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Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Приєднався 14 гру 2011
Driftless Dialogue | Wisconsin Dark Skies | John Rummel
Light pollution affects every ecosystem, organism, and community on Earth.
The United States is one of the most densely populated countries, and in general, it’s doing a pretty bad job of managing the encroachment of artificial light at night (ALAN).
How is Wisconsin doing? Join us for a closer look on what the state of Wisconsin is doing to mitigate light pollution, a discussion about what we are losing and gaining, and how we can do better in the future.
Presenter: John Rummel is a lifelong amateur astronomer, nighttime photographer, and avid road tripper to places dark and remote. He’s been active in the movement to adopt smarter nighttime lighting practices since the late 1990s. He’s a former president of the Madison Astronomical Society and a current Dark Sky International Advocate.
The Ralph Nuzum Lecture Series is free thanks to a grant by the Ralph E Nuzum Kickapoo Reforestation Fund through the UW-Madison College of Agricultural & Life Sciences, and the Friends of the Kickapoo Valley Reserve, and supported by Badger Talks.
The United States is one of the most densely populated countries, and in general, it’s doing a pretty bad job of managing the encroachment of artificial light at night (ALAN).
How is Wisconsin doing? Join us for a closer look on what the state of Wisconsin is doing to mitigate light pollution, a discussion about what we are losing and gaining, and how we can do better in the future.
Presenter: John Rummel is a lifelong amateur astronomer, nighttime photographer, and avid road tripper to places dark and remote. He’s been active in the movement to adopt smarter nighttime lighting practices since the late 1990s. He’s a former president of the Madison Astronomical Society and a current Dark Sky International Advocate.
The Ralph Nuzum Lecture Series is free thanks to a grant by the Ralph E Nuzum Kickapoo Reforestation Fund through the UW-Madison College of Agricultural & Life Sciences, and the Friends of the Kickapoo Valley Reserve, and supported by Badger Talks.
Переглядів: 202
Відео
Invasive Jumping Worms | Brad Herrick | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 3847 місяців тому
Talk Description: Jumping worms are a non-native invasive species to Wisconsin and the Midwest U.S. This talk will focus on general earthworm biology and ecology, potential impacts of the jumping worm to forests and gardens, and potential control options. Presenter: Brad Herrick holds a BA in biology from Luther College and an MS in ecosystems studies from UW-Green Bay. He is the ecologist and ...
Fishy Science: The Midwest Fisheries Center | Cristina Dahl | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 1469 місяців тому
Talk Description: Learn about the science and technologies used to track and monitor invasive carp, how dams impact fish, the use of environmnetal DNA in conservation, what happens when fish get sick and the incredible species studied at the Midwest Fisheries Center in Onalaska, WI. Presenter: Cristina Dahl is an outreach specialist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service stationed at the Midwe...
Protecting Our Night Skies | Scott Lind | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 27010 місяців тому
Talk Description: Join Scott Lind for a lecture on how to implement the use of dark-sky-friendly outdoor lighting to help prevent light pollution & preserve our night skies. Presenter: Scott Lind, Kickapoo Reserve Management Board Chair, is a retired licensed professional electrical engineer and master electrician who worked for 31 years in a variety of power and lighting design roles as a cons...
All About Raptors | River Valley Raptors | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 42311 місяців тому
Recorded outside the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Visitor Center on Saturday, January 13th, 2024. Join us for this lively talk as part of the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Winter Festival event. River Valley Raptors experts, Joe and Lila Kumrie share their knowledge on hawks, owls, and falcons. They cover everything from training, to diets, to sleep schedules of our feathered friends. Presenter: River Val...
A Year at a Beaver Pond | Al Cornell | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 20311 місяців тому
Talk Description: Join Al Cornell, writer & retired Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Technician, for a presentation on his new book, A Year At A Beaver Pond, where he spent over 400 hours observing and photographing a tenth acre beaver pond about eight miles from KVR. Among his many observations, here, he identified sixty-one species of birds, watched wood ducks chase a mink. ...
Rooted in Symbiosis | Jacob Hansel | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 108Рік тому
Talk Description: Temperate forests are important ecosystems in the Northern Hemisphere which provide habitat for many species, improve water quality, sequester carbon dioxide, and provide humans with lumber and additional food recourses. The study takes place in the Kickapoo Valley Wisconsin which harbors a unique unglaciated geology, various histories of land use and management, a virgin stan...
Not Another Dam Talk | Brad Steinmetz | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 144Рік тому
Listen as Brad Steinmetz, local historian presents information about the history of the LaFarge Dam Project, with a focus on the original Corps of Engineers’ project that was introduced in 1962. At the talk, a long-lost Corps’ display poster on the 1962 flood control plans for the Kickapoo Valley is unveiled. Presenter: Brad Steinmetz is a retired teacher with an avid interest in local history ...
