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In this issue...
☻Water Saving Tips
☻Erosion? What can you do?
☻River Cleanups
☺Upcoming
Cleanups
☻Volunteer
Opportunities
☻Watershed Education
☺Evergreen
Charter School
☺Boys and
Girls Club
☺Caring for
Children
☺Mars Hill
Elementary ~
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Highlight Water Saving Tips:
The French Broad Watershed and the entire Southeast
is in the midst of an unprecedented drought that is affecting
everyone. The good news you can help! There some very simple things
such as putting a brick in your toilet that will reduce about a
liter for each flush, catching rain water in a rain barrel for
irrigation, and cutting off the water when you brush your teeth. For
many more ideas visit http://www.wateruseitwisely.com/100ways/se.shtml, or some even more creative ideas visit http://www.jpeek.com/water/simple.html. Many of these water saving tips are cheap, easy, and can
make a real difference.
Ten ways that will save the most: 1. Water
your lawn only when it needs it. Step on your grass. If it springs
back, when you lift your foot, it doesn't need water. So set your
sprinklers for more days in between watering. Saves 750-1,500
gallons per month. Better yet, especially in times of drought, water
with a hose. And best of all, convert your lawn to native
plants. 2. Fix leaky faucets and plumbing joints. Saves 20
gallons per day for every leak stopped. 3. Don't run the hose
while washing your car. Use a bucket of water and a quick hose rinse
at the end. Saves 150 gallons each time. For a two-car family that's
up to 1,200 gallons a month. 4. Install water-saving shower heads
or flow restrictors. Saves 500 to 800 gallons per month. 5. Run
only full loads in the washing machine and dishwasher. Saves 300 to
800 gallons per month. 6. Shorten your showers. Even a one or two
minute reduction can save up to 700 gallons per month. 7. Use a
broom instead of a hose to clean driveways and sidewalks. Saves 150
gallons or more each time. At once a week, that's more than 600
gallons a month. 8. Don't use your toilet as an ashtray or
wastebasket. Saves 400 to 600 gallons per month. 9. Capture tap
water. While you wait for hot water to come down the pipes, catch
the flow in a watering can to use later on house plants or your
garden. Saves 200 to 300 gallons per month. 10. Don't water the
sidewalks, driveway or gutter. Adjust your sprinklers so that water
lands on your lawn or garden where it belongs--and only there. Saves
500 gallons per month. In the bathroom: 1. Put a
plastic bottle or a plastic bag weighted with pebbles and filled
with water in your toilet tank. Displacing water in this manner
allows you to use less water with each flush. Saves 5 to 10 gallons
a day. That's up to 300 gallons a month, even more for large
families. Better yet, for even greater savings, replace your
water-guzzling five to seven gallon a flush toilet with a one and a
half gallon, ultra-low flush model. 2. If you're taking a shower,
don't waste cold water while waiting for hot water to reach the
shower head. Catch that water in a container to use on your outside
plants or to flush your toilet. Saves 200 to 300 gallons a
month. 3. Check toilet for leaks. Put dye tablets or food
coloring into the tank. If color appears in the bowl without
flushing, there's a leak that should be repaired. Saves 400 gallons
a month. 4. Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. Saves
three gallons each day. 5. Turn off the water while shaving. Fill
the bottom of the sink with a few inches of water to rinse your
razor. Saves three gallons each day. In the
kitchen: 1. If you wash dishes by hand--and that's the best
way--don't leave the water running for rinsing. If you have two
sinks, fill one with rinse water. If you only have one sink, use a
spray device or short blasts instead of letting the water run. Saves
200 to 500 gallons a month. 2. When washing dishes by hand, use
the least amount of detergent possible. This minimizes rinse water
needed. Saves 50 to 150 gallons a month. 3. Keep a bottle of
drinking water in the refrigerator. This beats the wasteful habit of
running tap water to cool it for drinking. Saves 200 to 300 gallons
a month. 4. Don't defrost frozen foods with running water. Either
plan ahead by placing frozen items in the refrigerator overnight or
defrost them in the microwave. Saves 50 to 150 gallons a
month. 5. Don't let the faucet run while you clean vegetables.
