Monday, December 27, 2010
TWS CONCLAVE 2011 !!!
WHEN: March 25-27, 2011
WHERE: Camp Lakewood, Potosi, Missouri
What is Conclave?!?!
The Wildlife Society Student Conclave is an epic weekend filled with social events, field trips, presentations, hands-on workshops and quiz bowl! Every year student chapters from the North Central Section of The Wildlife Society come together for a great time, to learn and network with other schools. We took a large group down to Purdue last year and we hosted it the year before that. It is always one of the highlights of the year for everyone and we hope that you decide to come too! There isn't a certain level of knowledge or prior participation you have to have in order to attend and sometimes is all the better if you don't! You'll have a great time getting to know other FW Club members as well as learn more about the wildlife profession. There will be many schools there from Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio and Wisconsin. The cool thing about going to these types of conferences is you meet people and make friends from different parts of the country and continue to see them at future conferences and into your professional career. This is also a great thing to put on your resume!
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO ATTEND, WE NEED YOU TO EMAIL THE CLUB (msufwclub@gmail.com) BY THIS FRIDAY DECEMBER 31ST WITH A COMMITMENT TO PAY THE $50 WHEN WE GET BACK FROM BREAK. Our VP Marie is going to pay the costs up front for everyone that signs up, and you will be required to find a replacement or pay the $50, if you decide later that you are unable to go. (Please include your name, t-shirt size, emergency contact info, and any food requirements/allergies you may have in the email)
We really hope you decide to join us in March! Sorry for the rushed call for attendees - the lodge that MU is reserving has to know the number of people very early on and the money we send must be postmarked by January 1st..
Tentative Schedule
Friday 3:00-5:00 Check-in
5:00-6:30 Reception, Dinner, Door Prizes
7:00-8:00 Rifle, Archery, Alpine Tower/Zip line
9:00-? Social/bonfire
Saturday 6:00-8:00 Bioblitz
8:00-8:30 Breakfast
8:30-12:30 Field Trips
12:30-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Speakers
3:00-5:30 Competitions
5:30-6:00 Chapter President’s Roundtable Discussion
6:00-7:00 Dinner
7:00-9:00 Quiz Bowl
9:00-? Bonfire
Sunday 7:00-8:00 Workshop
8:00-9:00 Breakfast
9:00-11:00 Workshops
11:00-12:00 Awards, Send-off
12:00-1:00 Lunch
Monday, December 6, 2010
Updated T-Shirt Design!
Here is the updated version of the t-shirt! It will be a white design on green.
We plan on getting t-shirts and crewneck sweatshirts (no hood, vintage look!)
Give us any last minute thoughts you have! The 'Fisheries and Wildlife Club' text was just randomly chosen. We're going to ask the people at the t-shirt place if they can pick a nice font style.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
New T-Shirt Designs!
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Red Cedar River Cleanup Photos!
Thanks to the ~60 people who came out to help! Among other things, we pulled about 40 bikes from the river! Unfortunately, this is probably a new record. Thanks to Ruth Kline-Robach from MSU's Institute of Water Research and the CARRS Department for donating the shirts!
If you are interested in getting more information/getting involved in the Club's Red Cedar River Awareness Campaign, click on 'Outreach Committee' at the right. More info to come soon.
Thanks!
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Camping this Weekend @ Sleeping Bear Dunes
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Adams field map - Ultimate Frisbee!
Saturday, September 25, 2010
EVENT: Volunteering at Kellogg Bird Sanctuary
Friday, September 17, 2010
IM SOCCER TEAM!
EVENT: Bird Mist Netting!
The goal for this event is to demonstrate wild bird capture and handling techniques used in research. You will learn bird extraction techniques, identification, proper holds, measurements, sexing, aging, tick-plucking and more! This is a great thing to put on your resume and is always a lot of fun!
If you would like to go, but need a ride, everyone will be meeting at 6:30am behind Natural Resources to drive. Rose lake is about 15 minutes northeast of campus.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
HELP HERPTILES AT MARSHALL OIL SPILL!!
