- Outdoor gear store in Franklin celebrates expansion
- Finding your roots in Appalachia
- Cullowhee hitches its college-town dreams to the Tuckasegee River
- State grant bridges the gap for Jackson greenway
- Making the connection, one melody at a time
- Drawing the line between panhandling and charity at Franklin’s intersections
- New high-tech training center to be a feather in Franklin’s cap
- Indoor shooting range proposed in Franklin
Franklin High students became active volunteers in a service-learning program this fall to improve the ecosystem along the Franklin Greenway.
More than 40 students, along with local community members, conducted a three-day site inventory and extraction of exotic invasive plants along two miles of the greenway in October.
Exotic invasive plants have seriously degraded the natural areas along the greenway. Exotic plants spread aggressively and monopolize light, nutrients and space to the detriment of native species. As a result, animals that rely on native plants for food and shelter also suffer losses.
“The worst exotic invasive plants change the character of entire ecosystems,” said Mary Bennett, Southwestern Community College’s GEAR UP College Readiness Coach.
Controlling exotic invasive plants is labor intensive, in this case requiring pulling, digging and chopping.
“It’s just plain hard work!” observed sophomore Clinton Anderson, who eagerly uprooted 10-foot-tall shrubs from the woods.
In addition to the manual labor, the program was coupled with classroom instruction, guest speakers and fieldwork exercises.
“Participating in a practical and hands-on activity while communicating with professionals enables the students to improve technical skills and job readiness while increasing their career awareness,” said Bennett.
Other groups participating in the project included Western North Carolina Alliance, Friend of the Greenway, Coweeta Hydrological Lab, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, and Land Trust for the Little Tennessee.
“The students really took to the responsibility of protecting the natural habitat and wanted to leave it in better shape,” said Franklin Agriculture Teacher Devon Deal.
Every year as summer approaches and the days begin to heat up, I marvel at the beautiful orange explosion that protrudes from an unkempt patch of daylilies and Queen Anne’s lace that was once (BC – before children) a more kempt flowerbed.
