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Catherine Violet Hubbard Animal Sanctuary Continues To Keep Busy As Spring Arrives

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On Friday, March 13, Catherine Violet Hubbard (CVH) Animal Sanctuary sponsored “Woodcock Walk” on the grounds of the animal sanctuary, 8 Commerce Road. Laura King, program director of Catherine Violet Hubbard Animal Sanctuary, welcomed the group at the beginning of the session and then noted that the session was going to be led by Ken Elkins, the director of Education and Partnerships for the sanctuary. The session was billed as an opportunity for bird lovers to experience the magical world of woodcocks. Woodcocks are also known as timberdoodles, and they are “enigmatic and well-camouflaged shorebirds with a distinctive aerial courtship flight and nasal ‘peent’ call given in early evening." Guests were told that if they were lucky, they would get to witness the “amazing upward spiral mating dance.”

CVH Animal Sanctuary is also home to a relatively new geocache. The geocache was installed this past December and has seen a few guests visit. Geocaching is an outdoor recreational activity where participants hide tupperware containers or weather-proof lock boxes in popular hiking trails and register them online. Treasure hunters are invited to then go out and seek the geocache, open it up, and add their name and the date they found the geocache to the log book, and they can choose to leave something behind. After discovering the geocache, seekers are asked to replace the contents and close the receptacle properly. There are several other geocaches stored in and around Newtown. Interested parties can go to geocaching.com to discover what other geocaches are stored around town.

Catherine Violet Hubbard Animal Sanctuary’s director of Education and Partnerships, Ken Elkin, is seen describing the “amazing upward spiral mating dance” of the woodcocks who reside on the sanctuary property. —Bee Photos, Glass
Laura King (left), program director with the animal sanctuary, stands with Jason Walker and Rason McDermott during the examination of the geocache container at Catherine Violet Hubbard Animal Sanctuary on March 20. Walker and McDermott were responsible for designing, creating, and installing the geocache container and its contents. The geocache is a mini pinball machine. If a treasure hunter is successful in playing the game, another door on the geocache container opens to review the treasures.
After successfully opening the geocache container, explorers are encouraged to sign the logbook and then to take an animal sanctuary sticker and perhaps swap some items for the next adventurer to discover.
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