We have lots of news, big and small, since our last newsletter.
TRAIL IMPROVEMENTS! The most exciting news is, improvements to the final muddy section of our trail are under way. Soon we will have dry footing on the entire loop trail. Many, many thanks to Lower Merion’s Dept of Parks & Recreation for addressing the Number One project on our members’ wish list.
FREE FRESH HERBS. If, as you head home from the park to fix dinner, you’d like a bit of basil, parsley, dill, or oregano, help yourself from the herb pot in the Wildlife Garden, just inside the garden gate. Just remember to leave enough on the plant so it can keep on growing through the summer. And there are gallon jugs of water next to it, so if the pot is looking dry, feel free to water it.
KNOTWEED WORK DAY REPORT. During 3 work days in early June (two scheduled and one ad hoc to finish up), 11 Friends of WMC members spent 58 hours pulling out Japanese Knotweed, an invasive plant that increases stream erosion and crowds out wildlife friendly plants. A big thank you to Julian and Paul Brenman, Ellen and Stephen Briggs, Paula Burns, Michelle Detwiler, Mary Field, Karen Hinckley, Hazel Murphy, Ellen Reese, and Elaine Stern. We cleared the fenced off riparian area from the park gate all the way down to the second stream access point. There’s more to do in the final fenced section from the second stream access trail to the end of the park (and elsewhere). Email us (use the Contact Us tab on this website) for instructions if you would like to continue this work.
WEEDING WEDNESDAYS. We scheduled three garden workdays to weed and cut back overgrown sedge. We got lots of work done at the first one but there are two more, on June 22 and June 29, if you’d like to help. We are sending notices about this only to those who have expressed interest in working as a garden volunteer. If you would like to be included on that list, just shoot us an email. Also, garden workdays are always listed on the website so you can check for details there if you’d like to join in.