Don't miss out on this great opportunity to help wildlife at the Marshall Oil Spill. This has been a real tragedy, but you can help clean up the mess! Here is the information that was announced at our Club meeting tonight:
"Currently, I am involved with helping clean up oiled herps at the Marshall oil spill and we are in desperate need of some more volunteers. We just hit turtle #1000, a week ago Thursday, from the contaminated river in need of cleaning and had 81 more come in on Friday. Volunteers typically help with husbandry duties, such as setting up habitats, cleaning, feeding, and checking water levels, as well as with the tedious and time-consuming process of cleaning the oil off of the turtles.
Prior to volunteering, a mandatory 4-hour HAZWOPR training session must be completed. This course is currently offered on Sundays at 1:00 in Marshall, but it is possible to schedule a different time if there is demand for it. I would be willing to drive anyone for regular volunteering on the weekends or maybe a day of the week as well depending on schedule. This Sunday, September 19th, a group will be going down for the training and we welcome anyone would wants to help out! Additionally, if there is anyone willing to drive, that would be greatly appreciated too.
1I think that this would be a great service opportunity for anyone interested in wildlife/herps in general. Plus, in the past month that I have been helping out there, there have been many wildlife professionals, as well as people from zoos across the country (Toledo, Detroit, Potter Park, Binder Park, Ft. Wayne, etc.) that are coming to help clean, and they can be really interesting and insightful to talk to."
There is already a group of people signed up to go help. Email Alex Prediger (predige1@msu.edu) if you are interested in helping out!
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Volunteer Experience with Grad Student!!!
Thursday, September 2, 2010
First Meeting of the Year!
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Friday, April 30, 2010
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Preview: "Meet A Grad" video series!
Check out a preview of the "Meet A Grad" video series, coming this Fall
Presented by the MSU Fisheries and Wildlife Club
The purpose of this series is to expose undergraduates in Fisheries and Wildlife to the wide range of work that graduate students in the department are doing right now. The series will be released on our website in the fall, but we wanted to give you a preview of our first finished video. In this first episode, we sat down to talk to Emily Johnston about her research in the Avian Health and Disease Ecology lab.
EVENT: Bird Mist Netting!
Sarah Hamer (a graduate student in the FW Department), will be taking the club mist netting this Sunday at Rose Lake. If you want to help set up nets, we will be meeting there at 6:30. If not, you can stop by between 7 and 10am. (unless there is a lot of rain)
The goal for this event is to demonstrate wild bird capture and handling techniques used in research. You will learn bird extraction techniques, identification, proper holds, measurements, tick-plucking and more! This is a great thing to put on your resume and is always a lot of fun!
If you would like to go, but need a ride, people will be meeting at 7am behind Natural Resources to drive. Rose lake is about 15 minutes northeast of campus. Here is a map for drivers:
View Larger Map
Monday, April 19, 2010
Friday, April 16, 2010
EVENT: Fenner Nature Center Outreach Activity
Outreach Experience: Giving short talks and demonstrations to the public that come by the center.
When: This Sunday April 18th from 12-4
Where: Fenner Nature Center (just down the road from MSU)
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=131+Natural+Resources,+East+Lansing,+MI+48824-1222+(Michigan+State+University:+Parks+%26+Recreation+Resources)&daddr=2020+E+Mt+Hope+Ave,+Lansing,+MI+48910&hl=en&geocode=FZPjiwIdfPT2-iFs4zHmE1ZWIA%3BFT-7iwIdIEj2-ilFq1ibisEiiDHcdj32zaviag&mra=ls&sll=42.71693,-84.50094&sspn=0.050323,0.087547&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=14
There are 4 activities listed below and you can participate in as many as you would like! Supplies will be provided at the center. People that are already signed up are here as well.