Rinse them in a filled sink or pan. Saves 150 to 250 gallons a
month. 6. Use the garbage disposal less and the garbage more
(even better--compost!). Saves 50 to 150 gallons a
month. Outside: 1. Put a layer of mulch around trees
and plants. Chunks of bark, peat moss or gravel slows down
evaporation. Saves 750 to 1,500 gallons a month. 2. If you have a
pool, use a pool cover to cut down on evaporation. It will also keep
your pool cleaner and reduce the need to add chemicals. Saves 1,000
gallons a month. 3. Water during the cool parts of the day. Early
morning is better than dusk since it helps prevent the growth of
fungus. Saves 300 gallons. 4. Don't water the lawn on windy days.
There's too much evaporation. Can waste up to 300 gallons in one
watering. 5. Cut down watering on cool and overcast days and
don't water in the rain. Adjust or deactivate automatic sprinklers.
Can save up to 300 gallons each time. 6. Set lawn mower blades
one notch higher. Longer grass means less evaporation. Saves 500 to
1,500 gallons each month. 7. Have an evaporative air conditioner?
Direct the water drain line to a flower bed, tree base, or
lawn. 8. Drive your car onto a lawn to wash it. Rinse water can
help water the grass. 9. Tell your children not to play with the
garden hose. Saves 10 gallons a minute. 10. If you allow your
children to play in the sprinklers, make sure it's only when you're
watering the yard--if it's not too cool at that time of day. 11.
Xeriscape--replace your lawn and high-water-using trees and plants
with less thirsty ones. But do this only in wet years. Even drought
resistant plantings take extra water to get them going. That'll save
750 to 1,500 gallons a month. 12. When taking your car to a car
wash--a good idea for saving water--be sure it's one of the many
that recycles its wash water. 13. Dispose of hazardous materials
properly! One quart of oil can contaminate 250,000 gallons of water,
effectively eliminating that much water from our water supply.
Contact your city or county for proper waste disposal options. And
don't flush prescription medications! While
Shopping (Information below from Last Oasis, by Sandra Postel,
and California Water Facts, by the Water Education
Foundation) Water is an essential ingredient in most
manufacturing operations. Especially for those 1 billion of us in
the high-consumption class, cutting down on our purchases of
material things--from clothes and shoes to paper and
appliances--conserves and protects water supplies as effectively as
installing a low-flush toilet does. As with so many natural
resources, as long as prices in the marketplace fail to reflect full
social and ecological costs, voluntary changes in consumption
patterns will play an important role in the quest for
sustainability. . We rarely think about water when we see an
automobile, for example, but producing a typical U.S. car requires
more than 50 times its weight in water (39,090 gallons)! Choosing a
fuel-efficient model will help--it takes 44 gallons of water to
refine one gallon of crude oil and 1,700 gallons of water to produce
a gallon of ethanol. . A kilogram (2.2 lbs) of hamburger or
steak produced by a typical California beef cattle operation, for
instance, uses some 20,500 liters (5,400 gal.) of water.
. Producing 1 lb of bread requires 500 gallons of
water. . Producing 1 serving (8 oz.) of chicken requires 330
gallons of water. . Growing one cotton T-shirt requires 256
gallons of water (source: The King of California, by Arax and
Wartzman) . Producing 1 egg requires over 100 gallons of
water.
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| Highlight
Erosion! What Can You Do?
Muddy
Water Watch Our community has become all too familiar
with the site of new developments with poor measures to prevent
erosion and mud from leaving the site. Allowing this mud to runoff
into their neighbor's yards, the street, or our streams is against
the law and serious threat to the health of our streams. The
statewide Muddy Water Watch is designed to lend a hand to help stop
our number one polluter-sedimentation. Volunteers will be trained
throughout the French Broad Watershed this winter in effort to help
them recognize and report stormwater and erosion control violations.
These volunteer will inspect active construction sites and report
violations to the appropriate authorities. By having what RiverLink
hopes will become an army of trained volunteers watching
construction sites, preventive measures will be installed correctly
and maintained properly. This will help fill the gap that
state and local governments are not meeting and help clean up the
French Broad Watershed. If you are interested in becoming a Muddy
Water Watch Volunteer contact Hartwell Carson, French Broad
Riverkeeper at 828-252-8474 ext. 114 or Riverkeeper@riverlink.org.
Training will take place January 29th, February 12th, and 23rd
for three hours each day.
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Watershed Education
See below for volunteer
info!
