Category: General Watershed Info

  • Kalamazoo TMDL meeting

    Kalamazoo TMDL meeting

    Please join us on Thursday, May 16 from 9:00 – 11:00 am for our quarterly meeting of the Lake Allegan/Kalamazoo River Phosphorus TMDL Implementation Committee. We meet at the Kalamazoo Water Reclamation Plant at 1415 Harrison St., Kalamazoo, MI 49007.

    Click to download the meeting agenda. For questions, please contact Tom Dunn, Implementation  Committee Chair.

  • Consider native plants this spring

    Consider native plants this spring

    “I am interested in native plants, but what should I plant in my yard?”

    Photo Credit: USDA
    Photo Credit: USDA

    Join us for the answer to this commonly asked question and learn why, what, and how to include native plants in your landscape. Plus, learn how to design your home landscaping to improve water quality, prevent erosion, reduce flooding, save water, and provide wildlife habitat.

    “Native Plants in Your Landscape” — FREE workshop hosted by the Kalamazoo Conservation District and the Kalamazoo River Watershed Council.

    Wednesday, May 8th from 6:30 -8:30 pm
    Portage District Library – Austin Lake Room
    300 Library Lane, Portage, MI 49002

    Speakers: Tom Small, author of Using Native Plants to Restore Community and Erin Fuller, Watershed Coordinator at the Van Buren Conservation District.

    Advanced registration is requested by Monday, May 6. Please register online or by phone (269) 327-1258.

    “Where do I buy Michigan native plants?”

    The Kalamazoo Conservation District will be selling native plants from Hidden Savannah Nursery, a local native plant grower, on Saturday, May 11th. The plant sale will take place at the Bank Street Farmers Market in Kalamazoo from 7:00 am – 2:00 pm. They will be featuring a special Mother’s Day basket of native flowers. Get their early to pick up your flowers.

  • River Voices features article about Kalamazoo River

    River Voices features article about Kalamazoo River

    The Kalamazoo River and the Watershed Council were recently featured in an article in Kalamazoo River Leaning TreesRiver Voices, a publication of the River Network. Our article, “Cleanups: Beyond Trash” was part of a special series highlighting 25 lessons learned by 25 different watershed organizations working to protect and restore rivers and their watersheds. The article, written by Dr. Stephen Hamilton, describes several challenges and accomplishments in our watershed, including the 2010 oil spill and subsequent cleanup and PCB contaminated sediments throughout the Superfund Site. While this legacy of pollution is certainly part of our watershed’s history, it does not have to define our future. Many organizations, agencies, and local communities are working to change this legacy, and we are seeing and measuring improvements in the health of the Kalamazoo River ecosystem.

    The lesson learned from our watershed has been that persistence and patience are essential to remain engaged in our work of restoring, improving, and protecting the Kalamazoo River watershed. The Watershed Council will continue to be involved in these river cleanup actions for as long as it takes, while always seeking to improve the public image of the river and get more people to appreciate the wonderful resource that it is.

     

  • Last chance to register for Kalamazoo Legislative Breakfast

    Last chance to register for Kalamazoo Legislative Breakfast

    The Kalamazoo Environmental Council (KEC) is hosting the annual legislative breakfast on Monday, March 11 from 7:30 – 9:30 am at the Kalamazoo Nature Center. As a member of KEC, we invite you to join us as we talk with our state and federal lawmakers about protecting and managing Michigan’s natural resources for future generations in the face of global climate change and increasing pressure to maximize short-term economic gains. Invited lawmakers include: State Senator Tonya Schuitmaker, State Representatives Jase Bolger, Sean McCann, Aric Nesbitt, Margaret O’Brien, and legislative staff for U.S. Representative Fred Upton and U.S. Senators Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow.

    Register online at www.naturecenter.org or by phone (269) 375-0954 by March 6. Breakfast is $8.00. The discussion begins at 8:00 am and is free.