Geology Hike with Rick Allmendinger
An exploration of the local glacial and bedrock geology of the Clark Reserve in Chocorua with geologist Rick Allmendinger.
An exploration of the local glacial and bedrock geology of the Clark Reserve in Chocorua with geologist Rick Allmendinger.
Stewardship “in perpetuity,” the commitment land trusts make, means ongoing stewardship in the face of changing conditions!
Join us for an exploration of the local glacial and bedrock geology of the Clark Reserve in Chocorua with geologist Rick Allmendinger.
To understand where we’re going, we must understand how and why we got into our current predicament.
The beauty of snow is that it provides us with a natural canvas where we can see the pattern of animal tracks, other signs of animal activity, and read a story about the forest in winter.
What does it mean to think like a forester? What does a trained forester see when they walk out into the woods? Come find out!
With the diminishment of certain kinds of habitat, including convenient holes in old-growth trees, cavity nesting birds may have a harder time finding places to nest. We can help!
Yes, there are several large-scale solutions to the unprecedented warming of our planet, which any individual can become a part of.
Looking for a little exercise, good company, and work with a view? We’ll be clearing out the berms and swales along Chocorua Lake and can always use extra hands.
The changing world of energy production and energy use brings opportunities from jobs to cost-savings to cleaner air, as we transition to a new low-pollution energy future. What does that mean for a place like Tamworth?
Join us for a walk with UNH Cooperative Extension Natural Resources Field Specialist Wendy Scribner on Chocorua Lake Conservancy conservation land in Chocorua, where we will talk about how our forests sequester and store carbon.
Please join Cook Memorial Library and Chocorua Lake Conservancy live via Zoom for “Forest Management and Carbon” with UNH Cooperative Extension Natural Resources Field Specialist Wendy Scribner.
A changing climate asks us to change our practices to help the land and its many inhabitants adapt—and this can start close to home!
While the larger forces threatening our pollinator populations may seem far away or hard to grasp, we can take practical steps every day here at home to support native and naturalized pollinators.
Hearing the buzz around solar energy, but not sure where to start? As energy prices rise, are you looking for ways to save money on home heating and electricity? Would you like your business, town, or school district to reduce its energy costs, carbon footprint, and impact on the climate? Join us live via Zoom on Wednesday, March 1, at 7PM
Climate science basics, health effects of climate change and the health risks posed by climate change-related phenomena including extreme heat, pollen and allergens, air pollution, extreme weather events, and vector-borne disease, climate and clean energy solutions, and actions we can take as individuals.
Please join the Cook Memorial Library and the Chocorua Lake Conservancy at the Cook Library in Tamworth village, for a Community Climate Conversation as part of the CML/CMC series “Climate & Community.”
While the effects of climate change may not yet be as dramatic in New Hampshire as in some other places, its impacts are being felt by the tourism and other industries, by municipalities, in demographic changes to the state, and by the land and water and all who dwell therein.