Evergreen Community Charter
School Haw
Creek, Davidson River
On two sunny October
days, 42 first grade students from Evergreen Community Charter
School learned about the French Broad River with RiverLink's
Watershed Education program. The school is located near Haw Creek, so students first
visited this tributary for an EnviroscapeT watershed model lesson
which introduced them to water pollution and stormwater runoff. They
also produced works of art inspired by the water, based on the River
of Words and Art program. Students finished the day with a tag game
called "Macroinvertebrate Mayhem," which introduced them to the
aquatic insects they would be learning about on their field
trip.
The following day Evergreen traveled to the Davidson River in Pisgah National
Forest to test its water quality. The "Kids in the Creek" program
involves sampling macroinvertebrate insects, which indicate a
Pollution Tolerance Index. Students discovered that this tributary
of the French Broad River had good water quality, based on the
number and variety of insects they found.
Boys and Girls Club Caring
For Children Reed
Creek
The Buncombe County Boys and Girls Club and
Caring For Children's Latino Mentoring program both took trips in
October to Reed Creek in Asheville's Botanical Gardens to learn
about water quality through the "Kids in the
Creek" program. These afterschool programs provide local students
with constructive activities, including educational field trips.
The groups donned waders and crocs, and equipped with nets
they jumped into the water to look for macroinvertebrate insects,
which are indicators of stream health. Students were excited to
discover that this urban creek, despite being adjacent to busy
Weaver Boulevard, is home to crayfish and other aquatic insects.
However, RiverLink's Education Coordinator, Kathryn Blau explained that "due to the recent storm, Reed Creek is filled with polluted stormwater runoff, so we did not find as many insects as
usual."
"The kids had a great time, and I think that hands-on
learning is the only way for them to really understand the effects
of pollution on our water," said Jessica Potter, coordinator of
Caring For Children. "They were so impressed by the experience that
we did a river clean-up the following week and are planning to adopt
a section of stream!"
Mars Hill Elementary
Second Grade Gabriel's
Creek
On a wet and dreary October day, Carolyn
Easterly's second grade class at Mars Hill Elementary braved the
rain to learn about water quality in Gabriel's Creek on the campus
of Mars Hill College. Students were introduced to stormwater runoff
and non-point source pollution with the EnviroscapeT watershed
model. The nearby parking lot and a sign indicating pesticide use on
a sports field gave firsthand examples of polluted runoff entering
the creek.
Despite these threats to water quality in the creek, the
students found that this section of the tributary of Ivy Creek and
the French Broad River had good water quality, probably due to its
location close to the protected headwaters. The second graders found
a healthy variety of macroinvertebrate insects. "Sometimes it is
difficult to tell how clean a stream is just by looking at it and
its surroundings," said RiverLink's Kathryn Blau. "That is why the
Kids in the Creek program encourages students to get their feet wet
and use scientific analysis to determine water quality."
Asheville Middle School
River Corps Moore
Branch
Aquatic bugs, salamanders, and fish oh my! That was the
reaction of the Asheville Middle School River Corps students as they
discovered aquatic life in Moore Branch, a tributary of the French
Broad River next to Carrier Park in Asheville. RiverLink supplied
waders, nets, and bug ID kits to help the students understand the
importance of water quality and the role these tiny critters play in
the food chain. River Corps sponsor Will Yeiser said "students
learned bugs are an integral link to a healthy river environment."
In 2006 RiverLink and Yeiser launched a successful River
Corps program that has allowed to students to experience hands-on
education that inspires them to appreciate and protect the French
Broad River. RiverLink is now working to expand this opportunity to
other schools. This will allow many more students the opportunity to
paddle the French Broad River, conduct water quality sampling, plant
trees, and cleanup their local river.
For more information on how your school
can start a River Corps Club, contact Kathryn Blau at 828-252-8474
or education@riverlink.org.
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River
Cleanups
September
River Cleanup Stats ~ 5 River Cleanups ~ ~ 54 Volunteers
~ ~ 138 Volunteer Hours ~ ~ 104 Bags of Trash ~ ~ 10 Tires
~ ~ 1 Deer Carcass ~
Super Job
Cleanup Teams, Many THANKS for keeping our rivers clean.
Academy of
the Sierras North Fork of the French Broad River
Academy of
the Sierras Davidson River
Academy of
the Sierras Searcy Creek and Indian Creek
Subtle Yoga
Teacher Training French Broad River-Jean Webb Park-Craven
Rd.