12:30 Aquatic Sampling: We will be in waders, sampling for fish and macro-invertebrates. This is just demonstrating to people some sampling techniques and showing them what creatures we find! People signed up already:
Allyson Hughes
Ali David
Kristen Thelen
2:00 Herps: We will be taking a walk with people and looking for herps! People signed up already:
Marie Stevenson
Craig Sherwood
Dan Myers
Colleen Bumford
2:30 Tree IDing: Taking a walk with people and showing them how to identify some trees! People Signed Up:
Alyson Pierce (from the Forestry Club!)
Dan Myers
3:00 Birding - Helping people identify birds! People already signed up:
Angie Lane
Kristen Thelen
Marco Sanchez
**If you aren't signed up or don't feel too confident in leading anything above, please come out anyways!!! You can learn a thing or two yourself! (hah, none of us are experts anyways..) If you are going to need a ride, please contact Marco at 517-648-3087 or at our email at msufwclub@gmail.com. We will be traveling back and forth to pick up/drop off anyone who needs it!
EVENT: Kellogg Bird Sanctuary Volunteering
When: This Saturday April 17th from 9:30 - 3:30ish.
*We will meet at 8:00 am behind the NR Building for rides.
Where: Kellogg Bird Sanctuary in Augusta, MI near Kalamazoo.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=131+Natural+Resources,+East+Lansing,+MI+48824-1222+(Michigan+State+University:+Parks+%26+Recreation+Resources)&daddr=42.4047,+-85.401192&geocode=FZPjiwIdfPT2-iFs4zHmE1ZWIA%3BFVwLhwIdmOHo-g&hl=en&mra=ls&sll=42.498585,-84.940035&sspn=4.705836,1.296387&ie=UTF8&ll=42.496403,-87.022705&spn=4.705836,5.482178&t=h&z=7
What to Bring: We will be outside doing some dirty work, so bring some grungy clothes. They will probably be providing us lunch at the center as well!
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
CI Blog: Protecting Distant Forests Can Save Local Jobs..
"Today, CI and the Avoided Deforestation Partners launched a campaign to raise awareness about the protection of tropical rain forests, and the important role U.S. leadership must play.
The protection of tropical forests is critical to protect species, food, medicines, and fresh water supplies. It is also a central plank of any smart plan to fight climate change.
This campaign highlights those facts, as well as an important piece of less well-known information: protecting these same tropical rain forests directly helps protect U.S. jobs."
Michigan's Only Known Wolverine Died of Natural Causes
-----Original Message-----
From: Department of Natural Resources publications list [mailto:DNRWIRE@LISTSERV.MICHIGAN.GOV] On Behalf Of Mary Dettloff
Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2010 9:13 AM
To: DNRWIRE@LISTSERV.MICHIGAN.GOV
Subject: Michigan's Only Known Wolverine Died of Natural Causes
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 6, 2010
Contacts: Tom Cooley 517-336-3050 or Mary Dettloff 517-335-3014
Michigan’s Only Known Wolverine Died of Natural Causes
Michigan’s only known wolverine apparently died of natural causes,
the Department of Natural Resources and Environment announced today.
A necropsy performed at the DNRE’s Wildlife Diagnostic Laboratory and
microscopic examinations at Michigan State University showed some heart
degeneration and some liver congestion, but no sign of infection or
trauma. The wolverine was in fair body condition with small deposits of
fat. Metal and pesticide screenings were negative.
The female wolverine, first discovered by coyote hunters near Bad Axe
in the Thumb on Feb. 24, 2004, was approximately 9 years old, said DNRE
pathologist Tom Cooley. Previous DNA analysis indicated the animal’s
genetic origin was from a vast area of Ontario and Manitoba.
The dead wolverine, was found semi-submerged on the downstream side of
a beaver dam by hikers Morgan Graham and Todd Rann in the Minden City
State Game Area in mid March. The animal was last known to be alive on
Feb. 17, 2010.
The carcass was taken to a taxidermist by DNRE personnel. It will be
made into a full-body mount to be displayed at the Saginaw Bay Visitor
Center at Bay City State Recreational Area.
The animal was first wolverine ever authenticated in Michigan.
