Friday, July 25, 2008
auf Wiedersehen
We caught a baseball! Nearly…
Tonight, our RiverQuest chaperones organized tickets for the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball game against the Padres from San Diego. Beside the all you can eat possibility, the game was nice for the Germans and a rare seen one for the Pittsburghers, because the Pirates won 9-1. It was exciting for the Germans because they only have soccer in their country as a very popular sport. They were fascinated by the American mentality and lifestyle, that seems to be a lot more easy than in Germany.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Bayer Guests come to Camp
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Baywood: Meeting with Bayer Management
It was definitely one of our peak events during our stay for the Bayer Climate Camp!
How to Rescue the World (Duquesne University Climate Change Workshop)
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Nine Miles for an Ice Cream (Nine Mile Run Watershed Restoration)
After the long hike, we took a refreshing ice cream break at Cold Stone Creamery. We returned to the dorms and began a game of pick-up soccer to work off our ice cream. We ended the day tired and happy.
The Nine Mile Run Project
Above: reconstructed stream meanders and riffles. Photo from a spring 2008 RiverQuest/ASSET teacher workshop.
Nine Mile Run is a small stream that flows through Pittsburgh's East End. You don't need to cross a bridge to drive over Nine Mile Run because it is almost entirely underground. At the turn of the 20th century, open water was not viewed as an asset to the community. Streams were often seen as a means to transport trash and sewage away from homes. They were also viewed as hindrances to the "progress" of city building and were more often than not, piped underground.
Nine Mile Run was put in underground pipes, or culverts, starting in the early 20th century. However, because the stream runs through Frick Park, about a third of the stream was left above ground. Today the stream first emerges from its culverts in Frick Park and flows through the park to the Monongahela River. That's a 2.2 mile stretch of open water, a nearly unheard of amount for a city the size of Pittsburgh .
The Nine Mile Run Watershed Association website, from whence this background information comes, includes this very descriptive historical quote:
"During the hot dry months of summer the Run is a trickling rivulet of filth, and the odor emanating from it and from the decaying matter left exposed in the dry channel are decidedly disagreeable and a positive MENACE TO HEALTH."
-Taken from an Edgewood Town Meeting on January 11, 1913 where a vote to change the course of Nine Mile Run and pipe it underground was proposed
Nine Mile Run has come a long way through a recent reclamation project. But even today, Pittsburgh (much like cities throughout the northeastern corridor of the USA) is saddled with the issue of Combined Sewer Overflow. Many sewer lines beneath the city are constructed to deal with both storm runoff and municipal sewage. When an excess of rain falls, and in some cases 1/10 of an inch of rain is "excess," the combined sewer overflows into rivers and streams.
They were designed to do this, in a time when it was thought more health conscious to have sanitary sewage back up into waterways instead of up onto city streets. When the same river that carries "away" sewage also provides a city's drinking water--there's a problem!
The Nine Mile Run project serves as a model and testing ground where cost-effective and citizen based projects continue to explore ways to reduce stormwater runoff from roofs and impermeable paved surfaces.
Learn more at the Nine Mile Run Watershed Association website: http://www.ninemilerun.org/
More pictures from our experiments on the three rivers
Miss America: Meet Miss Pittsburgh (Environmental Science on the Three Rivers)
The food in a polluted area is also nice… (The Waterfront, Homestead, PA)
Monday, July 21, 2008
Murphy's Bottom Pond and Knapp Run Explorations
In the morning we went to a lake. Years ago they used the area to mine coal, now the Duquesne University uses the lake and the nature around the lake for research. There we met biologist, Brady Porter, who took us on a hike down to the lake. On our way we looked under some dubris, placed there on purpose, for snakes. We found a young black rat snake who was about to shed her skin. Brady said that she was probably a female because of her short tail. When we arrived at the pond, we prepaired to get wet, but nothing could've prepared us for this. We stepped into the mud and sank instantly. The clear water became black with the sturred up mud and our shoes stuck in the mud while we tried to walk around. We used large nets to capture the tiny blue gills and bass that inhabited the area. We also caught the occasional crawfish or dragonfly nymph, which Brady collected for research back at Duquesne. When we finished, we headed back to the van where Chris Statzer was waiting with our lunch. We ate hungrily then set off for the stream. On our way to the stream, we were taught about many invasive plant species such as Japanese knot weed. In the stream we caught many species of salamandar including: long-tails, two-lines, and mountain and nothern duskys. We also collected all the male crawfish we could find for a study at Duquesne. We had a great time!
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Culinary tour CO2 neutral: Firefly Restaurant
Raindrops kept falling on our heads (Ohiopyle)
Cooled down like that we did a surprising BBQ which warmed us up again. And we also had fun on the playground...
Bricks after all!!! (Fallingwater)
On Sunday morning, we visited the Fallingwater museum. The museum was built by the architect and artistFrank Lloyd Wright. It was originally a summer vacation home for a wealthy Pittsburgh family in the 1940s - 1960s. A guide showed us around in and around the house.
Close to Nature
This appropriate quote appears at the header of the Creek Camp blog, right under the toad.
Frank Lloyd Wright was a world-famous American architect (1867-1959) who was famous for his unusual and modernistic designs. We chose to include this tour as part of Bayer Climate Fellows Sustainability Camp because of Wright's committment to incorporating organic natural elements into human spaces. He designed many buildings--houses, office buildings, churches, museums, hotels. He is perhaps best known for Fallingwater, perched lovingly over the creek and waterfall at Bear Run, PA, as well as the Guggenheim Museum in New York City.
