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Restoring the Glen
Wetland Restoration
When: October, 2007
Who: Glen Staff and volunteers, with excavation by Bob McClain and funding from the US Fish and Wildlife Service
Where: South Glen, north of the wellfield for the Village of Yellow Springs
Early settlers to Glen Helen started farms in the flat areas. However, abundant springs made the land hard to farm. To dry out one field in the South Glen, settlers created a high berm to keep spring water in a channel, away from their fields. This year, we breached this berm, allowing spring water to reflood the field. We should start to see changes over the next few months. Slowly, the wetland will grow healthy and diverse again.
| Before | Atop the Berm | After |
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| Staff and volunteers atop the berm that has kept the Homestead wetland dry. | A view of the channel from the berm. To restore the wetland, the berm needs to be lowered to the level of the channel. |
Contractor McClain carefully scrapes away the soil of the berm, taking it even with the channel. Success! |
Painting Clayton House
When: August, 2007
Who: Community volunteers
Where: North Glen, along State Route 343
Clayton House, one of three interns houses at the Outdoor Education Center, received a welcome facelift by a team of volunteers. In a 70 hour blitz, two bedrooms, the living room, kitchen, and two hallways were given a fresh coat of paint. Glen Helen naturalists work hard when they're on the trail with schoolchildren. Now they can come home to a cleaner, brighter home.
| Before | During | After |
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| It had been years since the kitchen was painted. | Volunteers spent hours patching walls, priming, and painting. |
With its new coat of paint, the kitchen is one of four rooms that is now cleaner, brighter, and more comfortable. |
Replacing the old truck
When: December, 2007
Who: Made possible by a cadre of Glen Helen supporters
With a 1000-acre preserve to maintain, a heavy-duty truck is vitally important for maintaining our facilities. A truck is a necessity for plowing the roads in the winter to keep them free of snow and safe for our school groups and visitors, using the winch to move downed trees, and hauling everything from mowing equipment to gravel to owl food. Our old truck lasted for 22 years, but finally needed to be replaced.
| Before | After |
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| The old truck served us well, but was no longer safe to drive. |
The new truck, outfitted with a heavy-duty plow, will allow us to keep our drive safe for years to come. |
Honeysuckle removal
When: October 24, 2006
Who: Antioch College class, under supervision of Botany professor Tom Ayrsman
Where: North Glen, along Corry St., near the Fire Station
Dr. Ayrsman's class has made several trips into the preserve this semester to pull invasive honeysuckle. Armed with our heavy-duty "Weed Wrenches," they have been able to topple trees -- some of which are over 15 feet in height -- and pull them out by their roots. Their efforts will make a lasting imact on the ecology of the preserve.
| Before | After | The Honeysuckle Graveyard |
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| The only thing growing in the understory is invasive honeysuckle |
The landscape has been cleared. As soon as next spring, wildlowers will start to return. |
Students created a massive pile of downed honeysuckle which we used to close a highly eroded trail. |
Trail Restoration
When: October 21, 2006
Who: Land Manager George Bieri, along with volunteers and a crew of workers from Springfield-based Habitat Creations.
Where: Inman trail along Birch Creek, just upstream from the stepping stones.
Many people consider the section of the Inman trail between the stepping stones and the cascades to be one of the most beautiful and ecologically-sensitive parts of Glen Helen. In two long days, they constructed over 30 steps, and stabilized a section of trail in danger of tumbling into the creek below.
| Before | After | The Crew |
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| This scenic stretch of trail along Birch Creek was both highly eroded and increasingly unsafe. | The trail crew placed a series of stone steps -- some of which were huge and HEAVY! |
To complete the project, workers needed to bring a small cement mixer deep into the preserve. It came and went without a trace. |

