Caring for
Children French Broad River-Emma
Rd. |
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Upcoming River
Cleanups
November
25 Diamond Brand (Adopt A Stream) Ledges
Whitewater Park 12:00 pm-2:00 pm OPEN TO PUBLIC Meet at
Ledges park Contact James Trombley (828) 251
4668
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Volunteer
Opportunities
November 16 RiverLink Float Build
Day RiverLink needs volunteers to help build our float for the
Holiday Parade Meet at RiverLink Offices 10 am Please RSVP to
volunteer@riverlink.org
November
17 Holiday Parade, Downtown Asheville RiverLink is seeking
volunteers to ride/walk beside our float and hand out
goodies Meeting time TBA approx. 6 hour commitment Please
contact volunteer@riverlink.org
November 18 Richmond Hill Inn
Tea RiverLink needs volunteers to work our annual fundraiser
welcoming guests and helping with silent auction. Two time
periods 1:00 pm-3:00 pm and 3:00 pm-5:00 pm Please contact
volunteer@riverlink.org
Opportunities
Monthly
volunteer orientation First Wednesday of each month at 3:30 pm
and the First Friday at 12:15 November dates: 2nd & 7th
RiverLink offices, 170 Lyman St. Open to the public- please
RSVP to volunteer@riverlink.org
Come to
RiverLink to find out all about how YOU can get involved in our
efforts to revitalize the French Broad watershed! A 30 minute
presentation will give an overview of ongoing and special events
volunteer opportunities. You will have a chance to ask questions,
fill out a volunteer application, and speak with the Volunteer
Coordinator about your interests and availability.
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Watershed Education
volunteer training
Monday, December 10, 5:00-7:00
(snacks
provided)
Get
trained to deliver watershed education lessons to K-12 students and
citizens of the French Broad River watershed! This session
will focus on in-class/ indoor lessons such as Enviroscape and the
national Project WET curriculum. There will be optional follow up
field (stream) sessions early in 2008.
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RiverLink,
Inc. www.riverlink.org P.O.
Box
15488 Asheville, NC
28813-0488 Office: (828) 252-8474
x118 Fax: (828)
253-6848 information@riverlink.org
Get RiverLinked- read the
blog! www.getriverlinked.blogspot.com
Check us out on MySpace! www.myspace.com/riverlink |
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RiverLink to salute 2007
Critical Link winners Citizen Times, October
31
Richmond
Hill Inn tea party and silent auction to benefit RiverLink
Citizen Times, October 26
MHO
complexes could bring hundreds of new residents close to
downtown Citizen Times, October 25
RiverLink
voted Best Environmental Group in WNC by Mountain Xpress
readers! Mountain Xpress, October 17
Sleeping
Giant: Preparing for the next Swannanoa River flood Mountain
Xpress, October 10
RiverLink
seeks unnamed French Broad tributaries for 'Name That Creek'
project Citizen Times, October 7
Park
sculpture turns heads Citizen Times, October
6 |
| Events |
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Volunteer Information
Session
November 2, 12:15 pm RiverLink, 170 Lyman Street
RSVP to volunteer@riverlink.org
Volunteer Information
Session November 7, 3:30 pm
RiverLink, 170 Lyman Street RSVP to volunteer@riverlink.org
Mosaic
Church Adopt a Stream November 10, 10:00 am-12:00
pm Sweeten Creek, next to Trevi, Biltmore
Village
RiverFront Bus
Tour
November 15, 12pm-2pm Meet at City Hall RSVP volunteer@riverlink.org
Rotary
Club of Asheville Adopt a Stream November 17, 1:00
pm-3:00 pm French Broad River, Carrier
Park
Asheville Holiday
Parade
November 17, 2pm-6pm Downtown Asheville
Richmond Hill Inn Benefit
Tea
November 18, 2pm-4:30pm Richmond Hill Inn
Diamond Brand Adopt a
Stream November 25, 12:00 pm-2:00 pm Ledges
Whitewater Park
RiverSculpture
Festival
Extended to November 30. French Broad River Park
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| GET RIVERLINKED! |
| The feature of our
newsletter that aims to educate you about the French Broad
River watershed and get you RIVERLINKED! |
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River Fact of the
month
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River Photo of the
month |
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River Quote of the
month |
The
French Broad by
Wilma Dykeman
(1955)
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Readers are welcome
to submit river facts, photos, quotes, and anything else
related to the rivers! Email volunteer@riverlink.org | | |