5.25.2008

Vote for a chance for SAHC to win a $3,000 grant for Rocky Fork

Vote for a chance for SAHC to win a $3,000 grant for Rocky Fork
In an effort to raise awareness of the great projects that land trusts are doing across the state in support of Land Trust Day, the Great Outdoor Provision Company has launched a Land Trust Day competition. They are highlighting seven projects from seven different land trusts that are in need of protection. Patagonia has agreed to the underwriting of a $3,000 grant to go towards the winning land trust project. The winning project will be announced on Land Trust Day, June 7th.

ROCKY FORK is the project that SAHC submitted. For those of you that may not be familiar, here is the latest news:
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“To say this is a pleasant surprise would be an understatement.” That’s the word from Executive Director Carl Silverstein upon hearing the news that SAHC’s Rocky Fork project is now ranked as the #1 national priority for acquisition by the US Forest Service. “We were pretty excited last year when Rocky Fork ranked as the top USFS priority in the region,” Silverstein continues, “but to work on the top project in the nation, as a conservationist, it just doesn’t get any better than that.”

Nor does it get any more challenging. The 10,000 acre Rocky Fork tract has been eyed by conservationists and developers alike for years because of its size, its connection to 22,000 acres of protected land and its sheer scenic beauty. “This tract is going to become the favorite place of the next generation of Appalachian Trail users and outdoor enthusiasts,” says Jay Leutze, an SAHC board member who has traveled to Washington DC four times in the last year to lobby for federal funds for the acquisition. “For fly-fishing, hiking, mountain-bike riding, bird-watching and more, this vast land is going to add a critical link to decades of successful land protection. Purchasing it to give it to the public is just the right thing to do for locals, and for the people of the United States.”

Situated 34 miles from Asheville, NC, and 34 miles from Johnson City, TN, astride the new I-26 highway, the $40 million dollar tract stands on what might have been the next frontier of large-scale high-end development. Instead, SAHC’s partner, The Conservation Fund, has secured the site with an option to buy the entire tract. “Getting site security on the entire parcel, having the land under contract, is key,” Silverstein adds. “But closing the deal will still take a monumental effort involving private, state and federal dollars.”

It is not too much of a stretch to say that the top conservation project in the country will require the top fund-raising effort, too. “SAHC grows every year,” says Leutze. “Our members want to know that we are capable of protecting the landscapes we all cherish. As a result we’ve gotten very strategic about pursuing our priorities, increased our capacity through partnerships and member-drives, and worked at building relationships from Asheville to Nashville, and all the way to Capitol Hill.” Silverstein adds this: “We won’t celebrate until the deal is closed, but we’re confident that the work we’ve done on Rocky Fork is going to pay off.”
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Below is GOPC’s website page with the Land Trust Day project competition descriptions.

VOTE FOR ROCKY FORK!
http://greatoutdoorprovision.com/culture/wesupport/patagonia-land-grant/
Cheryl Fowler
Operations Director
The Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy
828-253-0095, ext. 200
34 Wall Street, Ste. 502
Asheville, NC 28801



appalachian .org

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5.24.2008

Eastern newt


Newt iii
Originally uploaded by Unaka
Notophthalmus viridescens (Salimandridae)

This is the eft stage.

Etymology from Wikipedia: The oldest form of the name is eft, which is still used for newly metamorphosed juveniles, but according to the Oxford English Dictionary it changed for unknown reasons first to euft and then to ewt. For some time it remained as an ewt, but the "n" from the indefinite article an shifted to form a newt.

Some newt trivia (from Wikipedia):

- "As pissed as a newt" is a popular British expression to describe someone who is very drunk, a reference to the side-to-side gait of a newt on land.
- "Eye of newt, and toe of frog, wool of bat, and tongue of dog" was part of the incantation of the three witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth
- The Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone is often lampooned for his interest in keeping and breeding newts and has become known as "King-Newt" to some of his political rivals.
- In 1936, Czech science-fiction writer Karel Čapek wrote an internationally-acclaimed novel called War With the Newts about the discovery of a species of intelligent newts in an island close to Indonesia.

5.23.2008

Unstrung Photography


I have decided to change the title of my blog. Though, "not all who wander are lost..." seems appropriate, the quote belongs to Tolkien and I need to find something else. The current title is temporary until I can decide on a new one.

5.05.2008

Abrams Falls

This is a fantastic if not well-known waterfall near Bristol, TN/Va. It's a short hike from the end of Abrams Falls Rd to the main waterfall, but very narrow and dangerous at times. More info and a map can be found here.
I believe the stream must be Abrams Creek, but I can't find a name. While looking for more info, I came across this poster of "Chief Benje Abrams Falls" at allposters.com, but can find nothing on the web about a "Chief Benje Abrams".


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A Vulture and some Wild Columbine

When I moved around the edge of the cliff above Abrams Falls to get a closer look at some Wild Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis) this American Black Vulture (Coragyps atratus) flew out from a small cave about twenty feet from me.

A few shots from the lush, green, springtime, forest...


"...a few fronds..."

The first three are maidenhair ferns (Adiantum pedatum) and the last is a christmas fern (Polystichum acrostichoides).


About Me

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This blog is a work in progress. An ardent perambulator and nature enthusiast; I take pictures of what I see and post them here occasionally.

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