The DNRE is committed to the conservation, protection, management and
accessible use of the state’s environment, natural resources and
related economic interests for current and future generations.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Follow up to Planet Earth - Tonight at 8pm!
EU countries block bluefin tuna ban
This is an saddening bit of news..especially considering the information that was presented in "The End of the Line".
Malta, Cyprus, Spain, Italy, France, and Greece block ban at Brussels meeting despite support from 21 EU governments.
The "Club Med" of southern European Union countries came under attack from environmentalists today for defying the campaign to ban trade in bluefin tuna, Japan's highly prized sushi fish, whose stocks are dwindling dangerously low.
A fortnight ago the European commission agreed, after weeks of argument, to back a proposal from Monaco to ban trade in bluefin tuna. If the EU had voted for the ban at an international forum next March, fishing for bluefin tuna would have been effectively outlawed, at least temporarily.
Despite optimism that the ban, supported by 21 EU governments, would go ahead, the move was blocked at a Brussels meeting late yesterday by Malta, Cyprus, Spain, Italy, France, and Greece.
"Deplorable," said Xavier Pastor, head of the Oceana fisheries conservation lobby group in Europe. "They are pushing tuna to the point of no return."
"Enough is enough," said Aaron McLoughlin, head of the WWF European marine programme. "It is once again large-scale Mediterranean fishing interests trying to gang up against the long-term survival of Atlantic bluefin tuna."
Article continues: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/sep/22/eu-bluefin-tuna-ban-blocked
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Food Film Festival This Saturday at MSU!!!
FOOD FILM FESTIVAL ON THE MSU CAMPUS –Free to all students!
9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday, March 20, 2010
A Food Film Festival will be shown on Saturday, March 20 from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the theatre on the basement level of Snyder Hall on the Michigan State University campus. Popcorn and pop will be served. This festival is part on an ongoing conversation at MSU on food, sustainability and the environment. Students, faculty, staff and members of the greater Lansing community are invited to attend. There will be brief discussions following the showing of each film. The films are very diverse and include one nominated for an Academy Award in 2010 (Food, Inc.), a Chinese film directed by acclaimed filmmaker Ang Lee (Eat, Drink, Man, Woman), a humorous movie about being a vegetarian in Alaska (Eating Alaska), a documentary about the rise of young farmers in America (The Greenhorns) and a film about growing asparagus in Michigan (Asparagus: Stalking the Good Life). The public is invited to attend.
This event is being organized by students and faculty at the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism in the MSU School of Journalism, the Residential College, the RISE program and the Department of Community Agriculture, Recreation and Resource Studies (CARRS).
Scheduled showing times:
Eat, Drink, Man, Woman – 9:30-11:35 a.m.
Eating Alaska 12:00-12:57 p.m.
The Greenhorns - - 1:30-1:50 p.m.
Food, Inc - 2:30- 4:03 p.m.
Asparagus: Stalking the American life - 4:30- 5:23 p.m.
About the movies:
Eat Drink Man Woman
Central Motion Picture Corp., Good Machine, 1994). Written by Ang Lee, James Schamus, Hui-Ling Wang. Directed by Ang Lee. In Mandarin with English subtitles. A widower and master chef (Sihung Lung) losing his sense of taste tries to keep family food traditions alive as his three grown and distinctly different daughters struggle to assert their independence. The dinner table becomes the site of conflict as well as of familial healing and growth, and the cinematography is finely tuned to present the Chinese delicacies in the most nurturing light. It's a sweet and scrumptious film, remade with less success as Tortilla Soup (Samuel Goldwyn Films, Starz! Encore Entertainment, 2001). http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111797/
Eating Alaska
A documentary about a vegetarian who moves to Alaska and is forced to confront a lot of the ethical issues she thought she had already settled on. The film chronicles her experience and the dilemmas she faces. Humorous and relatable to anyone who has ever pondered over the ethical questions of being a vegetarian or a carnivore. http://www.eatingalaska.com/
The Greenhorns
A documentary about the rise of young farmers throughout America. The film chronicles several families and individuals have started to grow their own food and their experiences with the process. Beautiful stories of real people. http://www.thegreenhorns.net/
Food Inc
This Academy Award-nominated film discusses the mechanization and industrialization of the United States food system and how food is shaping our economy and our lives.