Fallingwater was built as a residence. It was completed in 1939, for Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kaufmann, the founders and owners of Kaufmann's, one of the largest department stores in Pittsburgh history. Its cantilevered concrete balconies, limestone pillars and walls are elements of one of Wrights signature styles. As an indicator of the change in the value of the American dollar over the past 70 years, it is reported that the entire design and construction of Fallingwater--including the custom-designed and built-in furniture--was less than $175,000.00.
The green building movement today embraces many of the ideals that Wright employed more than half a century ago at Fallingwater. Wright's design placed a high value on natural lighting, facilitation of fresh air flow, and the inclusion of natural "white noise" from the waterfall below. It is a treasured work of art, and an architectural wonder that has been preserved for people to visit and appreciate. The house and grounds are now operated and kept as a museum destination by the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy.
For anyone with an interest in art and architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright is a fascinating and worthy subject for further research. His buildings are not to be missed; we are proud to have included this tour as part of the Bayer Camp. You can visit the Conservancy on line at http://www.paconserve.org/index-fw1.asp.
Jeff Jordan
Director of Education
RiverQuest
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Green Buildings and Segways in Paradise!
Saturday was hot and humid, with a high in Pittsburgh of 89 F (32 C). This morning, Leaders Megan and Brandon took the students on a Green Building tour lead by Indigo Raffel of Conservation Consultants, Inc., and later on, a tour of the entire city on pollution-free Segway people movers! .....
After a nutritious breakfast, we went to visit the Green Buildings in Pittsburgh. There a woman told us all about green technology, such as solar energy. She took us to a green house on the South Side. The man who owned it called the green house his "bio shelter" because he could use it to plant summer crops, such as tomatoes, all year round. We went to CMU to learn about the green roof. One Profesor imparticular was very passionate about his work and told us about how he was able to save a portion of the plants he loved so much. Then we went to a store which sold only products that were recycled and/or completly natural. For lunch we went to a "green" Giant Eagle. This store had very large windows so that the sun's light lit the store and less arteficial light had to be used. In the afternoon we returned to the university and relaxed. In the evening, we went to Station Square where two men were waiting to give us a tour on segways (two wheeled, motorized scooters) through Pittsburgh. We were conected by a microphone system so the guide could tell us about the area while we were riding. We had lots of fun and learned so much!
Triumphant Return to the 'Burgh
Friday night adventures took place at Camp Guyasuta, where the students learned to climb and zip-line back to earth, and cooked dinner over a campfire. Many thanks to Ranger Mike, and Matt and the Ropes Course crew for their hospitality -- we had a great time.
The RiverQuest "Bayer Camp" crew
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Check out that Creek Camp Blog!
RiverQuest camp counselors Megan and Brandon report that the week is running like clockwork thanks to the Creek Connections staffers and an excellent group of campers.
We'll be blogging on the RiverQuest end of the Bayer Climate Fellows Sustainability Camp starting this upcoming weekend, so stay tuned!
Meantime, be sure to check in with the Creek Camp blog at this website: http://www.creekcamp.blogspot.com/
Stay cool!
Monday, July 14, 2008
Sunday, July 13, 2008
On to Creek Camp at Allegheny College!
(You can click on any picture in the blog to see it full-size.)
Pictured L to R: Leader Megan, Moritz, Leonie, Imke, Martin, Florian, Leader Brandon, Education Coordinator Christine.
The campers spent Saturday night at Duquesne University's St. Anne Hall. After attending morning services, the group traveled 2 hours north of Pittsburgh to Meadville, PA, for the beginning of Allegheny College Creek Connection's "Creek Camp," sponsored by Bayer. Director Jim Palmer, Wendy Kiedzierski, Laura Branby and the Creek Camp crew welcomed everyone to the college, located adjacent to pristine French Creek. The full attendance of Creek Camp is truly international, and includes students from the United States, Costa Rica and Germany.
At Creek Camp, the campers are living in eco-friendly style in the recently constructed green student housing facility known as North Village on the Allegheny College campus. Lest anyone worry about the heat and humidity, all of our students' rooms are air-conditioned!
You can find the link to the Creek Camp blog in the column to the right. Creek Camp gets rolling early Monday morning, and you can check in with the blog to see what's going on throughout the week. Our five German explorers will return to Pittsburgh on Friday evening, along with three American students, for week 2 of Bayer Climate Fellows Sustainability Camp.
To all our colleagues at Creek Camp: hope you have a fantastic week!
See you soon.
Jeff Jordan
Director of Education
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Herzlich Willkommen!
At Pittsburgh International Airport, next to the Bayer "Making Science Make Sense" exhibit. Standing L to R: Leader Brandon, Imke, Leonie, Martin, Moritz, Florian. Kneeling: Leader Megan
Florian, Imke, Martin, Leonie and Moritz were greeted by a hot and humid evening in Pittsburgh. Saturday's forecast is for a high temperature of 90 F with high humidity. Who needs to visit the tropics when you can visit Pittsburgh?
Today is Saturday, and the schedule is relaxed and fun. As I type this, the Bayer Climate Fellows Sustainability Campers are on board the RiverQuest vessel Discovery enjoying a cool morning sail on the three rivers around the Golden Triangle, Pittsburgh's sparkling downtown district bordered by the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers as they meet at "the Point" to form the Ohio River.
Later today, we will ride the Duquesne Incline to Mount Washington, a neighborhood that overlooks the Golden Triangle. We'll have dinner together and enjoy the scenic overlooks that show off "America's Most Livable City." Tomorrow, our camp leaders Megan and Brandon will accompany the group to Allegheny College in Meadville, PA, for the start of a very busy week of science, nature, and fun.
Have a great weekend, everyone!