Health & Fitness
Stewards Laugh and Learn at Green Kirkland Training Event
Green Kirkland Partnership volunteer park stewards recently spent half a day at McAuliffe Park sharing experiences and learning restoration best practices.
On Saturday, June 9, the Green Kirkland Partnership held its first training session for volunteer park restoration stewards. Fourteen of the 21 program stewards attended the half-day event led by staff from the City of Kirkland and Forterra (formerly the Cascade Land Conservancy). Each steward is assigned to one of the six Kirkland parks currently being restored.
Green Kirkland stewards organize volunteer events to restore forests, wetlands and other natural areas. Without intervention, English ivy, Himalayan blackberry and other invasive plants strangle or shade out the native trees and shrubs.
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Green Kirkland Partnership Education & Outreach Specialist Sharon Rodman says, “Natural areas are public assets that provide many benefits. They clean our air, buffer noise, retain stormwater to reduce flooding, help filter water, increase property values, provide habitat to birds and other beneficial wildlife and generate recreational and health benefits for residents. It’s in everyone’s interest to keep them healthy.”
At the training session, stewards learned best practices for planning and managing restoration events in Kirkland parks, planting native plants and controlling invasive plants. The training was funded through a federal grant received by Forterra.
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During lunch, Jim Corson, a Green Seattle forest steward, talked about his experiences working at restoration sites and his involvement with Friends of the Burke Gilman Trail.
The stewards received a satchel of helpful tools, including pens that write upside down and in the rain, thorn-resistant gloves, metal clipboard boxes and a newly-published Steward Field Guide written by Forterra and the Green Kirkland Partnership.
Green Kirkland stewards work at , , , and parks, and at . The volunteer stewards run their own restoration events with the support of the City. The Green Kirkland Partnership hopes to hold training events annually.
For more information about the program, and how you can help, go to www.greenkirkland.org.