Welcome to the area! | Kickapoo Valley Reserve |
Переглядів 597Рік тому
The Kickapoo Valley Reserve is an 8,569-acre tract of land located between the villages of La Farge and Ontario in southwestern Wisconsin. Its history, resources, administration, and recreational diversity make it unique - a place like no other. The state-sanctioned Kickapoo Reserve Management Board is responsible for managing the property on behalf of the State of Wisconsin and Ho-Chunk Nation...
Monarchs and Land Ethics | Dr. Stanely Temple | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 53Рік тому
Dr. Stanley Temple discusses the perils of the Monarch Butterfly population, and how Aldo Leopold's 'land ethic' can be used to guide landowners to help the Monarchs. Presenter: Stanley (Stan) Temple is the Beers-Bascom Professor Emeritus in Conservation in the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology and former Chairman of the Conservation Biology and Sustainable Development Program in the Ga...
Bumblebees | Genevieve Pugesek | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 62Рік тому
Genevieve Pugesek talks about her research on bumblebee populations and how human activities like spring burns are impacting them. Research Interests: Pugesek is broadly interested in conservation ecology and habitat management. Though she has studied many taxa, she has a special place in her heart for bees, which she has been working with since she started graduate school. For her dissertation...
Climate Reality | Jeff Steuer | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 206Рік тому
Presenter: Jeffrey Steuer. Steuer describes himself as a citizen interested in Climate Change; however, he also has an impressive background as retired water engineer with the U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Discipline. With an M.S. in Hydraulic Engineering, University of Wisconsin, Madison & a B. S. Ocean Engineering, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, he has worked as a Professional Hydrologis...
Tracking Invasives in Vernon County | Matt Wallrath | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 110Рік тому
Listen as invasive species expert Matt Wallrath of the Upper Sugar River Watershed Association as he discusses organisms on the move, citizen science via Project RED, techniques for river monitoring and the current rules in the state of Wisconsin. The Ralph Nuzum Lecture Series is free thanks to a grant by the Ralph E Nuzum Kickapoo Reforestation Fund through the UW-Madison College of Agricultu...
Wisconsin Waters | Scott Spoolman | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 290Рік тому
Scott Spoolman invites you to explore Wisconsin’s many and varied waterways and to learn of how they came to be as they are today. From the placid Mississippi to waterfalls crashing over hard rock ledges near Lake Superior, to life bursting forth in one of the world’s largest freshwater marshes, these waterways each have a fascinating story to tell. Scott samples a few of the 19 stories from hi...
Plants in Space | Dr. Simon Gilroy | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 202Рік тому
Presenter: Dr. Simon Gilroy is a professor in the Botany Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research is on how plants sense and respond to their environment. He works extensively with NASA on understanding how plants grow on the International Space Station and plans for using plants in life support on planetary bases. NASA has a long history of partnering with university pla...
Raptors | River Valley Raptors | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 157Рік тому
Raptors | River Valley Raptors | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Walk With Me Among My Homelands: Hear the Echos of My Ancestors Ho-Chunk Talk | Janice Rice | KVR
Переглядів 2832 роки тому
Walk With Me Among My Homelands: Hear the Echos of My Ancestors Ho-Chunk Talk | Janice Rice | KVR
Funding a Forest School | Kickapoo Valley Forest School
Переглядів 4832 роки тому
Funding a Forest School | Kickapoo Valley Forest School
Hydrogeology of Wisconsin | Ken Bradbury | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 1,2 тис.2 роки тому
Hydrogeology of Wisconsin | Ken Bradbury | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Dam Challenge 2022 Pre-Race Zoom Recording | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 1402 роки тому
Dam Challenge 2022 Pre-Race Zoom Recording | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Homesteads of the Kickapoo Valley Tour | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 3572 роки тому
Homesteads of the Kickapoo Valley Tour | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Kickapoo Pearls Revisited | Brad Steinmetz Chuck Hatfield | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 1372 роки тому
Kickapoo Pearls Revisited | Brad Steinmetz Chuck Hatfield | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Bumble Bee Conservation | Susan Carpenter | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 922 роки тому
Bumble Bee Conservation | Susan Carpenter | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Climate Change Science | Rick Lindroth | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Переглядів 1662 роки тому
Climate Change Science | Rick Lindroth | Kickapoo Valley Reserve
Forest Management Panel Discussion Part 1
Переглядів 352 роки тому
Forest Management Panel Discussion Part 1
Forest Management Panel Discussion Part 2
Переглядів 252 роки тому
Forest Management Panel Discussion Part 2
Driftless Dialogue: Urban Canid Project - Coexisting with Canids
Переглядів 602 роки тому
Driftless Dialogue: Urban Canid Project - Coexisting with Canids
Kickapoo Valley Reserve Land Management Committee Meeting
Переглядів 242 роки тому
Kickapoo Valley Reserve Land Management Committee Meeting
Trout Unlimited Driftless Symposium - Environmental Risks of Insecticides to Aquatic Resources
Переглядів 432 роки тому
Trout Unlimited Driftless Symposium - Environmental Risks of Insecticides to Aquatic Resources
We used to climb Castle Rock as kids! Love that area! Still go multiple times every year! Wisconsin is the best state in the nation!
