restoration

Best Water Ways

Best Water Ways: Watershed Literacy, Stewardship, and Restoration Place-Based Learning Initiative. The Cowichan Community Land Trust (CCLT): Friends of Cowichan Creeks program is excited to be spearheading the Best Water Ways (BWW) initiative with the aim to accelerate fresh water and fish habitat literacy, stewardship, and active restoration within our schools. In order to meet curriculum requirements, the program will be directed towards students in grades nine to twelve in science and social courses. As of May 2019, we are developing the project and place-based learning resources and will begin piloting the program in Cowichan Valley’s schools in the fall of 2019. Over the next two years, BWW will be refined and made accessible online for use throughout the region and the province. Participating teachers will guide their students through several activity sessions. These lessons begin by introducing the concept of watersheds and the interconnection of people, ecosystems, and water. The sessions then introduce and explore the negative impacts of humans and climate change on our watersheds, and what students can do to help mitigate these impacts. Finally, students will participate in an active restoration activity at a local creek, lake, or other water source, where students will learn how to protect, restore, and care for their local watersheds. Activity sessions include Watersheds- Wading In Mapping our watersheds Watershed Detectives Watersheds under Stress Watershed SOS Riparian Restoration Workshop The BWW initiative aims to provide teachers and students with sufficient resources to run the learning sessions independently. The resources in development include a downloadable educator’s guide, a downloadable learner’s guide, and web-based audio-visual tools. Links to conservation organizations, ecological restoration specialists, and Indigenous knowledge support in each region provide help with the riparian restoration activities and other specific local elements. We are excited to launch pilot runs of this program in the Cowichan Valley in fall 2019. The learning resources will be available and accessible to educators in BC (and beyond) in 2020. Let’s inspire stewardship and active restoration of our watersheds through education! If you are a teacher interested in running part or all of this program in your classroom, please contact us for more information regarding how BWW meets parts of the required curriculum, how you can use the resources available, etc. We can be contacted with any inquiries about the project by email at info@cowichanlandtrust.ca or by phone at (250) 746-0227. With acknowledgement and gratitude to our project funders:  

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Government of Canada Invests in Community Environmental Project in Cowichan Valley, BC

Government of Canada Invests in Community Environmental Project in Cowichan Valley, BC NANAIMO, B.C., Environment Canada Press Release November 3, 2010 The Honourable Jim Prentice, Canada’s Environment Minister, today announced funding from the EcoAction Community Funding Program for a new environmental project in the Cowichan Valley, in British Columbia. $85,308 in federal funding will support local action to reduce pollution, improve air and water quality, and protect wildlife and natural habitat. This government is committed to addressing the environmental priorities of Canadians, said Minister Prentice. “We are proud to support community groups across the country willing to take concrete action through on-the-ground environmental projects that will achieve a more sustainable Canada. Your actions, large or small, will help to protect the abundance and variety of life that is part of our natural heritage.” The Friends of Cowichan Creek project will engage community members in the protection of riparian habitat. The focus of this two-year pilot project is on the ecological restoration of six urban creeks within the Cowichan Valley. Four streamkeeper courses and two riparian restoration workshops will be offered to increase the capacity and knowledge of those taking part in the project. “The Cowichan Land Trust currently supports youth streamkeeper groups on two local streams, and this funding will enable us to continue supporting these groups and to establish new streamkeepers on several other local creeks,” said John Scull, volunteer streamkeeper, Young Naturalist Club leader, and member of the Cowichan Land Trust Board. “These small streams provided important habitat for fish and other wildlife, and are important for maintaining water quality throughout the region.” The EcoAction Community Funding Program is a Government of Canada initiative that supports projects that rehabilitate, protect or enhance the natural environment, and builds the capacity of communities and individuals in support of a more sustainable Canada. The project announced today it will assist locally‑based, non-profit organizations in initiating actions that result in cleaner air, reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, cleaner water, and the protection of nature at the local community level. More information about the EcoAction Community Funding Program is available on Environment Canada’s website at: http://www.ec.gc.ca/ecoaction.

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