2009 zaagkii project #1: northern michigan

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2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan... à2010 Pollinator Week: The Fourth Annual National Pollinator Week will be June 21-27, 2010 Photos through Erika Niebler and also Greg Peterson (Negaunee, Michigan) âEUR" Surrounded with a swarm regarding 150,000 loudly buzzing bees on the hot summer day, a group associated with Marquette County teenagers turned nervous faces as well as trepidation directly into smiles along together with a training they heard loud as well as distinct âEUR" for you to protect rather than fear pollinators.

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2010 Pollinator Week:The Fourth Annual National

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Page 1: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan...

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2010 Pollinator Week:

The Fourth Annual National Pollinator Week will be June 21-27, 2010

Photos through Erika Niebler and also Greg Peterson

(Negaunee, Michigan) âEUR" Surrounded with a swarm regarding 150,000 loudly buzzing bees onthe hot summer day, a group associated with Marquette County teenagers turned nervous faces aswell as trepidation directly into smiles along together with a training they heard loud as well asdistinct âEUR" for you to protect rather than fear pollinators.

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At initial simply a pair of adolescents wearing protective beekeeping gear entered your apiary at theactual rear of your Negaunee township home associated with Jim as well as Martha Hayward. TheParticular other people wearing merely shorts as well as t-shirts quickly approached when theyfound that honeybees aren't aggressive.

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Suited with regard to Pollinators:

Beekeeper Jim Hayward, a new Marquette dentist, fits a protective suit in Zaagkii Project volunteerElliott Burdick, 17, the Marquette Senior Senior Higher School (MSHS) senior as well as TaylorDianich, 16, MSHS junior (left at the actual rear of Hayward),

as the actual Zaagkii group associated with teenagers prepare to check out your honeybee hivesabout June 25, 2009 inside the again yard of Hayward's home inside Negaunee Township, MI. (Photoby Greg Peterson) Bees and butterflies "are a new part of the internet of existence because that theypollinate all the flowers and also fruit trees that offer us together with food," said Dr. Jim Hayward, anew Marquette dentist that has four honeybee hives on the shaded hillside.

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Plethora regarding Pollinators:

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Beekeeper Jim Hayward (right) of Negaunee Township, MI explains how to manage a smoker toalways be able to Taylor Dianich, 16, the Marquette Senior Secondary School (MSHS) junior (center)and

Elliott Burdick (left), 17, MSHS senior on June 25, 2009. Hayward explained the smoker calms beessimply because these people protect his or her honey simply by gorging on their own with it fearingthere's a fire plus they could must flee with the beneficial sticky gold to produce a new nest. ZaagkiiProject teens visited Hayward's hives inside 2008 and 2009. (Photo through Greg Peterson)

The teenagers actually got up close as well as personal with just about all the honeybees throughinspecting honeycomb trays every covered along with concerning 3,000 busy bees and even handledany drone in which Hayward explained do not have got access to stingers such as the rest of thecolony and are easily identified by a larger round abdomen and also bigger eyes.

"It doesn't use a stinger? Are Generally a person positive?," asked apprehensive teenager KeithGelsinger associated with Marquette.

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The Actual Queen's Servant:

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Zaagkii Project teenager volunteer Anatoly Nelson holds a new honeybee drone, it doesn't have astinger and can't even feed itself but gets the essential duty involving mating with all the queen. theteenagers were amazed that will drones may not sting. (Photo simply by Greg Peterson)

"I am positive," Hayward stated confidently whilst carefully handing your struggling drone toGelsinger. "You can easily get upon with it âEUR" it won't sting you."

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Honey Farming Dentist:

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Beekeeper as well as Marquette Dentist Dr. Jim Hayward has been internet hosting Zaagkiiadolescents since the actual project began - providing the particular students the hands-on, up-closealong with individual expertise together with his 150,000 honeybees close to Negaunee, MI.

