Sunday, March 22, 2015

Nature Coast CISMA, Florida

Nature Coast CISMA Webster, Florida



I had the extreme pleasure of being the guest speaker at the Nature Coast CISMA on Wednesday, March 18, 2015at the Cedar Hammock Lodge, in Webster FL. I learned of the groups activities while  reading about the group in February during “Invasive Species Awareness Week”, in Florida. I was so impressed with the idea and thought it would be a great idea for Michigan to adopt.  So interested in learning how and why they started the Awareness week, I contacted several of the events chairperson, either through email or phone. Keith Morin, Park Biologist, Crystal River Preserve St.Park  and I connected and shared our ideas, frustrations and sheer passion for preserving the areas we both love. Because of the conversation, Keith invited me to be the guess speaker at the March Nature Coast
CISMA meeting. I was honored, and the rest is history.

 Driving from manicured and trimmed settings of The Villages Florida, I was reminded of the natural beauty of Florida. Only an hour away from where I am in The Villages, and I was able to see open expansive farms, cattle ranches and even areas with inland lakes and open water.

I was the first to arrive.  I did not attend the morning workday session. Many of the members were working, that morning, within the area on prescribed burns, and/or hand- pulling or spraying for Caesar’s weed,Wandering Jew, the houseplant gone wild in Florida and spraying Sword Fern and sour orange trees.


While waiting for all to arrive,  I was able to view the beauty of the old Oak trees all dripping in Spanish Moss and feel the coolness they offered to the heat of the 89 degree day. I saw butterflies, heard the birds and actually felt a little intimidated. This is not the Florida I am comfortable with, I see palm trees, manicured lawns and roadways, I hear the constant drum of traffic noises. It was peaceful, cooling, and inspiring to see insects, hear numerous birds and experience the coolness offered by the canopy of trees. 

 I am glad that I did not venture out to take pictures while waiting for the group to arrive. I learned that I was not properly dressed for even walking around the Lodge. I wore sandals, something so appropriate for my lifestyle in The Villages, was not appropriate out here. It was pointed out to me, along the cement walkway to the Lodge, beautifully camouflaged among the fallen oak leaf litter, there it was. . .a juvenile  Ggymy Rattlesnake !!!! And yes they can impact a venomous bite, tiny yet fully equipped with fangs and venom.


Walking into the lodge, I was introduced to the members of the Nature Coast CISMA. While listening to their committee reports, recaps of the last meeting, and the nominating and voting in a new Steering Committee Chair, Operations Committee Chair, I felt right at home. I was thousands of miles from my home in Michigan, yet felt very comfortable with this group of concerned and passionate people here to ensure that the native Florida they know and love will be in existence for future generations.



I also learned, they experience the same trials in running a CISMA, of getting persons to volunteer, keeping them  active within the group, m$ney, m$ney and m$ney is always an issue for a volunteer group. Keeping the events staffed with volunteers, supplying the educational materials/handouts to  the ever increasing interested persons, and of course feeding the masses when they come to a workday project: different place, same issues.

I explained our challenges, our struggles and successes with OPIS and the now newly formed Oakland County CISMA. They appreciated that we too are as concerned with the environment and engaging people to maintain the integrity of Michigan’s native beauty.

I will be keeping in contact with this group. We shared numbers, emails, website addresses. I drove away with a sense that it is comforting to know there are individuals that have the same concerns and passions for Florida as I do for Michigan:  protecting  the precious resources of land, water and wildlife.  




Thursday, January 15, 2015

Oakland County CISMA

Hello Everyone,

The Oakland County Co-operative Invasive Species Management Area or OC CISMA, has been formed!

A meeting hosted by Orion Township, and attended by 15 of the 19 grant partners created the Steering Committee on January 13, 2015. A grant was submitted by Orion Township to the MDNR for the Michigan Invasive Species Grant Program on behalf of these 19 partners on December 5, 2014.

The partners are as follows:
Addison Township
Charter Township of Bloomfield
Charter Township of Brandon
City of the Village of Clarkston
Charter Township of Independence
City of Keego Harbor
Michigan Nature Association
North Oakland Headwaters Land Conservancy
Oakland County Conservation District
Oakland County Intermediate School District
Oakland County Parks and Recreation Commission
Oakland Phragmites & Invasive Species (OPIS) Task Force
Charter Township of Orion
The Road Commission for Oakland County
Rose Township
Charter Township of Springfield
The Stewardship Network
Charter Township of Waterford
West Bloomfield Parks and Recreation Commission

The Parties established the OC CISMA to establish and document an organizational framework of collaboration and cooperation between the Parties to work toward addressing the effects of invasive species across jurisdictional boundaries.

On February 15, 2015, the results will be given by the MDNR to the Parties. Funds can be dispersed as early as April 1, 2015. Several of the Parties have started an Action Plan for winter of 2015, to hit the ground running when the funds are dispersed.

If you reside in one of these communities and would like to be part of this newly formed organization, and would like to join in with their efforts, please contact OPIS at www.oaklandphragmitestaskforce.com.

As a private homeowner, business owner, property owner, learn how you can eradicate invasive plants from your property and waterways. It is possible to regain our land from these invasive plants.

Friday, January 9, 2015

Winter has arrived! Polar Vortex or Alberta Clipper?


Baby It's Cold Outside!!!!

It is being blamed on the Polar Vortex. New buzz words for cold, frigid and nasty below freezing temperatures.  Some remembering cold winters being blamed on the Alberta Clipper. Are they one and the same? How do we turn them off?

Each system is responsible for frigid temperatures, fierce winds and snowfall. While they are both centers of low atmospheric pressure, a polar vortex is an actual cyclone, albeit a very large one.

 The Alberta clipper forms, moves across North America from west to east, and then breaks up. Whereas the polar vortices are just "there," all the time, drifting, ebbing and flowing, strengthening and weakening. So, the polar vortex doesn't "form, then sweep, then disband." It's always up there at the North Pole within a certain area, and when the conditions are right it expands or "spills" down into Canada and the US.

The Alberta clipper is fast-moving; the polar vortex, not so much. The "Alberta" part of the name is obviously a reference to its origin in the area of Alberta, but the "clipper" part is a reference to the fast-moving sea vessels. The polar vortex doesn't move so much as it just changes shape. And how fast it changes shape depends on what happens to those forces that are keeping it penned in.

The Polar Vortex usually retreats in mid March but can extend into May, opening the door for warmer air and Spring. The winter of 2014, a Polar Vortex nightmare,  set many records here in Michigan. Let's hope the winter of 2015 will not be following with that trend.



NORTHERN POLAR VORTEX, WITH CENTERS OVER SIBERIA AND CANADA