Guy Cove Watershed Restoration Project In 2008, Green Forests Work set out to restore Guy Cove Watershed in collaboration with the University of Kentucky Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering. This area had been surface mined for coal and reclaimed as a valley fill, eliminating nearly a mile of stream within the watershed. We excavated approximately 150,000 yards of soil during construction and replaced it within the watershed to form a new valley and bring back the buried stream. In the spring of 2009, over 30,000 native trees were planted in the watershed. Today, the forest has returned, the stream flows again, and wildlife utilizes this resource. The first picture is from 2007, before the restoration work. The second picture is from 2024, 15 years after the project was completed.
Green Forests Work
环境服务
Lexington,Kentucky 622 位关注者
Tree planting organization reforesting formerly mined lands in Appalachia.
关于我们
Green Forests Work is committed to reforesting surface-mined lands throughout Appalachia with native species in ways that restore a variety of ecosystem services while providing current and future economic opportunities for the people of Appalachia.
- 网站
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https://greenforestswork.org
Green Forests Work的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 环境服务
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- Lexington,Kentucky
- 类型
- 非营利机构
- 创立
- 2009
- 领域
- tree planting和reforestation
地点
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主要
730 Rose St
US,Kentucky,Lexington,40508
Green Forests Work员工
动态
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Green Forests Work and the U.S. Forest Service hosted a planting event on the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia for our partners at Komatsu on Thursday, May 16, 2024. Volunteers planted 1,500 red spruce trees over 2 acres, bringing the total number of trees planted through this partnership to over 600,000. In all, Green Forests Work has now planted more than 1,000,000 trees in the Monongahela National Forest since 2010.
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On May 14, Eric Oliver represented Green Forests Work (GFW) at the Western Pennsylvania awards ceremony for the Pennsylvania Environmental Council (PEC). At the ceremony, the Altoona Water Authority (AWA) received the Excellence in Partnership Award for its work on approximately 2,500 acres of formerly mined land it purchased. Green Forests Work partnered with AWA to reforest 188 acres of legacy-mined land in 2022 as part of its land management plan. It also wants to reforest more acres in the future. Partners in the reforestation project, including PEC, GFW, AWA, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, PA DEP, and Bryn Mawr College, have united their efforts to envision a comprehensive land management plan. This plan includes reforestation, the development of mountain biking, hiking, and snowmobile trails, and public access for other recreation and hunting activities. This multifaceted approach ensures the sustainable use of the reforested areas. Another highlight of the ceremony was the recognition of Davitt Woodwell, a newly appointed board member of GFW. He was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award for his service as the immediate past president of PEC. During his tenure, he was pivotal in promoting and scaling up the ARRI-mined land reforestation in PA, a testament to his dedication to environmental conservation.
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After Chris and May May Barton have wrapped up a work week with Green Forests Work, they can be found on their family farm working in their truffle orchard and training their 3-year-old white labrador retriever, Pinky, to become a truffle hunting dog. Listen (or read) "Off the Beaten Path with Sam Dick" as he talks to Barton, Brian Mattingly, and Amanda Humphrey from Maker's Mark Distillery and shares how the truffle industry is growing in Kentucky. https://lnkd.in/eAnAUcdh
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Green Forests Work held a volunteer tree planting with the Moshannon Creek Watershed Association, the Emma Munson Foundation, and several Boy Scout, Cub Scout, and Girl Scout troops from the Centre County area on April 26, 2024, near Sandy Ridge, PA. The volunteers planted approximately 700 trees on 2 acres of previously mined land prepped in March. Green Forests Work provided the site preparation, while the Chesapeake Bay Foundation provided the trees for the site.
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Last Saturday, April 20, 2024, Green Forests Work and our partners at New River Gorge National Park and Preserve hosted a volunteer tree-planting event at War Ridge Campground. Local community members, campers, and the WVU National Park Trust came out to help plant 2,400 trees on a gorgeous spring day. Tree species planted included red oak, white oak, red maple, yellow poplar, black cherry, and red mulberry. Because the site wasn't heavily invaded by invasive species, it was only deep plowed to decompact the ground. The native herbaceous and shrub vegetation and the soil containing its seed bank were left on-site. That vegetation will help protect the seedlings as they grow into saplings. We hope everyone who helped plant will visit the campground in ten years to see how their trees have grown!
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On April 12th and 13th, Green Forests Work partnered with St Francis University of PA, the Altoona Water Authority, the Emma Munson Foundation, and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation to plant approximately 1,900 trees, including red spruce, eastern white pine, red oak, chestnut oak, black locust, sugar maple, and American chestnut, on a 3-acre site mined and reclaimed in the 1990s. The Altoona Water Authority owns the site and will help protect and restore the watershed. GFW provided site preparation, trees, and tools. St Francis Environmental Engineering students and staff provided the labor to plant.
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Approximately 50 University of Kentucky and Berea College students joined Green Forests Work on Saturday, March 23, to continue reforestation efforts on a property near Hazard, Kentucky. Participants planted 3,000 trees across 5 acres of the 152-acre project area, including 200 trees, to recognize donor contributions following WEKU's Fall 2023 fundraiser. When completed, more than 100,000 trees of 20 different species will have been planted, including nearly 3,000 potentially blight-resistant chestnuts provided by the Arbor Day Foundation and The American Chestnut Foundation.
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Green Forests Work (GFW) will plant about 130,000 trees this spring on approximately 150 acres of privately owned, formerly mined land in Clearfield County, PA, near Punxsutawney. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, The Nature Conservancy, One Tree Planted, and GFW are funding this project, which is in year one of a two-year project that will eventually reforest 300 acres of mined land. The site was previously heavily overgrown with autumn olive, invasive honeysuckle, and Japanese knotweed. A.M. Logging of Spring Mills, PA, and Smerkar Services from Shippenville, PA, removed these invasive species from the planting area. Fremer Reclamation, Inc. of Brockway, PA, ripped the site using a Komatsu 155 dozer with double-ripping shanks. Napieralsky Forestry Services will complete the planting, which includes 24 tree species. Once the planting is complete, one of the landowners wishes to enter their property into a permanent conservation easement to preserve the crucial habitat that exists and is being restored. This easement will conserve nearly 150 acres. Eric Oliver is managing the GFW project with assistance from Michael French and Anna Branduzzi.
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A group of students from UNC Chapel Hill spent a week at Robinson Forest studying ecological restoration and planting trees. It was a great week and we look forward to seeing the results!
My environmental science capstone class had the opportunity to spend our spring break at the Robinson Research Forest in Clayhole, Kentucky. We measured tree growth for loblolly pine and oaks, conducted vegetation surveys, and sampled soil to compare various forestry management styles for reclaimed mine sites. It was wonderful to see the hours of research and proposal planning come together in the field. I'm so grateful to have had the chance to gain more field work experience and conduct research with an amazing group of my peers. A big thank you to Chris Barton for your invaluable expertise in the field and to Geoffrey Bell for your guidance through the proposal development process. Now it's time to crunch some numbers!