Hayward and his awesome wife Martha enjoy the taste of honey and he says his beekeeping hobbyoffers nothing to complete with trying to keep youth coming from eating sugar and avoid dentalproblems - it's a pleasant coincidence. (Photos by simply Erika Niebler)

In his soft-spoken, calm demeanor in which relaxed the actual teenagers as well as the bees,Hayward mentioned "you could stand a excellent deal closer should you want, you won't get stung."

"The sole purpose with the drone would end up being to mate using the queen. Normally it has nofunction. The idea can't even feed itself. The other worker bees have to give the actual drones."

The adolescents let loose an audible nevertheless soft gasp when Hayward brought out a new traythat was dripping along with honey and packed together with bees.

"Oooohh," a amount of your astonished youths said from once.

Pointing to the side of your honey-oozing tray in the bright sun, Hayward said "you can easily beginto determine the glistening of honey there."

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"It's awesome,' said 13-year-old eighth grader Tanya Nelson of Ishpeming. "Look from it, it's honey,it's dripping."

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Sweet Honey:

Zaagkii Project volunteer 17-year-old Elliott Burdick associated with Marquette, MI inspects anyhoneycomb oozing together with honey and covered together with a big amount of honeybees that isgetting held by simply veteran beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward. (Photo through Greg Peterson)

The young adults additionally visited any bee farm across the Dead River managed by Dr. LisaLengthy as well as Lee Ossenheimer in Negaunee Township along with have been informed bybeekeeper Jon Kniskern regarding Marquette.

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Beekeeper Jon Kniskern:

Zaagkii Project teens learned with regards to honeybees from three northern Michigan beekeepersincluding Jon Kniskern involving Marquette who brought hive frames along along with other

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equipment with the trade being a smoker to always be able to his session using the students next forthe calm Marquette Lower Harbor about Lake Superior inside the summer regarding 2009.

The teens also visited the actual beekeeping operations involving beekepers Jim Hayward and alsoLee Ossenheimer of Gather'n Greens. (Photos through Erika Niebler)

The Zaagkii Project will be sponsored by the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute (CTI), Keweenaw BayIndian community (KBIC) and in addition the United States Associated With America Forest Services(USFS).

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We're Family:

Dozens of northern Michigan teens get participated in the Zaagkii Wings along with Seeds Project(Photos simply by Greg Peterson)

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2008 Zaagkii Tasks Teens:

In July 2008 in the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute annual Mid-Summer Festival, Zaagkii Project teensadvised supporters what these folks were learning concerning pollinators along with indigenousplants and also wildflowers.

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During the very first summer (2008) in the Zaagkii Wings as well as Seeds Project, teens built,painted and handed out butterfly houses - in which the slimmer along with longer than bird housesusing entries regarding butterflies together with folded wings plus a slab involving bark regardingrest along with reproduction. some with the students returned inside 2009 to participate in in thesecond summer in the Zaagkii Project during which in turn mason bee houses were built, paintedalong with distributed. both a lengthy time the actual adolescents planted as well as distributed

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1000s of native species plants. (Photos simply by Greg Peterson)

Teen Anatoly Nelson was impressed which he had been able to stand inside the huge swarm andnever get stung.

"Holy cow, this is a large amount of bees," stated Nelson, whom furthermore handled the honeybeedrone it doesn't possess a stinger.

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Acquiring a new Grip:

Beekeeper Jim Hayward involving Negaunee, MI runs on the gripper to show among the actualhoneycomb trays to Zaagkii teens throughout a June 25, 2009 visit by Zaagkii Project members.(Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

Student Anatoly Nelson furthermore stood inside a thick heat regarding bees and also watchedalong with amazement as they buzzed about his entire body and also bumped him with out stingingor perhaps turning out for you to be alarmed.