http://www.foodincmovie.com/
Asparagus
Based in Asparagus capital Oceana County Michigan, this award-winning movie discusses the hardships faced by the community in the wake of the U.S. War on Drugs, Free Trade and a Fast Food Nation. http://www.asparagusthemovie.com/
Here kitty-kitty...
from Callie Gesmundo
to msufwclub@gmail.com
date Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 3:55 PM
subject Fwd: FW: Honey would you start the car for me this morning?
mailed-by gmail.com
signed-by gmail.com
"Brooklyn is by the Irish Hills where Michigan International Speedway is.......getting close. Here kitty-kitty!!!
Michigan
This gives new meaning to the phrase "Honey would you go outside and warm up the car for me.”
These were taken in Brooklyn, Michigan off Sharon Hollow Road IN THE Lower Peninsula."
REAL OR FAKE??
Friday, March 5, 2010
Conservation International: Team Earth Magazine
Thursday, March 4, 2010
TWS Blog: Alberta Considers Grizzly Bear Hunt
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Pheasants Forever Banquet Help!
Info on helping set up:
When: This Friday at 8:15am - early afternoon.
Where: Eagle Eye Golf/ Banquet Facility. It's on Abbot road about 10 minutes north of campus.Google Map
Kent Ballard has also invited anyone who is interested to stay for the dinner as well. I believe it will start between 4 and 6.
IMPORTANT: I need people to commit to come. We are representing the FW Club and the Department, so it will look really bad if people bail at the last minute..
Conclave Information:
This year's annual Midwest Wildlife Society Student Conclave is a weekend of epic proportions! Join a us and a bunch of other school's Wildlife Society's in our region for a mini-conference filled with guest speakers, workshops and a whole lot of fun! This is a great way to meet wildlife students from other areas and network! You'll see many of these faces at similar events throughout your careers! Ask anyone and they'll tell you that this is definitely worth going to!
Description:
"The Purdue Student Chapter of The Wildlife Society will be hosting the 2010 Midwest Student Conclave, March 26th-28th, 2010.
The topic of the weekend will be "Managing in the Matrix: Wildlife Management on a Changing Landscape." Modern pressures for increased agricultural production, more space to house a growing population, and an overall disconnect between an increasingly urban population and our natural resources necessitate that today's wildlife biologists be able to conserve our wildlife resources in a highly fragmented environment.
These environments are becoming more common throughout the Midwest and with that growth, human-wildlife interactions are increasing exponentially. It is today's wildlife professional who is charged with the task to conserve our valuable natural resources and optimize human interactions with wildlife.
This year's conclave will focus on this broad topic and equip Midwestern students with additional tools to Manage in the Matrix."
Activities
Information Sheet
Itinerary
***Registration is $60. Now this may seem like a lot, but this fee includes all meals (Friday dinner through Sunday breakfast), lodging, a shirt and all activities. Make checks payable to 'Purdue Wildlife Society' if you are mailing this yourself or to 'MSU Fisheries and Wildlife', if you would like to send it along with everyone else's. These kind of events are really important for your career! Comment, on this blog post if you have any other questions!
The rest of the flyer with more detailed information: DOWNLOAD REGISTRATION FORM! They can be sent to:
Purdue Wildlife Society
C/O John Dunning
715 W. State Street
West Lafayette, Indiana 47907
FUN EVENT this weekend:
The rest of the flyer with more detailed information: Flyer
Let me know if you would like to join me on Saturday! ~Marco
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Saturday, February 27, 2010
EVENT: GPS/GIS Workshop
Event: You neeeed these skillzz!
Tomorrow: GPS/GIS Introductory Workshop. A recent FW graduate student Dan Wieferich will give us an introduction to using GPS units and then GIS to use the data we collect.
