature weaving exploration activity. Participants brought home potted native plants, a children’s book, and assorted fun swag from the various organizations tabling at the event. 

The depth and variety of knowledge within the Wareham community--in the fields of land protection, wildlife conservation, and environmental protection--was on full display at the Wild for Wareham event, and the opportunities for interesting outdoor explorations were plentiful! Wildlands Trust was thrilled to be a partner in this event, and hope that it was the first of many to come! 

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Outreach, Stewardship Kyla Isakson Outreach, Stewardship Kyla Isakson

Wildlands' Community Welcomed Back at Opening Day 2022

Read Time: 2 min

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

On May 1, the Wildlands community came together at our Davis-Douglas Farm headquarters, in Plymouth, to kick off the 2022 programming season. Near-perfect spring weather was a bonus for all who attended our Opening Day celebration, making for a fun and relaxing Sunday afternoon that surely left many visitors daydreaming of the summer days ahead! 

Friends of all ages, people and pets, families, returning members, staff, volunteers, and first-time visitors enjoyed local beer and live music on the lawn, explored craft activities and games, and learned all about the Wildlands Trust community, the work we're doing, and the various opportunities to join us--at our programs and events, as volunteers, and through membership.  

The Conservation Barn was open for visitors to peruse information tables about current offerings and initiatives at Wildlands, or to purchase soft pretzels, fresh out of the oven. Many visitors enjoyed lengthy conversations with our staff and volunteers inside the Barn, while some of our youngest visitors dropped in just long enough to find the lollipops that adorned the display areas.

Wildlands’ Programming and Outreach Manager Claire Johnston said, “We are thrilled to have people interested in learning about us, what we’ve been doing, and what’s to come!” And our entire staff loved seeing all of the smiling faces and the steady buzz of activity around our headquarters that day. We can't wait to keep the momentum going as our 2022 programming season gets underway, so be on the lookout for more fabulous events to come!

EVENTS
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