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Unbee-lievable Buzz:

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Anatoly Nelson (left) calmly freezes, as well as can't assist smiling, as a swarm involving honeybeesbounced off his body yet are not upset by simply his existence in the Hayward apiary. Watching aregenerally 16-year old Jake Gentz (center), a Marquette Senior Secondary School senior; along withJim Rule (right), a kid treatment counselor at Marquette County Youth Home. (Photo through GregPeterson)

Honeybees frequently have "sacks regarding yellow or even orange pollen upon its legs," Haywardsaid. "They tend to be busy bringing his or her nectar as well as pollen back towards the hive."

"You could study a lot about the wellness in the hive by just looking at your flow with the beescoming in along with out with the hive," Hayward said because the hefty bees bounced insideregarding landings.

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Golden Combs:

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Beekeeper Jim Hayward (left) holds a new tray with a big quantity of honey bees as Zaagkii Projecteighth grader Tanya Nelson (second coming from left), 13, of Ishpeming, MI watches in amazementin supplement to Cedar Tree Institute volunteer Amanda Emerson (second via right) regarding Cary,Ill., the particular 21-year-old event coordinator for the Northern Michigan university (NMU)Student Team plus an NMU Senior Majoring in International Research (emphasis on Latin America)along with Earth Science (emphasis in rocks and minerals). Generating a new point can be ZaagkiiProject volunteer Tom Reed (right) associated with Marquette, whom includes a bachelors degreeinside social work and contains labored on several Cedar Tree Institute environment projects. (Photothrough Greg Peterson)

In its 2nd summer, the actual three-year Zaagkii Wings as well as Seeds Project protects pollinatorsby means of habitat creation that includes teenagers constructing dozens associated with bee as wellas butterfly houses although helping native plants flourish simply by distributing as well as plantingtens involving 1000's indigenous seeds.

Billions of bees of have got died worldwide throughout an ongoing syndrome dubbed ColonyCollapse Disorder (CCD). Suspected causes with regard to CCD contain pollution, pesticides, climatechange and also habitat destruction.

Bees get usually been killed with a wide-range regarding predators.

Natural bee killers contain black bears which raid hives pertaining to honey, bald-faced hornetswhom eliminating the queen as well as feast on the colony, birds in which pick these off inside mid-air along with skunks which scratch on the hive by having an insatiable taste for guard bees.

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Zaagkii Project Teens:

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Zaagkii Project young adults at the Grooving Crane Farm inside Skandia, MI within the summer of2009 (Photo through Erika Niebler)

Feral and also commercial hives are generally attacked through viruses, bacteria and parasitesbeing a tracheal mite that will infests honeybee airways and blood-sucking mites that infect and alsofeed on adult and also larval bees causing wings deformities.

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Pollinator Pleasure:

Beekeeper Jim Hayward explains the principal difference inside the look of members in thehoneybee family similar to worker bees and also drones as Zaagkii Project volunteer Keith Gelsingerinvolving Marquette, MI smiles. (Photo through Greg Peterson)

Hayward makes use of electric fences for you to protect bees through persistent bears along withelevates hives upon cinder blocks in order to discourage skunks.

"That helps make the skunks possess to square up, therefore their bellies are generally exposed as

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well as the bees can sting them much more easily," Hayward said.

Experts say bee colonies have got declined 70 for you to 90 % in the past quarter century. AlbertEinstein predicted humans would die within 4 a long time if bees disappeared.

"People get into beekeeping is always to sell their pollination services in order to orchards aroundthe country" including "apple along with cherry orchards inside Michigan," Hayward said.

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Youthful Green Thumbs:

Joining Forces: Your force of Mother Nature's Native Species Plants as well as the effective hungrywith regard to knowledge Zaagkii Project adolescents tend to be unstoppable....

Zaagkii Project students are employed in among the particular huge fields together with nativespecies plants inside the summer associated with 2009 in the Grooving Crane Farm within Skandia,MI (Photo simply by Erika Niebler)

"I got straight into raising bees after neighborhood bee populations died out since associated withsome disease so we did not possess anything to pollinate" our fruits along with vegetables, Haywardsaid.

