We arrived at Connelly Creek service site under dark clouds but no rain for our last service outing of the Fall season. for the last month there has been four groups of Explorers working on this site every weekend. The transformation of this land has been amazing to watch and be a part of.
This final outing of service for the Fall season was such a great way for the Red Tailed Eyas and the Grey Wolf Pups to not only see all the work that groups before them had done, but also to put in the final push of work before we leave this site until Spring. Our task today was to plant the seven 10ft tall Red Alders that the Parks Department had left for us. We needed to dig holes for every tree, set up supports, and finally cage in and mulch around the base of the trees.
While we waited for the Grey Wolf Pups the Red Tailed Eyas had a discussion about one of the main species that is affected by the work that we do; the Salmon. The Alders are great nitrogen fixers for the soil as well as providing shade to stunt the invasive reed canary grass. The boys had some really insightful observations on what makes good habitat for salmon and how our work is benefiting habitat.
When the Grey Wolf Pups arrived the combined energy of the two groups swept us into productive work. Digging holes, throwing mulch, finding roots, clearing Reed Canary grass, moving Red Alders, setting up cages, massaging roots, laughing, new friends, dirty hands, more holes, and plenty of strong work.![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uFIA2-giHCxgNCiG0yDWmoAFFvOC8_FimPcV4V_FVB8_WTS2hSKgD-BDzVhHtqXP_-sCpHRM6zaxPfhs1omnjy69CQTC0ayE2Q9eIbhDMNlRYOlGPT7h0MSjLU7R8YgGJZNVN8wWd9HJQxZCXpV3Jc3CQqqKylCkzqf10y-sVG6Yxr0PV_4U24wItncj7-B5rIZXnt5Fqe-WFmzDH8RCmQBCXEzmXz2iRyNa3J-A=s0-d)
The power of having two Explorers groups work together is so tangible when doing this work at Connelly Creek; So much hard work and new connections with each other. After a solid few hours of work the Red Alders were no longer laying on their sides in a pile, but instead happily standing in freshly dug and mulched holes. It was really amazing to look around and see a miniature forest of Red Alder saplings instead of the Reed Canary grass that had carpeted the ground previously.
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