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Signage highlights partnerships to connect Circuit Trails

PRINCETON, N.J. — With funding from the William Penn Foundation, D&R Greenway plans to develop

From left – D&R Greenway Land Trust President & CEO Linda Mead; Bordentown City Mayor James Lynch; Joel Dowshen of the Abbott Marshlands Council; and Kay Widmer, representing Friends of the Abbott Marshlands. All welcome the new sign at Bordentown Beach that signals community partnerships.
— Provided photo

more interpretive signage like the new one at Bordentown Beach that connects communities.

As part of its new “Community Conservation” initiative, D&R Greenway, Abbott Marshlands, and TravelStorys App will partner to connect the Greater Philadelphia and Greater Trenton Circuit Trails.

The connectivity of these trails will feature historical and educational signage along their paths. There will be about four new signs.

“D&R Greenway’s expertise lies in maximizing existing partnerships and building new partnerships at all levels – State Government, County Government, Municipal Government, corporations, community groups, nonprofit organizations and individuals,” says President and CEO Linda Mead.

D&R Greenway recognizes all the beneficiaries of land preservation, and so the new totem-designed signage at Bordentown Beach in the Abbott Marshlands lists collaborators of the effort.

The sign helps to promote the use of the Circuit Trails, Tulpehaking Nature Center, and the TravelStorys app.

“D&R Greenway has acted as the leader to bring all these groups together to understand the importance of connecting communities and merging resources to do so,” Mead says.

“The signage will also acknowledge the perseverance and volunteer work of key community people, those who ultimately protect and care for our watershed with boots on the ground,” she says.

For 25 years now, D&R Greenway has been working toward preservation and stewardship of the Abbott Marshlands. It has worked with Mercer and Burlington counties to make the Abbott Marshlands and the Circuit Trails the robust community assets they are today.

An oasis of natural beauty, the Abbott Marshlands is a unique urban wetland where osprey, marsh wrens, and many kinds of butterflies and dragonflies live. There are also the occasional beluga whale and harp seal.

Human visitors include students on field trips, hikers, cyclists, bird watchers, canoeists, kayakers, fishers, hunters, photographers and artists.

Folks along these trails can also enjoy the offerings at the Tulpehaking Nature Center created by D&R Greenway and N.J. Green Acres Program in partnership with Mercer County.

Along with 15 new signs and trail maps, the new TravelStorys app that was released in 2017 provide paddling and walking tours, enabling visitors to imagine journeying back in time.

This app allows them to navigate Crosswicks Creek in the Abbott Marshlands, visit the bluffs that witnessed Lenape Indian life, early English settlers and French royalty. App users can hear the sounds of a railroad, summer insects and the call of an osprey while learning about key events that shifted the course of American history.

Both the app and new signage along the regional network of hundreds of miles of multi-use trails, enhance community connections, and will soon add the Tulpehaking Nature Center, Abbott Marshlands and Lawrence-Hopewell Trail to the Circuit network.

The William Penn Foundation not only funds the new signage for the Circuit Trails, but it also funds the Alliance for Watershed Education, which is a group of 23 nature centers that bring educational programs to the public with a goal of protecting natural resources of the Delaware River Watershed. More than 15 million people get their drinking water from the Delaware River Watershed.

D&R Greenway Land Trust and the Tulpehaking Nature Center are members of the Alliance for Watershed Education.

Categories
Local News

Rediscover connections between humans and nature

PRINCETON, N.J. — At D&R Greenway Land Trust, an author and a photographer are exploring trees, miniscule plants and other species from a different perspective.

Author Andrea Fereshteh expresses her love for trees in this image.
– Provided photo

Author Andrea Fereshteh and Photographer Tasha O’Neill offer unique views of their take on nature.

Fereshteh will discuss her book called, “In the Company of Trees,” Thursday at D&R Greenway’s Johnson Education Center, while O’Neill currently has a display of her close-up photography of oft-overlooked nature called “From a Child’s Perspective“ at D&R Greenway’s Olivia Rainbow Gallery.

“Practicing being present in nature has been a truly transformative experience for me,” Fereshteh says.

Fereshteh credits the lands preserved by D&R Greenway and other local conservation groups for inspiring her to write a newly published book about the ancient and enduring wisdom of trees.

“We are so lucky to have so many amazing preserved natural spaces in our area. They are incredible resources for experiencing firsthand the magic of nature, and I am thrilled to encourage others to get outside and take advantage of our local trails by sharing this new book,” she says.

Fereshteh has an interest in blending mindful and contemplative practices with nature, which has led her into the woods of central New Jersey where she has practiced forest bathing for the past two years.

Her book is full of short essays, inspirational quotes and color photographs that can be enjoyed piece-by-piece, allowing the reader to savor the experience of trees, healing and nature.

Likewise, O’Neill’s photography focuses macro-lenses on the unusual and the tiniest plants in nature that give the Olivia Rainbow Gallery art lovers the outdoor experiences of the late Artist Olivia Kuenne.

“I seem to be drawn to the unusual. The tiniest plants compel me, as though I were still my child self. I am pleased that D&R Greenway invited me to share these images from the child’s perspective for Olivia’s Rainbow Gallery,” O’Neill explains.

Photographer Tasha O’Neill focuses her macro lenses on this blue egg shell laying out there in nature.
— Provided photo

O’Neill’s art regularly appears in the Princeton-area juried exhibitions.

Recently, D&R Greenway demonstrated her one-person exhibition of her “Forest Bathing” art in their Soul of a Tree display; and is also highlighting her Golden Light art about the apotheosis of winter trees in their Lovely as a Tree display.

This artist grew up in a diverse countryside of Germany, where her family was dedicated to nature.

“There we would walk; explore; learn about wild plants and berries; and then nap in the meadow. With our faces so close to the flowers, the gentle buzzing of insects would lull us to sleep,” she states.

Both Fereshteh and O’Neill are sharing their love for nature locally.

At 7 p.m. Thursday, Fereshteh will discuss the inspiration for her book.

A month later, at 5 p.m. Thursday, Mar. 21, she will lead a mediation workshop focused on trees, healing and nature at the Johnson Education Center, where participants will also walk through Greenway Meadows Park.

During the walk Fereshteh will guide them to pause and ignite their senses at different points so they will experience the benefits of being immersed in nature.

These Princeton events are free, but require registration at rsvp@drgreenway.org, or by calling 609-924-4646.

The public can see O’Neill’s other exhibitions such as Gifts from the Sea at Merwick’s Millstone Gallery in Princeton from March 10 to May 9. And, Princeton’s Nassau Club will feature her Shapes of Water artwork in November and December this year.

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