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Bodacious Honeybees:

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About 3,000 honeybees cling to end up being able to every tray that all ooze with honey in the apiaryoperate by simply beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward within Negaunee, MI. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

The young adults discovered with regards to beekeeper tools similar to honeycomb trays, framegrippers, the hive instrument and a bee brush.

"You could brush all of them off an location using this gentle brush and it won't damage theparticular bees," Hayward said.

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Happy and Unafraid:

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(Photo through Greg Peterson)

While reassuring the teenagers that "honeybees tend to be docile," Hayward donned himself and 2youths within protective gear including any bee veil and gloves.

"If I produce a false step as well as jar the particular hive as well as move for you to quickly it keepsme via being stung," he said. "Honeybees die if they sting you, so these people really aren't anxiousin order to sting unless they are protecting by themselves or perhaps the hive."

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Nature's best Friends:

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Zaagkii Project teenagers gather along the edges in the apiary inside Negaunee, MI which includesnumerous honeybee hives although listening to Dr. Jim Hayward's honeybee facts. (Photo throughGreg Peterson)

"The queen excluder keeps the actual queen from acquiring up to the honey chambers as well aslaying eggs therefore you never get larval bees in for you to the honey," he said. "These twochambers would always be the brood chambers, the spot where the hive raises its new bees."

During the actual summer, the queen "lays near any thousand eggs the day," Hayward said. "Itrequires a 3 week period to obtain a bee to always be able to develop."

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Smoking Sumac:

Zaagkii Project tens learned numerous uses regarding bitter dried sumac, a new plant indigenous tobe able to northern Michigan, such as making a lemonade-flavored tea and for use in the beesmoker. Beekeeper Jim Hayward (left) demonstrates the approach to light the dried sumac in orderto Zaagkii Project volunteer Elliott Burdick (center), 17, a Marquette Senior high School (MSHS)senior and also Taylor Dianich, 16, MSHS junior (right). (Photo through Greg Peterson)

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Using the smoker that uses up dried sumac, Hayward mentioned your smoke "simulates the forestfire" triggering the protective instinct that triggers the particular bees "to gorge by themselves withhoney in preparation pertaining to leaving your hive."

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2009 Zaagkii Project Teens:

Zaagkii Project adolescents learned respect pertaining to naturel as well as on their particular ownthroughout the summer regarding 2009. (Photo through Erika Niebler)

Hayward explained the bitter sumac burning throughout his bee smoker tends to make a great teawhich tastes just like lemon.

Later your teens produced sumac iced tea, add the drop regarding Hayward's honey along withserved it to be able to Zaagkii Project supporters in the annual CTI Midsummer Festival fromPresque Isle inside Marquette. The Particular youths made additional all-natural hors d'oeuvres likehoney and wild mint in a tiny appetizer cup.

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Lake Superior Safe Harbor:

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Sitting about the Dock in the Bay together with Zaagkii Students:

Marquette teenagers listen to Zaagkii Project founder Rev. Jon Magnuson although sitting aroundthe edge of your bike path that parallels your Marquette Upper Harbor next the the old iron oredocks as quickly as utilized by giant ships to become able to haul ore in order to steels mills aboutthe lower Fantastic Lakes - ships like the Edmund Fitzgerald (Photos by Erika Niebler)

The smoker brings about the bees for you to swiftly take in honey with regard to feasible transportfor you to a brand name new hive and additionally the honey relaxes the particular bees so whichthey won't sting whilst becoming handled.

"When they may well be gorged with honey they will tend to be more docile," he said. "The crucialwill be relocating gradually and trying to become a gentle as you may be âEUR" therefore the beesdo certainly not get too excited."

