Chocorua Little Lake Ecology Paddle & Aquatic Invasive Species Patrol
Like every pond and lake, Chocorua Lake is home to myriad species of flora and fauna. Come learn who lives here!
Like every pond and lake, Chocorua Lake is home to myriad species of flora and fauna. Come learn who lives here!
Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain quick-growing plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health, or just come help prevent the spread of bittersweet to the shores of Chocorua Lake?
Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain quick-growing plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health?
Fresh air! Free workout! Friends! Come spend a morning in a beautiful place stewarding land with us.
When you take a walk you probably recognize common plants and flowers—dandelion! rose! daylily!—but when you swim or kayak, do you know the names of the plants who live in the water you are enjoying?
Join CLC Stewardship Director Debra Marnich for a leisurely guided paddle on Chocorua Lake to learn about who lives in and around the lake.
Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain invasive, quick-growing plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health?
Fresh air! Free workout! Friends! Come spend a morning in a beautiful place stewarding land with us.
Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain quick-growing invasive plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health?
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.
Stewardship with trails to wander afterward, an extraordinary glacial erratic, and mixed habitat to explore. Come spend a morning in a beautiful place that is being managed to provide food and habitat for wildlife.
Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain quick-growing plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health?
Join us for a leisurely guided paddle on Chocorua Lake with naturalist and outdoor educator Hillary Behr and learn more about who lives in and around the lake.
Join the Chocorua Lake Conservancy for a morning of camaraderie, exercise, and invasive plant control at the Brown Lot across from Chocorua Lake.
We’ll be weeding around fruiting shrubs we’ve planted there to improve habitat for wildlife, and mulching them to help them retain moisture when the weather is dry.
Enjoy a naturalist-guided lake paddle and learn who lives in and around Chocorua Lake!
Rescheduled due to rain and possible thunder storms! Want to learn more about how to reduce the spread of certain quick-growing plants without using chemicals that pose risks to pollinators and to soil health?
Our last stewardship event of the year! Join naturalist and CLC Stewardship Director Lynne Flaccus for a Stewardship Morning, clearing and removing invasive plants from the small north field near the edge of the Charlotte C. Browne Woods on Washington Hill Road in Chocorua.
Come help us clear field edges and learn about field habitat for birds, and shrub, tree and invasive plant identification, and building wildlife brush piles for habitat.
Join Chocorua Lake Conservancy Stewardship Director Lynne Flaccus for a leisurely guided paddle on Chocorua Lake. We’ll see what insects, reptiles and amphibians we can find, learn what plants grow with their “feet” in wet soils at the lake’s edge or on the bottom, and keeps an eye out for aquatic invasive species.
Join Chocorua Lake Conservancy Stewardship Director and naturalist Lynne Flaccus for a Stewardship morning. Come help us and learn about field habitat for birds, and shrub, tree and invasive plant identification. We’ll also learn about wildlife brush piles—how to take what we’ve cut and create “homes” for wildlife at the edges of the fields.
Join Chocorua Lake Conservancy Stewardship Director Lynne Flaccus for a leisurely paddle on Chocorua Little Lake. We’ll see what insects, reptiles and amphibians we can find, learn what plants grow with their “feet” in wet soils at the lake’s edge or on the bottom, and keeps an eye out for aquatic invasive species.
On Friday, June 11, from 9-11AM, join the Chocorua Lake Conservancy for a morning of camaraderie, exercise, and invasive plant control at the Brown Lot across from Chocorua Lake. Our volunteer stewards will be learning to identify some common invasive plants and how to remove and control those that might otherwise out-compete native shrubs.
April Fools! So says nature, bringing rain on April 1, and so we are rescheduling this first stewardship day of the year to Monday, April 5, at 9AM. Fresh air, good company, and a chance to pitch in, all with a view of a beautiful mountain!
Fresh air! Free workout! Friends! Come spend a morning in a beautiful place with us on Thursday, September 24, 9-11:30AM, weeding fruiting shrubs and eradicating invasive plants!
Come explore Chocorua Lake with us as we investigate flora and fauna, and search for signs of invasive aquatic plants.
Can you tell the difference between native plants and more recently introduced non-native species that risk overrunning your property and destroying habitat for native plants and animals?
Variegated milfoil? Water naiads? Chinese mystery snail, Asian clam, zebra mussels and spiny water fleas? What do these all have in common? We don’t want them in our lakes and rivers!
Stewardship at the Island, this Saturday, June 13, 9-11:30 AM. Please sign up in advance!