Mainspring Conservation Trust

Stewards of the Southern Blue Ridge

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The Cherokee Scout: Bird Organization Monitors Welch Farm

August 8, 2018

By: Kelsey Richardson
August 8, 2018

Mist settled over the Valley as Mark Hopey and Kathy Gunther walked through the tall dewey grass of Welch Farm, monitoring birds to put toward the station’s last set of data for the year.

Hopey and Kathy, who work for the Southern Appalachian Raptor Research, travel to four stations across western North Carolina every summer. For the past four years, the organization has gathered research at Welch Farm.

For 10 days, Hopey, Kathy and other members of their team have taken measurements of mostly songbirds to send to the Institute of Bird Populations. Welch Farm is one of about 500 stations nationwide that gathers such information.

“Our goal is to collect data in different habitats to see what’s breeding and what’s surviving,” Gunther said.

She said the four stations her organization monitor encompass different habitats. Hopey describes Welch Farm as relatively “feral.”

Owned by Mainspring Conservation Trust, the farm is not managed for agriculture. The undeveloped land’s thick brush and river allow for birds to thrive and return every year.

Hopey said unlike the other three stations, Welch Farm’s habitat provides a home for Louisiana waterthrush and willow flycatchers. This year’s most common species of bird found at the site included the gray catbird.

Hopey and Kathy catch the birds through setting up 10 nets around the farm. Each year, the nets are placed in the same locations.

Once removed safely from the nets, they take the birds’ measurements, then release them back where they were found. If the bird has a numbered band on its leg, they mark down its identification. If not, they usually place a band around the bird’s leg.

In addition to members of Southern Appalachian Raptor Research, volunteers contribute to the Welch Farm bird monitoring.

Trekking through the farm during the early morning hours on July 30, Bob and Lynn Appleget took their bird-watching to a new level. Lynn said she mostly watches birds from her property, but never receives the opportunity to get hands-on experience with them.

“It’s just cool,” she said. “I learned about the worm-eating warbler. This is a good reason to be outside.”

Filed Under: News, Press Room Tagged With: Cherokee County, education, event, families, Welch Farm

Celebrating Boring

July 3, 2018

Mainspring’s news typically centers on timely events, either positive (a new land acquisition, an award won), or potential problems that Mainspring can address.

In 28 years of biomonitoring, we’ve had many timely successes – the return of the threatened spotfin chub to Licklog Creek, restorations of healthy riparian buffers along streams – but in the biomonitoring world, the best news is the boring news. Biomonitoring results from high-quality rating sites like the Little Tennessee mainstem, where it flows through the Needmore Game Lands, or in Betty Creek in Rabun Gap, Georgia, are monotonous. Year after year, they have the best biodiversity ratings that can be expected in populated areas, but that type of data just doesn’t grab headlines.

In addition to identifying problems, a key function of biomonitoring is to draw attention to what is good and remind us all to be thankful for it. If it were possible to fix everything, all biomonitoring results would be stable year after year. Instead, we celebrate the “boring” results of Needmore and Betty Creek and work towards more “boring” results at other sites. Reporting on those few places which already match the “desired future condition” serves to remind us of the goal and gives us great joy. It may not be flashy, but it’s definitely something to celebrate.

Dr. Bill McLarney
June 30, 2018

Filed Under: Uncategorized

BPR News: How The Little Tennessee River Was Saved 25 Years Ago

July 3, 2018

By: Lilly Knoepp

July 2, 2018

Twenty-five years ago, representatives from the Tennessee Valley Authority, the League of Women Voters, the National Rifle Association and many more came together at the First Presbyterian Church in Franklin NC.

What brought this diverse group together?

The conservation of the Little Tennessee River watershed.  The watershed includes all streams and creeks that flow into the river starting in Rabun County, Georgia and flowing up through Macon and Swain Counties in North Carolina. The 27 miles of free flowing river between Lake Emory in Franklin and Lake Fontana near Bryson City supports one of the most diverse ecosystems of plants and animals in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

View or listen to the rest of the story here.

Filed Under: News, Press Room Tagged With: aquatic, conservation, Macon County, Swain County, water

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