• Skip to main content

Mill River Greenway Initiative

A community-based steward for the Mill River

You are here: Home / Bike Ride to Support Global Efforts to Limit Climate Change Effects

Bike Ride to Support Global Efforts to Limit Climate Change Effects

River Exploration for Educators

November 22, 2021 by Berner

Mill River education kick-off event

The importance of “slowing down” and “paying attention” were key takeaways for participants in the Mill River nature journaling workshop on a balmy afternoon in early October. Seven educators and five River Guides gathered along the Mill River trail for the 2021 kick-off event of  River Inquiry via Exploration of our Region. Teachers spanned grade levels from early elementary through higher education and settings from community gardens to environmental clubs. Carol Berner and Jan Szymaszek co-facilitated the activity, welcoming new and returning teachers to the Mill River educator network — an initiative launched in 2019 and interrupted by the pandemic. Several participants knew each other and were excited and grateful to be reconnecting on a sunny afternoon by the river. 

Event mapping from Pebble Beach

Jan led the group along the Mill River trail to “Pebble Beach,” a name given by 3rd graders who frequented this flotsam-strewn meander during their annual river study. Carol introduced the group to a journaling activity called Event Mapping, in which an explorer records their wandering path with a mix of words, images and symbols. “The purpose is to create a trail of encounters as you, the explorer, move through a particular place, at a particular moment, asking, ‘What’s going on here?’” (from Hannah Hinchman, A Trail Through Leaves). Carol invited participants to disperse and explore along the river for the next thirty minutes, before reconvening to debrief their experiences. 

Slowing down, paying attention and questioning

Event map shared by Natalee Dias

“I sat on a sun-drenched rock I’d never seen before,” shared one teacher who had walked her dogs along this trail for years. Karen wondered, “how could there be tadpoles this time of year?” Katie perched on a boulder, feet dangling in the water, writing and sketching. Natalee found poop bags everywhere she looked and concluded: “We need to educate others about taking care of our environment for all to enjoy. I love nature and dogs, but we are not alone… one dog poop left on the river is one too many.” Flotsam of all kinds caught people’s attention, raising questions about how the river shapes the land and how people shape the river. 

Takeaways and bringing the experience to students

De-briefing their experiences, participants highlighted the quality of time: “Taking time to settle in, slow down and notice” and “how valuable it is to observe undistracted for a good length of time.” Teachers were eager to bring this experience to their students. Sally Imbibo facilitated event mapping with the JFK Middle School Environmental Club and reflected, “every student was totally engaged.” The October kick-off event inspired participants and facilitators alike to feel “appreciation and gratitude for the opportunity to be in a beautiful place,” and to request “more of the same!” in anticipation of future workshops. 

Looking ahead: next steps for River Inquiry 

Look for a survey requesting YOUR input on future River Inquiry educational opportunities. Here are some of the ideas generated by participants in the October workshop: 

Watercoloring with water from the river.
Photography of the river’s edge.
Poetry writing about the river.
Hands -on science experiment with the river.
Could you do this with an ELL lens?
More open-ended experiences like this.
Learning about history and natural history of the river
More of the same!!

 

Virtual launch of children’s book about Mill River flood (coming in January, 2022) girl with fish

Author, artist and educator Nancy Meagher will host a live reading of her book Millicent and the Day it Rained Buttons, a lively re-telling of the 1874 Mill River flood featuring real-life factory girls, historic artifacts and a spotted brook trout named Millicent. Explore with other educators how this book might inspire and inform classroom curriculum across disciplines of social studies, art, engineering, poetry, mapping and civics. 

Post written by Carol Berner
Photography by Brita Dempsey

With thanks to John Sinton, Gaby Immerman & the River Guides:
Karen Bryant, Brita Dempsey, Wendy and Freeman Stein, Jan Szymaszek.

 

Filed Under: Education

MRGI HAS A NEW WEBSITE!

