Upcoming Work Day: Saturday, July 9, 8:00 a.m. to noon, at Homedale Trail

For our mid-summer work day, we are planning a shorter work day that starts earlier, and will be planning for most of our tasks to take place in the shaded areas of the trail. We wore ourselves out last year, and want to be gentler on ourselves this time!

We will have on site: cold drinks, energy bars, sun screen lotion, and poison ivy protection. There are also a few free t-shirts from our last work day available. Our volunteers need to be sure to: wear protective clothing and a hat, proper work shoes, bring work gloves and their own water bottle to keep close at hand.

We will be doing weed control, some trail edging with cedar logs, continuing the repairs of the rock retaining walls for our bridge, and some trail resurfacing work. We will also be sending out ?scouts? into the woods to tag with bright colored ribbon the very large ligustrum trees that are responsible for the continuous re-seeding of this invasive species. Rene Barrera, of the City?s Land Preserve Division, has agreed to partner with us and have his crew cut down or ?girdle? these larger specimen trees, and treat them so they are less likely to resprout. That will be a great boon in reducing the future populations.

We hope to have a good showing of volunteers for this event. If you haven?t joined us yet, it?s a community adventure. Come add to the great collaborative spirit that has emerged around this wonderful place. Please RSVP to: gleeful@earthlink.net so we can plan appropriately.

Recent Work Day Report

On April 23, the BHNA-Greenbelt Guardians participated in the city-wide ?It?s My Park Day!? sponsored by the Austin Parks Foundation. On that day, 33 parks around town received the caretaking attention of some 940 volunteers.

We had a total of 60 volunteers show up to donate some 210 hours of time on our Greenbelt trails! The trails were crowded with the traffic of busy volunteers. Our neighbors turned out in generous numbers, plus the Community Service kids from Travis County Juvenile Probation, an enthusiastic group of Cub Scouts, and some Community Service students from U.T.

Because we were receiving help from the Austin Parks Foundation in recruiting for volunteers, we got more ambitious in our scope of work this time. For the first time, we worked both trail heads, Gus Fruh and Homedale, on the same day, which required more elaborate planning and participation by our expanding leadership team.

We completed the ambitious trail renovation project that we had started on our last work day at Gus Fruh. The remainder of the cross-drain swales were excavated and packed; stone & gravel cachement basins were constructed; and the entire trail was resurfaced with decomposed granite and then compacted. Lots of muscle power and endurance went into the effort. The results are spectacular and transformative. Peace, safety, and aesthetics reign on the once rutted and eroded trail.

The overgrown Homedale trail entry was opened up and cleared and widened, yielding a much more expansive trail entry. The large natural stone steps and retaining wall at the bottom of the trail onto the ?rock flats? by the creek, were completed, and the retaining walls in the arroyo supporting our new bridge were repaired.

Both trails got cleared of sticker weeds and invasive grass, and rock borders were straightened and repaired. The invasive ligustrum and nandina plants got our enthusiastic weed wrench treatment at both trail sites. And sacks of weeds and garbage were hauled away.

Special thanks go to the dedicated contributions of our neighborhood Greenbelt Guardian Team Leaders for this work day: Stan Ostrum, Robbin Trusty, Tim Steckler, Scott and Janet Byers, Robin McKeever, Kay Kennedy, Nancy Koch, and Ken and Rosalie Russell. And of course, our PARD Partner, John Cook, can?t be recognized enough times for his dedication and knowledge and true partnership in this endeavor.

Glee Ingram

 

On Saturday, April 23, we will be participating in the city-wide program, It’s My Park Day for a work day on both of our trails: Gus Fruh and Homedale! We have developed quite a skilled core team of trail leaders and workers, and both trails are in need of our attention. The Austin Parks Foundation, which sponsors the city program, is helping us recruit additional volunteers through their website and other promotional activities.

To date, we have commitments from two groups of young volunteers: the University of Texas Service Group and the Travis County Juvenile Probation ­Community Service Group. We will need the help of our neighborhood volunteers to guide the process and balance all that youth with wisdom!

Please come join us for a hopefully beautiful spring day sprucing up our Greenbelt trails. We are bound to have lots of fun and the reward of a day well spent with visible results that many others can enjoy. Please RSVP as soon as possible to gleeful@earthlink.net to sign up for the trail work day. You can come for all or part of the day. Please indicate which trail you would like to work on. Stan Ostrum will be guiding the work at the Gus Fruh trail and I will be guiding the work at the Homedale Trail. John Cook, our COA Parks Partner, will be trailboss for the Gus Fruh trail renovation efforts.

Recent Work Day Report

After twice re-scheduling due to inclement weather, on March 5 the clouds held the rain in check long enough for us to assemble at the Gus Fruh Trail and give it some vigorous tender- loving care. We had twenty-five spirited neighbors show up and put muscle and mind to the tasks at hand. Together, we contributed 90 hours of service to our Greenbelt.

At the end of the day, there were large mounds of ligustrum carcasses spread throughout the top portion of the trail. They had been converted from invasive pests to new homesteads for wildlife. The Invasive Species Crew was enthusiastic and merciless!

We have begun an ambitious renovation of the steep switchback trail, which was suffering from extensive erosion damage. All of the cross-trail drainage bars will be replaced with newly designed ones that will be both more effective, and definitely more aesthetic than the rubber tire strips. The entire trail will also be resurfaced. At the end of our March work day, one-half of the switchback trail had been excavated for the new drainage bars. Since that work day, John Cook has had the help of an AmeriCorps group to excavate the rest of the drainage bars. We are optimistic that this renovation work will restore the trail to its former wheelchair accessible status.

Other March work day accomplishments: The entrance to the trail was tidied, pulling back invading ivy and the small host of sticker weeds that were popping back up (a much reduced population after last year’s weeding frenzy), and re-establishing the lines of the rock border. Also, our Clean-up Crew came upon a tangle of old barbed wire ranch fencing and wrestled with it, bringing it to the trailhead to be hauled off with the bags of bottles, cans & cast-off clothing.

PLEASE COME OUT AND JOIN US FOR THE APRIL 23 WORK DAY

 

Photos from yesterday’s Greenbelt Guardian workday at the Gus Fruh access are up on the BHNA Yahoo group:

http://photos.groups.yahoo.com/group/barton_hills/lst

in the folder Greenbelt Guardians/2005 March 05 workday – Gus Fruh.

After two reschedulings due to unfavorable weather, we were finally able to get out there and work this weekend. The rain held off until we were just finishing up and our smaller-than-normal group of volunteers pushed extra hard all day and got a lot accomplished.

The creek is flowing nicely right now and the greenbelt is really beautiful this time of year. I hope everyone can get down there sometime soon and see for themselves.

Stan Ostrum

 
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