Climate Resilience News | Hudson River Estuary | January 2020
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation sent this bulletin on 01/28/2020 09:40 AM ESTDEC Delivers - Information to keep you connected and informed from the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation |
Share or view as a web page || Update preferences or unsubscribe |
Climate Resilience in the Hudson River Estuary |
||||||||||||
Converging Human Health and Conservation: Kingston Land Trust’s edible stream bufferLooking for a way to improve your community’s health and promote conservation at the same time? You could try planting fruit trees in the floodplain. This was the idea behind Kingston Land Trust’s edible stream buffer along the banks of the Esopus Creek. Establishing the saplings in the edible stream buffer on the Esopus Creek (Kingston Land Trust) Stream buffers help prevent flooding by providing space for flood water to move into during a storm and by absorbing that water as well. Buffers usually consist of native plant species and are “multifunctional” in that they provide many other benefits besides flood prevention like reducing erosion, improved habitat, and improved stream health. However, adding fruit trees and shrubs to these plantings is a unique twist designed to increase benefits to the community. Who wouldn’t want to go berry picking along the waterfront? The Kingston Land Trust’s edible buffer is located at a formerly residential plot in the floodplain of the Esopus Creek. The first planting took place in Fall, 2018 and includes native fruits like high-bush cranberry, elderberry, American Plum, and swamp rose. The initial seedlings were provided by the Hudson Estuary Trees for Tribs project. Design and management consultancy were donated by Earth Designs Cooperative in Rosendale. Swamp Rose (G. Shaheen)
This planting will benefit community members by providing fruit picking of edible and medicinal plants along the Esopus. However, it isn’t just an orchard; the new vegetation along 60 ft of waterfront will also improve habitat for pollinators and act as a natural barrier against flooding. This combination of both community and environmental benefits is not easy to achieve. That’s why we want to celebrate projects like this that are striving to find those common benefits. Land trusts are well-suited to these interdisciplinary projects, and the Kingston Land Trust is a great example. Not only is Kingston Land Trust operating as a Conservation Land Trust, but they are also working towards a Community Land Trust model to achieve benefits like inclusive land management planning, and affordable housing. So, the next time you find yourself on Buckley Street in the town of Ulster see if you can’t find some berries growing in the edible stream buffer. Just make sure you don’t visit during a flood! Resilience Roundup: News and projects from around New York
What we're reading
Funding opportunities
Local weather summary
2019 monthly extremes relative to the 124-year weather record:
Information provided by Natalie Feldsine and the Mohonk Lake NOAA Cooperative Weather Station: 124 years and counting! |
||||||||||||
Visit our website, Adaptation Inspiration videos and other Resources for Resilience, or email us at hvclimate@dec.ny.gov Please invite your friends and colleagues to join our newsletter: tinyurl.com/ClimateNewsletter |