Thanks so much for posting this video. I absolutely loved this session. Mr. Cornell did a great job of talking about the behavior and activities of the animals, birds, and the environment of the Beaver pond. As an amateur photographer and nature journaler, his entire presentation appealed to both of my hobbies. BTW, I just found your channel and have already watched several recordings. I'll be subscribing to your channel. Thanks, again.
rocky arbor state park has sandstone areas
Nice work! Happy to see you used my photos. :-)
so sorry but I really couldnt watch 90 mins of this. the first few seconds seemed to dry as it is. I promise I literally mean no disrespect. Perhaps it is me, but definately affecting many. information needs to come thick and fast! We are in the age where James Hansen has told us the REAL climate forcings have set our thermostat to +10. time is REAL short... The clickbait title dragged me here. my motive. understanding a new type of worm I never heard of... purpose: to quickly determine why it exists and what nature intends for it. I am sorry but people need to wake up fast... we are already past the time we need to be building multiple seed banks and gene arks. Please make an illustrated or animated PRIMER version of 20 mins or less. It honestly, took me less time than this video to sit down with AI and develop a pioneering new method of desalinating water with heat pumps. instant fresh water at an energy profit in a solid and transportable form and this methodology harnesses natures ways, because sea ice naturally excretes the mineral salts and co2. we can make ice with heat pumps and then capture the brine for the resource pot of minerals AND essentially just shake the brine like soda to release the co2 extremely cheaply. And I have so many other ways to capture carbon and make use of it. Help me save the worms. give it to me in a way my special brain can digest <3
PS feel free to take that to AI and work it out for yourselves. that is a free for the world invention i give freely.
Excellent presentation. I will hit the referenced website and check out some springs.
Very educational, I have grown up in the driftless region and love this series!
I remember the night sky being amazing in Westby when I was growing up. Sadly those days are gone.
Thank you
The people of the Americas is such a fluid subject in the last decade... Almost anything older than a year could arguably be worthless
Who is the professor at Madison that he refers to around the 5:30 mark? Who is doing work on light pollution levels at the UW??
That is David Lorenz
@@scottlind5037 Thanks, I know Dave. His work on LP is not part of his work/research at the UW, rather something he does - more or less - on the side. We've had Dave as a guest speaker at the Madison Astronomical Society. His LP/Google tools are the best in that category.
I'm glad the lake never happened. We already have 15,000 lakes in the state, and only one large scale driftless recreation area preserving this land. I come to the reserve many times a year to spend my money. Now, bring back Campsite AA as a regular vehicle accessible site again.
I enjoyed this. One of these days I’ll have to pay the reserve a visit. I was born (in 1955) and raised in rural Richland County. I was a real outdoors kid, as most were back then, and had a fascination with birds. I had a big feather collection, wanted to be an ornithologist before I could pronounce the word, and took a keen interest in all birds. In 1965, when I was 10, seeing a hawk was an unusual event. Not rare, necessarily, but unusual. Today, they’re so common that seeing a hawk on a drive in the driftless is much like seeing a robin on a suburban lawn, which I attribute to the end of the indiscriminate killing of ‘bad’ wildlife in favor of the ‘good’ wildlife that was once so common. Who says the world never changes for the better? On the other hand the red-headed woodpeckers, meadowlarks, whippoorwills and others that were everywhere in 1965 (and I do mean everywhere) are gone.
Excellent presentation. Thank you all for sharing this with us. Being homebound and unable to join you in person, these presentations mean a lot to me.
Outstanding presentation!
A friend had some property in this area. He found, what appeared to be, a stone hand ax that MAY have been used during this pre-history area.
I LOVE the public libraries!! So much we can learn about this 🌎 world, the state of Wisc! ☺️
Thank you for this demonstration. I shot a buck this season with a lead core 100gr .243 in the shoulder. It ruined about 30lbs of meat after fragmenting through the chest cavity. I will NEVER use lead again!
Good words. Thank you for sharing
I am 67, born in 1955, and grew up in the Richland Center area. I remember well my parents discussing the dam project. They were both opposed. As a kid growing up with a keen interest in all-things outdoors I, too, was opposed -- in a kid way, of course. What a travesty it is to destroy free-flowing rivers and the valleys they carve to create impoundments so developers can get rich by impoverishing the world.
Wow this was such a valuable session! 👍🏻
Glad it was helpful!
Linguistics tell such an interesting story and, interestingly, it's not the story that academia cares to tell.
Yawn. Plenty of academia specialize in linguistics. What are you really trying to say?