Friday, October 17, 2014

Wisconsin Bat Festival 2014 in Milwaukee Was a Success!


By Licia Johnson, NLDC Staff Naturalist

“Every year, the Wisconsin Bat Program hosts a Wisconsin Bat Festival in conjunction with partners. The Festival is a globally relevant, engaging and important event to promote conservation of bats and ultimately, our environment. Bats are critical to ecosystems around the world and locally. Because these animals are often misunderstood and because multiple species are now threatened with extinction people should be encouraged to protect them. Through this message, citizens learn about the importance of being good stewards of the earth while inspiring children to become the next generation of researchers and biologists necessary to preserve the balance of our environment.” 

Wisconsin Bat Program


Photo 1-  Over 800 people came to the Urban Ecology Center on October 3rd for the annual Wisconsin Bat Festival.
Photo 2- One of my jobs at the festival was educating folks in the live bat room.  Here I am with Leon, one of the Discovery Center’s education bats- he was echo-locating, and we were able to hear it with the Anabat detector. 
The 2014 WI Bat Festival reached over 1300 attendees over three days.  It was hosted by the Urban Ecology Center in Milwaukee Wisconsin starting on October 3, 2014.  This year, the Festival included not only the same great educational programs and activities as last year, but also a bat science symposium and a screening and discussion panel of the video Battle for Bats- Surviving white-nose syndrome.



Leon, Fritz (our two new male educational Big Brown Bats) and I attended and worked in the live education bat area-educating folks on big browns, fruit bats, and Jamaican leaf nosed bats.  Over 100 individuals make this Festival happen each year.   Presenters shared their stories and expertise, research and monitoring results with others.  Science presentations this year covered a wide range of topics including rabies, white nose syndrome, acoustic monitoring, bats of Cuba and caves.  We had great attendance in the Science Symposium!  There were also activities including guano dissection, “what does a bat eat” activity, craft cave, and more.  Attendees also had a chance to explore the blow up cave and learn to be a bat biologist with other fun activities.  I was fortunate enough to take a turn being the mascot- “Stella Luna” (of the kids bat book) and met the first girl in the world to survive full-on rabies, Jeanna along with attending her interview with WPR’s Judith Siers-Poisson- discussing her journey with the disease.  It was a great weekend filled with bat education and celebration! 


Photo 3- Me as Stella Luna and Jeanna.

Photo 4- I had a little fun with the “green screen” activity at the Festival- here I am as a hibernating Eastern Pipistrelle. J 


Photo 5- One of the bats in the live bat display, the Jamaican Leaf Nosed Bat.


Celebrate bats during National Bat Week October 26-November 1!

Photo 6- Celebrate bats!



Thursday, October 2, 2014

500 Hours

by: Leah Dittberner


Upon graduating the University of Wisconsin this spring, I was filled with a variety of emotions. Of course there was the excitement, pride, and relief that I had made it out alive. However, closing out my time studying natural resources and ecology also left me with a sense of sadness, anxiety, and even despair upon learning how much humans have devastated our environment. We have lost so many species of flora and fauna, and will continue to endure such losses. A nature lover who grew up watching The Lion King, this concept is painful to ponder. However, my time at the Discovery Center has helped to restore a sense of hope by serving as a shining example of how humans can come together to heal the wounds we have inflicted on this planet we call home. The center’s committed individuals treat not only the people, but also the plants and animals that reside in the Northwoods as family, as integral parts of a complex and interconnected community. This, to me, is stewardship.

One idea that is discussed profusely in the classrooms of universities around the country (including my alma mater) is that of a sense of place. After sitting for 500 hours at boat landings this summer conducting Clean Boats, Clean Waters surveys, I understand exactly why this topic is so prevalent in the curricula of environmental educators, scientists, historians, and ethnographers alike. I have learned to love these boat landings, these seemingly insignificant places, by simply observing the wildlife, the silent magic in the transitions from irises to asters, gaywings to goldenrod, throughout the course of the growing season. I have heard the wind in the pines, the call of the loon, and the sound of the waves washing the shore. I have felt the joy of watching warblers forage in their treetop kingdom. I have witnessed a dragonfly emerge from its nymph form, sun itself, and take flight for the first time. I have seen the excitement on the faces of adults and children alike as they describe their catch out on one of the many beautiful lakes in Vilas County. I have learned about the edible and non-edible plants, lichen, mushrooms, and mosses. I have had the privilege to help protect these waters for future generations to enjoy, and I couldn’t be more grateful for this summer’s 500 hours of “weed patrol.”

I strongly believe that a highly internalized sense of place, of knowing not only the people and economics of an area, but familiarizing oneself with the complex ecology as well, is essential for the health of the planet as a whole. Sitting at boat landings for 500 hours has taught me patience, has revealed nature’s many avenues for exploration, and has instilled in me a deep sense of respect, not only for the land, but for the people who love this place and call it home. It has even helped to cure my wanderlust. Of course I would love to take off and hike mountains, learn to surf, or soak in a hot spring in some far-off land. However, the enchanting beauty, biodiversity, and serenity of the Northwoods have assured me that learning about the wonders of my homeland is something that must be shared in order to help individuals, families, and communities grow sustainably.

I will end this reflection on my time at the NLDC with the words of that one wise song from The Lion King:

 “There is far too much to take in here, more to find than can ever be found.”

Abundant thanks to the North Lakeland Discovery Center for reminding me of this and helping restore in me a sense of childlike curiosity about the world around me.