Date: Fri 14-Feb-1997
Date: Fri 14-Feb-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Hawley-school-park-bio
Full Text:
Hawley School Applies For Grant To Create Biodiversity Pocket Park
B Y D OROTHY E VANS
When Hawley Elementary School math/science specialist Debbie Cowden thinks of
spring, she's hoping for more than daffodils.
This year, she wants it all - spring peepers, wood frogs, wildflowers,
butterflies, maybe even a spotted salamander or two - and she's looking to
find them in a very small, very pristine bit of wilderness behind the Church
Hill Road school that she and other teachers hope to turn into an outdoor
nature lab.
The park would only be one acre - a very long, thin acre located at the back
of the Taylor playing field.
"We'll tread very carefully," promised school principal Linda Siciliano,
hoping not only to reassure school neighbors living on The Boulevard and
School House Hill Road whose property backs onto the proposed park, but also
sending a message to the entire school community that the property must be
treated with the utmost respect and care.
"Our intention is to make this a true laboratory for the study of plants and
animals, as well as a serene place for student reflection and expression," Mrs
Cowden said.
With the help of consultant Will Stoddard of the Kellogg Environmental Center
in Derby, Mrs Cowden, Mrs Siciliano and third grade teacher Maura Drabik have
worked together to apply for a $9,580 grant from the Toyota Corporation to
help create the mini-park.
The money would be used for restoration of native plant species, for a small
outdoor amphitheater, for construction of an entrance trail and bridge and
toward purchase of educational resources including cameras for the students to
record and bring their findings back to the classroom. The school hopes to
hear back from Toyota concerning the grant request by February 28.
Mrs Cowden said the project "extends an idea which began with the donation of
land from the town of Newtown," a gift that was made May 26, 1995.
The property includes a small woodland bordering the field and contains at
least two vernal pools, which are wetlands that appear in spring but often dry
up over the hot summer months.
"They fill up and dry down," Mr Stoddard said, explaining that since fish
can't survive in vernal pools, they are a perfect breeding place for frogs and
other species of amphibians whose eggs are normally eaten by fish.
"I'm looking forward to collecting tadpoles in those pools," Mrs Cowden said,
adding she also wouldn't mind seeing a pair of wood ducks set up housekeeping
in May.
Pack 70 Boy Scout Eddie Wolf and his fellow scouts helped clear and clean the
trails.
-Bee Photos, Evans
Birch trees decorate the winter woods.
Hawley science specialist Debbie Cowden stands nearby a vernal pool.
Fallen leaves trapped by ice.
Moss pillows sheltered by trees.
Who lives here? Hawley students hope to discover.
