Monthly Archives: February 2016

Next Thursday (Feb. 25): Learn how to create your own backyard BCAS Certified Wildlife Garden!

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Join Bergen County Audubon Society President Don Torino on Thursday, Feb. 25, at 2 p.m. in the Meadowlands Environment Center and learn how you can create your own backyard, BCAS Certified Wildlife Garden. Backyard wildlife gardens provide a beneficial habitat for birds, butterflies and other wildlife. Don will talk about aspects of backyard wildlife gardens including the use of native plants, providing food and water sources, cover, and places to raise young .

The BCAS started the Certified Wildlife Garden Program this year to raise awareness of the importance of ensuring that backyards, schoolyards, business grounds and other areas benefit wildlife.

For more information on the program, click here. You can also contact Don Torino at greatauk4@gmail.com or 201-230-4983.

The event is free. Registration is recommended at eventbrite.njsea.com.

 

 

 

Don Torino’s Life In The Meadowlands: Housing Crisis In New Jersey!

New couples are finding it very hard to find suitable housing in the Garden State this year . Commercialization and urban sprawl are making life tough for these families to locate places where they can settle down and raise their young . There is stiff competition for housing that already exists and unless they can find help these families may have to seriously think twice about raising a family and bringing forth their next generation here in New Jersey.

The housing shortage I speak of occurs in all our own towns and cities and backyards and parks. It is our birds that are in serious need of some housing this Spring.

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Evening Yoga This Monday Feb. 22!

 

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The Meadowlands has always been a place for peaceful relaxation, and now for the first time we’re giving you the chance to further balance tranquility of the mind, body and soul with an “Evening Yoga Class,” on Monday, Feb. 22, from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Meadowlands Environment Center.

We will focus on alignment, flow and warmth followed by a restorative pose to unwind the body and mind for bed. The program is open to all levels of students-beginner to advanced, ages 14 and up. Poses can be modified to accommodate all levels.

Cost is $10.Sign-up at njsea.eventbrite.com.

Hope to see you next Monday night!

 

 

 

 

Hooded Mergansers Galore!

Ron Shield’s car woes yesterday are our gain.

Ron writes: If your car battery is going to die, what better place than in front of the Clay Avenue Wetlands! I shot these photos from my car window during the height of yesterday’s blow. A dozen or so male and female hooded mergansers were present.

As for Ron’s car, AAA came to the rescue.

 

DeKorte Sunsets and Winter Scenes

Mickey Raine sent a dispatch of his recent DeKorte Park excursions, accompanied by some wonderful photos of canvasbacks, sunsets and ice formations. Thanks Mickey!

We wanted to share some winter delights captured in the Meadowlands–Richard DeKorte Park in Lyndhurst, in this case.

The sunset photos were taken at the very end of January on very cold days, but nothing compared to that last two days.  In any event, there is always something so special about the Golden or Magic Hour at DeKorte, and as I often say, one does not need to have a variety of birds present to truly enjoy this wonderful site, and winter, as cold and challenging as it can be sometimes, offers excellent experiences to learn and appreciate the miracles of nature.

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NJSEA Celebrates Black History Month: Gethsemane Cemetery

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 We are honoring Black History Month with a weekly post each Monday throughout February on people and places related to the Meadowlands. The posts are taken from our archives and were originally done by former staffer Jim Wright.

   Gethsemane Cemetery in Little Ferry is located on an acre on a sandy hill just off Route 46 and Liberty Street.  The photo above is a view of the cemetery’s entrance on Summit Place.

Gethsemane Little Ferry a It was set aside in 1860 as a burial ground for African-American residents of nearby Hackensack. The last burial took place in 1924.

The site was entered onto the National Register of Historic Places in 1994 “because of the significant role it played in the enactment of New Jersey’s early civil rights legislation, as well as containing evidence of West African burial customs,” according to the Bergen County  Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs.

According to the agency, “Fewer than 50 gravestones remain, but the burials of more than  500 people have been documented. Gethsemane Little Ferry d

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“They include Elizabeth Sutliff Dulfer who was born a slave in the late 1700s, freed in 1822, and died in 1880. She was one of the area’s wealthiest businesswomen and landholders. [Dulfer owned clay beds that supplied clay to potteries from Philadelphia to Boston. Her clay company along the Hackensack River was said to be the second-largest in the nation.]

“Two Civil War veterans, Peter Billings and Silas M. Carpenter, were also buried here.”

Click “Continue reading …” to learn more about the cemetery’s role in early civil-rights legislation. Continue reading