Experiencing nature while volunteering with JRA at Presquile

I went on a field trip down with Andy Thompson to the southeastern tip of Chesterfield County this week to volunteer with the James River Association at Presquile Island. Big adventure time! We met with several other volunteers from various environmental organizations and enjoyed a morning of work, education and soaking in nature.  Read Andy’s […]

I went on a field trip down with Andy Thompson to the southeastern tip of Chesterfield County this week to volunteer with the James River Association at Presquile Island. Big adventure time!

We met with several other volunteers from various environmental organizations and enjoyed a morning of work, education and soaking in nature.  Read Andy’s column in today’s Richmond Times-Dispatch:

Less than a year ago, the James River Association’s dream of running an ecology school at the Presquile National Wildlife Refuge on an island in the tidal James still was hundreds of thousands of dollars from reality.

Today, with money in hand and construction nearing its final stages, that reality is almost tangible.

I’ve joined Gabe Silver, the JRA’s education and outreach manager, and a handful of volunteers on this 1,329-acre island fewer than 20 miles south of Richmond to help work on a wetlands-spanning boardwalk and to get an up-close look at the progress this project is making.

Andy did a little bit of volunteering, a little bit of work and a little bit of play.  I did more volunteering and playing. We got to see some of Presquile Island in the fall, the good work that JRA is doing and plenty of nature.

The island itself is home to bald eagles, heron, barn owls, white-tailed deer, red fox, wild turkey, box turtles and more. We saw at least half of those.

On the pontoon boat ride to the island, we saw great blue heron and a buck with a big rack swimming across the James River. We also saw what we thought was the “Mallory” (boat  that survived being sunk during Hurricane Irene) headed down the James (it wasn’t). While walking we saw a beautiful old box turtle.

On the paddle back (we took our kayaks for an early exit — parenting duties), we experienced the surge created by the tide coming in, survived a tugboat pushing a barge and got in a good workout. I also found cantaloupe-sized Osage-oranges (horse apples), which I’ll show you soon.

Volunteers with James River Association boating to Presquile Island
Cable ferry to Presquile Island
Deer swimming in the James River near Presquile Island
Boat in the James River near Presquile Island
Volunteers work on a gazebo at Presquile Island
Equipment shed at Presquile Island
Volunteers work on a boardwalk at Presquile Island
Andy Thompson and Gabe Silver at Presquile Island
Box turtle on Presquile Island
James River at Presquile Island

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Phil Riggan

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