Monthly Archives: July 2024

Don Torino’s Life in the Meadowlands: Attention Nature Lovers: It’s Time to Organize!

In case you have not noticed, nature lovers have received a wonderful gift! In fact, we have been lucky enough to get many gifts, perfect gifts, given to everyone by many people from all walks of life over 50 years ago. Our benefactors were people that thought about the future and cared about the world that their children and grandchildren would one day live in.

Many of those people are no longer with us, but back then, they knew that they had to give us something. In fact, they felt that they owed future generations more than they had ever received themselves. It was not enough to enjoy the world around them and keep it to themselves. They needed and wanted to leave it better. Although it was not easy and much of it was a battle that at times seemed unwinnable, they did just that, made things better for everyone.

Today, we get to enjoy those wonderful gifts in the form of incredible things such as the sight of a Bald Eagle flying overhead, a family walk along a saved wildlife preserve and the honor of sitting by a clean running stream. Those special gifts came in boxed marked by The Endangered Species Act, The Clean Water Act, The Clean Air Act, The Migratory Bird Treaty Act, Earth Day and The NJ Green Acres program, just to name a few.

Sadly, sometimes we receive gifts that are often taken for granted and selfishly accepted without consideration of the sacrifice made by the giver.  But we can no longer afford that luxury. It’s time to pay it forward and ultimately decide what our own legacy will be.

As many of you may know, I am on old Teamster and my background is in the labor movement. And of course, the mantra and lifeblood of any good labor union is to “Organize.” Simply put, it’s a way to bring people together and make things better. There is great power in joining together for the common good and that is exactly what our gift givers did back then. Old, young, rich, poor, Democrat and Republican. And that is exactly what we need to do better if we are to leave the next generation a better community to live in.

A solitary walk in nature can be one of the most therapeutic things we can do to improve our mental and physical health. Whether we are bird watching, looking at plants, taking photographs or just sauntering along with family, at the same time we need to understand that these wonderful natural places we love and the wildlife we cherish did not happen by accident. Whether you know it or not, just like the labor movement, there is power in numbers.

We will need everyone in the coming years, from the expert birder that travels the world to the backyard nature lover, because the proverbial barbarians are always at the gate. And they are just waiting to develop warehouses, apartment developments and sports fields, over every and any wildlife habitats that we have left.

The voices that are typically heard are not the nature lovers but all the others that the politicians seem to hear above ours. We need to ORAGANIZE! And let our elected officials and government agencies hear from the rest of us with one voice for the environment.

In the labor movement, we once dreamed of the one BIG Union so that we all could speak with one voice, but that would never happen. In addition, it is the same in the environmental movement, which actually works out just fine! One organization concentrates on wetlands, another on birds, yet another on butterflies, some on plants and others on climate change and national environmental issues. Now, it is up to you to decide what is most important to you, and then don’t sit back! Be Heard! Join up! Get involved!

Individuals can no longer sit back and watch habitat destruction and say, “Oh Well.”  Nature, our wildlife, the birds, bees and butterflies will not continue unless all of us decide to stand up and join together to say enough is enough, and demand more open space preservation, wetlands instead of warehouses, and wildlife conservation instead of condos. There is power in numbers and the conservation movement needs all of us!

 See you in the Meadowlands

Women Who Made the World Better for Birds and People

The Bergen County Audubon Society recently presented the NJSEA with a sign honoring the accomplishments and achievements by women in birding. Titled “Women Who Made the World Better for Birds and People,” the sign raised awareness of the often-overlooked contributions of women in the field. BCAS member Dee De Santis designed the poster.

The BCAS thought it was very important to finally bring attention to the critically historical role women have had in conservation, and protecting and preserving our wildlife, especially our birds,” said Don Torino, President of the Bergen County Audubon Society.

The NJSEA is thrilled to receive the sign, which is proudly displayed next to the entrance to the Marsh Discovery Trail, DeKorte Park’s most popular walkway.

Park visitors now have the opportunity to read about such guiding lights as Florence Merriam Bailey, a nature writer and ornithologist who is credited for writing the first known bird guide. “Birds Thorough an Opera Glass” was published in 1889.

Then there is Frances Hamerstrom, an ornithologist who dedicated herself to one avian species: The Greater Prairie-chicken. She spearheaded a research team that saved this this eccentric species from extinction in Wisconsin.

Phoebe Snetsinger, most famous for having seen and documented an amazing 8,398 bird species, a record at the time. In her excellent memoir, “Birding on Borrowed Time,” Snetsinger reflects on a lifetime of birding.

Genevieve Estelle Jones was a self-taught scientific illustrator who garnered the moniker, “other Audubon.” Inspired by Audubon paintings, Jones drew the nests and eggs of the 130 nesting species in Ohio at the time.

Rachel Carson isrecognized for her book, “Silent Spring,” which excoriated the pesticide industry. Carson was an outspoken advocate for the environment and one of the great social revolutionaries of her time.

Harriet Lawrence Hemenway and Minna Hall established the National Audubon Society.The pair were a dream teamwho double-handedly dismantled the 19th century plume trade. The plume trade entailed killing birds and sending them to fashion designers who used their feathers or entire bodies to make hats.  

Bergen County Audubon’s Dee De Santis presents the Women Birders sign to Gabrielle Bennett-Meany, NJSEA Manager of Parks, Trails and Open Space

Butterfly Day Schedule for This Sunday (July 21)!

We’re just about there! The 15th Annual Butterfly Day is this Sunday, July 21, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at DeKorte Park, 2 DeKorte Park Plaza, Lyndhurst.

The highly-popular, family-friendly program is co-presented by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority and the Bergen County Audubon Society. The event includes butterfly walks starting at 10:30 a.m. and continuing throughout the day. The walks are led by BCAS and NJSEA experts.

BCAS President Don Torino will give a talk on “Saving the Monarchs” at 12:30 p.m. There will be information tables and plenty for the kids, including a Butterfly Costume Contest for ages 12 and under, games and crafts, and other activities. An ice cream and cupcake truck present a perfect opportunity to cool off.

Information: Don Torino at 201-230-4983 or greatauk4@gmail.com

Butterfly Day Is This Sunday!

The wait is just about over! The 15th Annual Butterfly Day is this Sunday, July 21, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at DeKorte Park and the Meadowlands Environment Center in Lyndhurst. The event is co-hosted by the NJSEA and Bergen County Audubon Society and is the most highly anticipated public program of the year.

We invite everyone to participate in this family-friendly, engaging, educational and fun experience.

The Meadowlands Environment Center is located at 2 DeKorte Park, Plaza, Lyndhurst. The rain date is Sunday, July 28. For more information, contact Don Torino at greatauk4@gmail.com or 201-230-4982.