Where: We will be collecting data in our Management Area which is right behind the Natural Resources Building. We will actually be using this information in our upcoming management plan for the area!
When: Meet at 9:30am behind the NR Building. This event will last between 3 and 4 hours.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
EVENT: WOOD DUCK BOX CLEANOUTS WITH DNR!
Field Experience: Cleaning Out Wood Duck Boxes with DNR at Rose Lake.
WHEN: This Sunday February 21 at the DNR office at Rose Lake.
9:00am~12:30pm
*We will meet at 8:15 behind the Natural Resources Building to sort out rides*
WHAT: We will be helping the DNR clean out the wood duck boxes they have around Rose Lake. The boxes are usually out on the water, so we need the ice to access them. We will be replacing the bedding, repairing the boxes if necessary and recording the number of egg shells. We will also be using GPS units to map out the locations of the boxes. This is another great volunteer activity to put on your resumes, while having a blast outside! We will most likely be provided lunch as well!
WHAT TO BRING: Warm clothes, boots
Note: We would prefer that people coming to this be dues paying members or become members soon.. Dues are only $10 for a lifetime of knowledge!
Map to Rose Lake
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
The End Of The Line Trailer
FREE SHOWING: TUESDAY FEBRUARY 23! B104 WELLS HALL! 7-8:30! Sponsored by us and the Fisheries and Wildlife Graduate Student Organization.
FACEBOOK EVENT: End of the Line - East Lansing
Extinct Toad on Exhibit at WCS’s Bronx Zoo
The Kihansi spray toad, which has hopped into oblivion in its native home of Tanzania, has found a safe haven at WCS's Bronx Zoo. A new exhibit features an "assurance colony" of the small, mustard-colored toads, a species now listed as extinct in the wild.
When the spray toad's waterfall habitat dried up, WCS scientists stepped in.
The chirps of these toads once filled a verdant, five-acre swath of the Kihansi Gorge, where they lived in the mist created by the waterfalls. It was their only habitat in the world. But when construction of a hydroelectric dam at the falls began in the late 1990s, diverting the water flow out of the gorge, the mist zone dried up.
The new exhibit is a window into the efforts of a team of WCS herpetologists to ensure the toad does not disappear from the planet altogether. In 2001, following an agreement with the government of Tanzania, WCS scientists helped collect 499 spray toads from the gorge and flew them back to New York. In the years since, they have worked to propagate the species behind the scenes. Breeding a colony of toads that have so many unique requirements–a special insect diet, a steady spray of mist, filtered water, and more–has been a true feat.
Within the next year, WCS will send a small population to a facility at the University of Dar es Salaam. Eventually, in collaboration with Tanzanian partners who have already installed a system of sprinklers at the gorge to replicate the toad's habitat, they hope to return the species to the wild.
Read more...
The Story of Stuff
This is the video that we watched last week at our meeting! We also had somewhat of a discussion afterwards, but please post any lingering thoughts you might have on it!
"From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It'll teach you something, it'll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever."
Thursday, February 11, 2010
EVENT: SNOW SHELTER BUILDING!
Intensely Fun Event: Snow Shelter Building
WHEN: This Sunday February 14th at the Natural Resources Building. 9:00am-12:30pm.
**Meet at 9:00am behind the Natural Resources Building (We will make sure someone is there to open the door)**
WHAT: A Fisheries and Wildlife Graduate Student, Bob Montgomery, will use his survival skills learned through his upbringings in a family of Polar Bears in the Arctic to show us the ways of Snow Cave Construction. Prepare for an expedition that will test every part of your body and soul!
Schedule: -1 hour to build snow mound - 1-2 hours to wait for it to settle - 1 hour to dig it out and finish it off.
During the wait time, we will head back inside to have some eats and watch 'Touching the Void' which is a film about two mountaineers who have a near fatal experience attempting to climb the 20,813 ft Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes in 1985.
