Cypress Festival
Politics and Advocacy on First Saturday
First Saturday Seminar – Cape Fear COASTKEEPER® Mike Giles will be the featured speaker and “Political Advocacy” will the be the topic at June’s First Saturday Seminar on Saturday, June 7th at 9:00am at Cape Fear River Watch’s Environmental Education Center at 617 Surry St. in Wilmington. The North Carolina Coastal Federation will be taking an especially active role among the Watershed Alliance at this year’s Clean Water Lobby Day on June 4th – releasing their “State of the Coast” report and championing the proposed new stormwater rules – and Mike will be the perfect speaker to give a rundown of accomplishments by this year’s crop of grassroots lobbyists. He will also provide us with the inside dish on what important current conservation legislation most bears watching not only during the coming legislative session in Raleigh, but on the local and national levels as well. Who says advocacy can’t be a thrilling spectator sport? As usual: pancakes at 8:30, seminar at 9:00.
First Saturday Seminar for April – Drought
April’s First Saturday Seminar will be held on April 5th. This month’s topic will be the conservation challenges posed by extended drought. Following a casual pancake breakfast at 8:30, the seminar will begin in earnest at 9:00 am with a showing of Troubled Waters: An Illusion of Abundance. This 1 hour documentary about the 2002 North Carolina drought was made by UNCW in 2003 and is narrated by former chancellor James Leutze. Though our current drought is certainly more severe than the events discussed in the film, it’s not inconceivable that there are some lessons to be learned from 2002. A panel/audience discussion will follow.
Panel members will tentatively be Dave Clark an Irrigation Contractor, Bill Hart – Director New Hanover County Soil and Water Conservation District, Dr. Larry Cahoon, UNCW Professor of Biology and Marine Biology and CFRW Board Member, and Philip Fragapane, Water Resource Engineer, NC DENR Division of Water Resources.
New Enviroscape Instructors Needed

Cape Fear River Watch, City of Wilmington Stormwater Services and New Hanover County Soil & Water Conservation have been conducting interactive Enviroscape presentations for all New Hanover County 8th graders (about 1,700 students/year) for several years. We’re looking for additional volunteer instructors to help with this exciting program. An orientation/training for new volunteers will be held at our Surry St. Environmental Education Center on April 1st, from 7:00 to 8:30pm.
The NPS (nonpoint source) Enviroscape model currently used and 8th Grade Science curriculum requirements will be reviewed and the new, somewhat more complicated model will be demonstrated by Aimee Sloan of the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service.
Contact Bill Murray (wmurray@cfrw.us or 297-2664) with questions or to RSVP. Not to offer a bribe or anything, but there is a very strong possibility of refreshments.
Greenfield Bathymetry
CFCC’s Hydrographic Surveying class used Greenfield Lake as a lab last month and produced what is likely the first subsurface map of the lake in . . . well, forever. It’s a great map. Who’d have thought that the relic stream meanders would still be so well defined some 200 years after the lake was first flooded? Thanks to Tim Shaw and his class for this image.
Water Issues to be Discussed
“Urgent Water Issues” will be the topic addressed by Bill Murray, (who works with CFRW and has an extensive background in resource management, ) at the Lunch With League to be held March 20 at Pilot House Restaurant, 11:30 a.m. The League of Women Voters of the Lower Cape Fear has had strong interest in environmental issues and especially in the present situation with our water supply and quality. Order lunch from a limited menu before the presentation. The public is invited, no reservation necessary.
Audrey Albrecht
Sierra Club Hosts NC Coastal Land Trust Speaker
Camilla Herlevich, Executive Director of NC Coastal Land Trust, will be the featured speaker at the next meeting of the Sierra Club’s Cape Fear Chapter on March 6.
Sierra Club meets at the Cape Fear River Watch Environmental Education Center at 617 Surry St.
The formal meeting starts at 7:30pm, but come at 7:00 for coffee and cookies.
Water Quality, Oysters & Pender County
On Wednesday, March 12, Troy Alphin, Senior Research Associate in the Benthic Ecology Program at UNCW’s Center for Marine Science, will speak to PenderWatch at the Hampstead Library at 7:00pm. Alphin has been working with PenderWatch projects involving water quality testing, oyster spat set studies and possible oyster restorations in open and closed waters. He will speak on the importance of community involvement in assessing ecosystem health – with a focus on oysters.
PenderWatch welcomes visitors to their meetings.
March First Saturday Seminar
Janet Davidson, an historian with the Cape Fear Museum will be the featured speaker at March’s First Saturday Seminar. Dr. Davidson will speak about the changing role of the river in Wilmington’s development over the years in a presentation entitled “Wilmington’s History: A River Runs Through It.”
Before coming to Wilmington and the Cape Fear Museum in 2005, Dr. Richardson was an Historian and Curator at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. She is also the author of various scholarly books and articles, most recently serving as co-editor of The Business of Tourism: Place, Faith and History.
Barrier Island Presentation
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