Dr. Erin Grabarczyk of Valdosta State University talked about
research so far
her research
on the effects of human-caused environmental change on animals, especially birds,
and including noise.
She included some preliminary notes on her research beginning in the Okefenokee Swamp.
Emily Ferrall will give an overview of the bats of Georgia,
including species likely to occur at Banks Lake,
and she has footage of the Douglas warehouse bats to show.
She will mention the acoustic volunteer program.
She is a
Wildlife Biologist, in the Wildlife Resources Division of the
Wildlife Conservation Section of the
Georgia Department of Natural Resources (GA-DNR).
She specializes in research and monitoring for nongame mammals in Georgia and spends much of her time working with bats. Emily has been with GA DNR since 2016. Emily earned both her Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees from the University of Georgia with an emphasis in wildlife science.
WWALS Board President Sara Jay Jones will give a brief introduction, Emily Ferrall
will speak for about 45 minutes, and we will have questions and answers. Continue reading →
Thanks to the reporter for doing this story,
especially for including the material about the stigma of sewage spills,
which affects even Suwannee Basin rivers that are not even downstream from Valdosta,
and about the economic damage of such stigma.
Please note that while Valdosta is the biggest sewage spill problem,
because it is the most populous city in the Suwannee River Basin,
it is far from the only city that spills sewage,
and not all E. coli contamination comes from sewage;
see other sources.
As noted in the story, Valdosta is spending millions of dollars to fix its sewage problems.
Nobody will be happier when there are no more sewage spills than Valdosta staff and elected officials, many of whom are new since most of the notorious sewage spills happened.
But that day is still some time in the future.
At 7:30 AM tomorrow morning, Wednesday, July 24, 2024,
Bill Osborne and Suwannee Riverkeeper will invite songwriters to send in songs by midnight that day,
for the Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest.
Hahira, Georgia, July 22, 2024 — Songwriters, Wednesday is the last day to send in your story in song about any river, creek, spring, sink, swamp, pond, aquifer, or bay in the Suwannee River Basin or Estuary, except not in the Santa Fe River Basin.
“So sharpen your pencils and submit your song, to www.wwals.net. See you there!” said Sweet William Billy Ennis, the 2021 winner and 2022 headliner,
https://youtu.be/GGns39nI6-o
The finals will be held Saturday, September 7, 2024, at the WWALS
River Revue, Turner Center for the Arts, Valdosta, Georgia. The
audience will listen, while three judges decide who wins in several
categories.
Shawn O’Connor and Quen Metzler and I sawed through the first deadfall in several places.
At the last cut, Shawn found a snake in the hollow log.
We never did see what kind.
Bird Chamberlain, leading this outing, had already fallen in at the first deadfall.
He was in the water pulling sawed logs out of the way.
Shawn said to Bird, that log’s stuck on a sandbar, see if you can pull it over.
Bird pulled, and it wasn’t a sandbar.
A dead gator floated up.
Not knowing the gator was dead, Bird apparently walked on water back to his boat.
“I don’t want to play anymore,” he said.
Update 2024-07-30:
Cancelled due to too strong flow for the upstream Suwannee Paddle to Suwannee River State Park Ramp.
Come along for this fun 8.44 mile paddle on the Withlacoochee River from Allen Ramp to Suwannee River State Park. There will be beautiful springs to enjoy and several sets of shoals to paddle through, possibly requiring some basic skills. Everyone must wear a PFD at all times on the river and have a bow line for your boat. There will also be an upstream paddle of 1/4 mile from the confluence of the rivers to the ramp at SRSP.
When: Gather 9 AM, launch 10:30 AM, end 3 PM, Thursday, August 1, 2024
Put In:Allen Ramp,
2726 SW 64th Way Jasper, FL 32052, in Hamilton County, Florida.
From Jasper, travel north on US 41 to SR 6; turn left; travel south on SW CR 141 to SW CR 143; turn right and follow SW CR 143 to SW 64 Way and follow to ramp.
A few people brought their own paddles and PFDs, and they paddled anyway.
But there was a mixup with getting the paddles and PFDs from Lanier County.
Kimberly Godden Tanner, the outing leader, did not have those,
so the WWALS paddle did not happen.
We will investigate a better way.
And thanks again to Lanier County for providing free rental of the kayaks and canoes
and the paddles and PFDs.
Thanks to Kim for trying, and better luck next lunar month.
For more WWALS outings and events as they are posted, see
the WWALS outings web page,
https://wwals.net/outings/.
WWALS members also get an upcoming list in the Tannin Times newsletter.
The Santa Fe River tested clean at the spot it didn’t last week,
Wanamake (Butler) Ramp,
a tenth of a mile up from the Suwannee River.
Sugar Creek tested clean last Saturday.
We don’t have any more test results this week.
However, since there has been little rain, chances are that nothing much washed into the rivers.