Lake Heritage In Adams County To Become Live Stake Nursery With Support From PA American Water Grant
Photo

The Watershed Coalition of the Lehigh Valley, in partnership with the Penn State Extension Master Watershed Steward Program has received funding from Pennsylvania American Water to install a live stake nursery at the Pennsylvania American Water property on Heritage Drive in Lake Heritage, Adams County.

Live stakes are branch cuttings of native trees and shrubs that, when planted along stream banks, grow into new trees or shrubs. They are an effective, low-cost way to establish a root network along stream banks to help prevent soil loss and to rebuild eroded banks. 

Live stake nurseries consist of native shrubs that, when mature, provide live stakes (cuttings) to local conservation organizations and streamside landowners.  These shrubs will provide future material to protect streams and habitat locally.

The nursery will be planted this fall and maintained by Penn State Extension MWSs, locally educated and managed volunteers who address conservation priorities in collaboration with a broad partnership of organizations and local governments. 

Volunteers in the Lake Heritage community will also help install plants and help with maintenance. 

The Master Water Steward Program recruits interested citizens from the community, provides them with formal classroom and hands-on, in-the-field learning, and then connects them with ongoing volunteer opportunities, such as riparian buffer installation, water quality monitoring, and watershed education activities. 

The program is now offered in 42 counties throughout the state, with 776 volunteers, who have contributed over 100,000 volunteer hours since the program began in 2013.

If you would like to learn more about live stakes, stream health or how to get involved in the MWS program, contact Holly Smith by sending email to: hps5293@psu.edu

Resource Link:

-- Penn State Extension: Live Staking For Stream Restoration

-- Penn State Extension: Live Staking - A How-To Guide [Video]

Related Article:

-- PA American Water Announces $75,000 In Grants To Support Local Environmental Projects

Related Articles This Week:

-- EQB Adopts Final-Omitted Reg. Limiting Methane Emissions From Conventional Oil & Gas Facilities; And A First-Ever State MCL For PFOS/PFOA  [PaEN]

-- IRRC Sends Order Laying Out Formal Reasons For Disapproving The Final EQB Manganese Reg; EQB/DEP Now Have 40 Days To Decide How To Proceed  [PaEN]

-- Chesapeake Bay Executive Council Elects EPA Administrator As Chair, Starts Discussion On Steps Needed For States To Get Closer To Meeting 2025 Pollution Reduction Milestones  [PaEN]

-- Bay Journal: Chesapeake Bay Leaders Pledge To Step Up Progress Toward 2025 Cleanup Goals, But Admit They Won’t Meet Them

-- ​​NRCS-PA Awards Nearly $300,000 To Four Conservation Innovation Grant Projects In PA [PaEN]

-- Guest Essay: Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership Celebrates 5 Million Trees Planted -  By Cindy Adams Dunn, Secretary of DCNR  [PaEN]

-- DEP Begins Accepting Applications For $103.4 Million In Abandoned Mine Reclamation Grants Starting Oct. 24  [PaEN]

[Posted: October 13, 2022]


10/17/2022

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page