September 12, 2020 by JW Sinton

MRGI Has a new website

Dear Mill River Lovers,

We’ve returned just in time to bring you some joy during these hard times. Lots has been happening to all of us, and for MRGI, it’s been a time to focus our energies. on:
1. A new website;
2. Extending the greenway itself;
3. A Mill River Learning Initiative.

We’ll leave #s 2 and 3 for an email next month, but right now, please concentrate on the new website. The url hasn’t changed, but Neal Bastek, our comrade in arms for a decade, has finished his amazing work, and we’ve now hired Carey Baker of Midnightson Designs to create our new one. We have no idea whether this design works or not, and it’s still in progress.

We need you to make this a responsive site. Send us your evaluation, your suggestions, edits, your furious grumblings and joyful outbursts. Whatever you’ve got, we can not only handle it, we need it! Send it along to us at info@millrivergreenway.org.

John and Gaby

Filed Under: Mill River Greenway

Fund Drive to Link the Mill River to Broad Brook

January 13, 2020 by JW Sinton

Fund Drive to Link the Mill River to Broad Brook

Please help the City of Northampton acquire this critical link!

Dear Mill River Lovers,

Steve McDonough on behalf of the Leeds Civic Association, Friends of Northampton Trails, and Yours Truly urge you to contribute to this great project. Here’s how Steve describes it:

Northampton seeks to purchase 44.7 acres of land in Leeds located north of Beaver Brook between Haydenville Road and the Leeds bike path.  The acquisition would expand the current Beaver Brook conservation area while helping to connect the Mill River Greenway to the Beaver Brook/Broad Brook Greenway and Broad Brook/Fitzgerald Lake Greenway.

As we send this message out to you MRGI folk on January 13, we already have more than $2000 donated of the $15000 goal. You can donate directly to the City of Northampton via the Office of Planning and Sustainability, 210 Main St., Northampton, MA 01060 or simply click on this site: https://charity.gofundme.com/o/en/team/beaver-brook-land-purchase

Due to the property’s connection with the other conservation areas, it is also important as a wildlife corridor.  Deer, bear, deer, fox, porcupines and turkeys have all been sited on a frequent basis.  And just in the past few months, river otters have been spotted in Beaver Brook on at least two occasions, likely using it as a migration route to and from the Mill River!

The area has become a popular recreation area as it connects with the trails along the Mill River Greenway and the Beaver Brook Conservation area with the main access off the bike path near the Beaver Brook bridge.  There are about 2 miles of well-maintained trails on the property and also some ‘bread crumb’ trails that lead out to Route 9 and the new wildlife blind.

The acquisition would also add a major land parcel in support of Northampton’s Multi-Use Trail Plan to develop a Northampton trail that encircles the city building on existing trail networks where possible.

Thanks from all of us at MRGI, LCA, FNT, and the City of Northampton!

Filed Under: Mill River Greenway

Invasive Plant Management Walk, Lathrop Community, Easthampton,Oct. 28

October 2, 2019 by JW Sinton

Reigster early, folks, and learn how to manage invasive plants on this walk at the Lathrop Community in Easthampton! Learn how and why they are removing invasive plants to protect wildlife in Lathrop’s forests. See what is replacing the invasives in areas where they’ve worked for up to five years.

Registration required. Walks at 1:00 and 3:30.

Check out Lathrop Land’s website.

 

 

Filed Under: Invasive plants, River walks

Bike Ride to Support Global Efforts to Limit Climate Change Effects

September 21, 2019 by JW Sinton

The Mill River Greenway Initiative is urging all our members to join with our neighbors and partners in a bike ride on Friday, September 27th at 5:30 to celebrate two weeks of support to limit the effects of climate change. Let’s do it!

 

 

Filed Under: Northampton

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 21
  • Go to Next Page »

© 2021 Mill River Greenway Initiative. Email info@millrivergreenway.org | All Rights Reserved. Webspinner Msondev.graphics