Sports

Old Mine Park Clean Up

On Saturday, May 19, from 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM, volunteers will gather to complete streamside plantings at Old Mine Park along the Pequonnock River in Trumbull, CT. The Trumbull Conservation Commission and Save the Sound, a program of Connecticut Fund for the Environment, ...are co-hosting the event.

Native plants, tools, and refreshments will provide volunteers of all ages the opportunity for a direct hand in completing the planting and to learn more about details of creating streamside buffers to protect our waterways and wetlands, to reduce flooding impacts, and to create habitat for fish, birds and other wildlife.

A brief news conference will precede the volunteer portion to present the project to the public and to thank town officials and community volunteers whose efforts have made the Old Mine Streamside Buffer project possible. Funds for trees, shrubs and plants, and landscape features, have been awarded through a competitive grant program of the Anne Richardson Foundation to Connecticut Fund for the Environment and the Town of Trumbull. The Town has contributed an equal share in materials and labor to match the Anne Richardson grant and provide a beautiful and functional landscape at the parking entry for Old Mine Park.

Find out what's happening in Trumbullfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The project is among the inaugural restoration efforts of the Pequonnock River Initiative, a collaboration of Monroe, Trumbull and Bridgeport to improve water quality and protection of the Pequonnock River Watershed. The landscape and planting that you will see at Old Mine Park is a model streamside buffer, which is a recommended "Best Practice" in inland wetland and waterway protection. Planting native species on streamside banks helps to reduce soil erosion, to absorb flooding, and to provide shade and cool water for fish and other wildlife. The Old Mine Streamside Buffer includes trees, shrubs, stormwater retention pool and other plantings that help to clean water by natural filtration as it overflows in rainstorms, in this location, from road and parking area run-off, before entering the Pequonnock River.

To RSVP for the event or for more information, please email Save the Sound's Kierran Broatch at kbroatch@savethesound.org  or call (203) 787-0646, x113.”

Find out what's happening in Trumbullfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.