Coming
to Crescent Lake this summer is the Melinda Ann, a 30-foot pontoon boat
designed to
be a
floating classroom. This classroom is the centerpiece of the LakesAlive!
program developed by the Maine Lakes Society.
Susan
Gajewski, President of the Crescent Lake Watershed Association (CLWA) announced
that the free program will be held at Camp Agawam in Raymond on August 16 and
17 and is open to Raymond and Casco students and summer visitors to the lake
age 8 years old and older. According to
Gajewski there will be several sailings each day that last about an hour and a
half, just long enough to provide each participant the opportunity to use the various
instruments and tools aboard the floating classroom.
The
Melinda Ann is equipped with proprietary and field-tested materials and
activities that deliver a powerful on-the-water learning experience. Through
hands-on activities that explore such topics as lake ecology, food webs and
water cycles, the Melinda Ann’s young passengers use a Secchi disk to measure
water clarity, a benthic dredge to take bottom samples, a camera mounted on a
remotely operated vehicle to explore the lake and scientific instruments to
measure temperature and oxygen levels throughout the water column as well as to
explore the microscopic organisms that live in our lakes. As a bonus while awaiting to board the
Melinda Ann, the students will examine an EnviroScape Wetlands Model that
tracks how rainwater falling on the lands surrounding lakes carry soil,
chemicals and other pollutants into the lake.
The goal is that once engaged in the life of the lake, students will begin
to develop a personal motivation to become good environmental stewards.
The program
is sponsored by the Crescent Lake Watershed Association in close cooperation
with Camp Agawam which held a LakesAlive! program in June during its Maine Idea
session. “When CLWA first discussed this
program with us,” commented Karen Malm, Assistant Camp Director at Agawam, “we
knew we just had to offer it for our Maine Idea session this spring and we were
not disappointed. The boys just loved it
and I am sure it will be perfect for the Crescent Lake community this summer.”
In
early June the Friends of Wilson Lake (FOWL) hosted a LakesAlive! session for
students of the Wilton Academy. “I
cannot begin to tell you how excited those students were as they stepped off
the boat at the end of their session on the water, “ said Sandra Muller, a FOWL member and close observer of the event,
“and a large part of the success of each trip can be attributed to the
knowledge and communication skill of Melinda Ann Captain Phil Mulville,” she
continued as she explained how Captain Phil is able to connect with each
student on board.
The
LakesAlive! concept was originally developed over a decade ago and since 2010
has been a major part of the Maine Lakes Society’s multi-faceted effort to
improve its capacity to engage both children and adults in understanding and
protecting Maine’s lakes. “We have developed this program at a time when our
society is seeing alarming declines in children engaged in outdoor activities
and experiences that teach them how to care for their environment and how to
simply “be” in the natural world,” comments Maggie Shannon, Executive Director
of the Maine Lakes society, “and we are particularly pleased to be able to
partner with Camp Agawam and the Crescent Lake Watershed Association to bring
this wonderful program to the Crescent Lake community.”
According
to CLWA’s Susan Gajewski, this is the organization’s first attempt to expand
its community outreach to encourage lake health education and stewardship. “We hope to interest more community members
to help us develop creative activities and programs to promote and protect this
valuable community resource that is the chain of lakes surrounding our
watershed.”
For
more information or to register your student for the August LakesAlive! program
on Crescent Lake go to www.CrescentLakeMaine.com.
Maine
Idea campers from Camp Agawam watch as Captain Phil Mulville explains how and
why a dredge is used to take samples of the bottom of Crescent Lake. This is just one of the hands-on learning
experiences aboard the Melinda Ann in mid-June.
First
Mate and former Maine IFW scientist Matt Scott discusses the content of bottom
samples with Maine Idea campers.
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