*WHAT TO BRING: 1) Warm Clothes 2) A Lunch 3) A shovel if you have one
Note: You don't have to be a dues paying member to participate! Should be a good time!
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
EVENT: 'Merdian Tackles Ice Fishing'
OUTREACH EVENT: 'Meridian Tackles Ice Fishing'
WHEN: This Saturday February 13 at the pond in the Meridian Historical Village. It will last from 8:30am ~ 12:00 p.m.
**We will meet behind the Natural Resources Building at 8:00a.m to figure out rides. Bring a vehicle if you have one.**
WHAT: This is a free fishing weekend in Michigan (don't have to have a license) so, we will be helping kids learn how to ice fish (teaching,helping,drilling,measuring,fixing poles) If you have never gone fishing/ice fishing yourself, this will also be a great opportunity for you to learn! Even if you don't wish to fish yourself, it will be a nice opportunity to get hands on experience with outreach. (which is obviously a very important aspect to our field)
WHAT TO BRING: Just warm clothes and your happy faces! (fishing gear if you'd like)
Note: You don't have to be a dues paying member to participate!
Map: Meridian Historical Village - Pond
T-Shirt Designs
Saturday, February 6, 2010
CONSERVATION ISSUE - NO MORE GRIZZLIES CAMPAIGN!!!
Visit nomoregrizzlies.com to find out more about this horrible conservation threat!
Detecting Asian Carp in the Great Lakes | Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy
Conservation Leaders for Tomorrow: Introducing Wildlife Students to Hunting
Conservation Leaders for Tomorrow: Introducing Wildlife Students to Hunting
This is a great opportunity for MSU students to participate in as well. This past fall we took 4 students to the workshop (Colleen Bumford, Lydia Vanderbilt, Marco Sanchez, Robyn Bailey). Be sure to ask Jim Schneider about it!
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Monday, January 25, 2010
Saturday, January 23, 2010
David Attenborough - Human Mammal, Human Hunter
Thursday, January 21, 2010
New Facebook Page
http://www.facebook.com/pages/East-Lansing-MI/MSU-Fisheries-and-Wildlife-Club/211581336962?v=wall
Welcome to our new Blog!
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2010
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April
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- The Turtleman
- Preview: "Meet A Grad" video series!
- EVENT: Bird Mist Netting!
- EVENT: Red Cedar River Cleanup!
- EVENT: Fenner Nature Center Outreach Activity
- EVENT: Kellogg Bird Sanctuary Volunteering
- CI Blog: Protecting Distant Forests Can Save Local...
- Michigan's Only Known Wolverine Died of Natural Ca...
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March
(12)
- Follow up to Planet Earth - Tonight at 8pm!
- EU countries block bluefin tuna ban
- Food Film Festival This Saturday at MSU!!!
- Here kitty-kitty...
- TWS Blog - The Realities of Nature
- Conservation International: Team Earth Magazine
- TWS Blog: Alberta Considers Grizzly Bear Hunt
- Pheasants Forever Banquet Help!
- Conclave Information:
- Potluck Tomorrow!
- FUN EVENT this weekend:
- Study: Lakes in the Great Lakes region healthier t...
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February
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- EVENT: GPS/GIS Workshop
- Wood Duck Box Clean Out Pictures
- Ice Fishing/ Snow Shelter Building Pictures
- Guns legal in national parks
- EVENT: WOOD DUCK BOX CLEANOUTS WITH DNR!
- The End Of The Line Trailer
- Extinct Toad on Exhibit at WCS’s Bronx Zoo
- The Story of Stuff
- EVENT: SNOW SHELTER BUILDING!
- EVENT: 'Merdian Tackles Ice Fishing'
- T-Shirt Designs
- CONSERVATION ISSUE - NO MORE GRIZZLIES CAMPAIGN!!!
- Detecting Asian Carp in the Great Lakes | Cool Gre...
- Conservation International Blog - Polinators In Peril
- Conservation Leaders for Tomorrow: Introducing Wil...
- TWS Blog - Keeping Black Bears Wild
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April
(8)