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Zaagkii Coverup:

Nettin' to become Reluctant of:

Dr. Jim Hayward adjusts any protective bee net along with hat worn through Zaagkii Projectvolunteers (Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

"Drones develop coming from unfertilized eggs, worker bees are generally developed throughfertilized eggs," Hayward said.

"If they need to produce the queen these people take worker larva as well as feed it a special extractcoming from their own heads called Royal Jelly along with in which larva grows into a queen insteadof the worker."

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check it out:

Zaagkii Project young adults visit Gather'n Greens about June 24, 2009, any bee farm across theDead River run through Dr. Lisa Extended as well as Lee Ossenheimer in Negaunee Township, MI.

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Their seven-year-old son, Jesse Ossenheimer, will be pictured showing Zaagkii project students anumber of the frames employed by bees to end up being able to create honey. Your coupleadditionally develop mushrooms.

Zaagkii Project teens went swimming in Dead River Basin after tasting honey as well as visitingtogether with beekeeper Lee Ossenheimer. It's a household affair because the couple's childrentaught the actual students concerning the artwork of beekeeping. (Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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Exact Extracting:

Beekeeper

Lee Ossenheimer regarding Negaune Township, MI and also his

seven-year-old son, Jesse Ossenheimer

,

show Zaagkii Project young adults your honey extractor that spins and also utilizes centrifugal forceto take away the honey in the frames in honeycombs. Ossenheimer and the wife Dr. Lisa Long, veryown an organic farm that features a new beekeeping, mushroom as well as vegetable seedlingcompany named Gather'n Greens throughout Negaunee Township, MI. (Photo by simply GregPeterson)

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Long Term Beekeeper:

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Seven-year-old Jesse Ossenheimer

shows any honeycomb frame for you to Zaagkii Project volunteer Taylor Dianich, 16, a new MSHSJunior. Jesse provides learned a excellent deal regarding his mothers and fathers beekeepingoperations with their own company Gather'n Greens within Negaunee, Township, MI. (Photo throughGreg Peterson) The Particular young adults likely have "never been in which near to a bee hivebefore," mentioned Jim Rule, a child treatment counselor with Marquette County Youth Home. "Eventhe particular kids that didn't possess virtually any protective gear were proper close up too," Rulesaid. "I was surprised about how brave they will were."

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Yummy Tummy Honey:

Above, Zaagkii projects teens Anatoly Nelson (second from right) and also Brandon Maki (right)enjoy fresh honey supplied by beekeeper Dr. Lisa long (left) throughout Negaunee Township, MI.(Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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Sticky Licking

Zaagkii Project eighth grader Tanya Nelson (left), 13, regarding Ishpeming, MI utilizes a fork toenjoy the actual refreshing honey provided by Dr. Lisa Long. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

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Honey Heaven:

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Hayward Honey:

Beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward speaks inside July 2009 to Zaagkii Project supporters at the annual Mid-Summer Festival hosted by the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute inside the pavilion on Marquette'sPresque Isle that's surrounded on three factors by Lake Superior. (Photos simply by Greg Peterson)

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Gather'n Greens

Holding his three-year-old son Alex Ossenheimer,

Beekeeper

Lee Ossenheimer associated with Negaune Township, MI talks along with Zaagkii Project youngadults upon June 24, 2009 before taking these people on the tour regarding his apiary andmushroom growing operations named Gather'n Greens. (Photo simply by Greg Peterson)

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Sunny Honeycomb:

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Zaagkii Project teenager Devon Myers checks out the particular sunlit honeycomb frames utilized bybeekeepers as well as their bees to generate honey. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

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Pass the particular Comb:

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Zaagkii Project eighth grader Tanya Nelson (left), 13, regarding Ishpeming, MI holds a frameemployed by beekeepers to have bees generate honeycombs. Below, teen Brandon Maki sniffs yourwax smell of the actual honeycomb tray following the honey will be removed. (Photo by GregPeterson)

The young adults sniffed honeycomb trays as well as checked all of them out utilizing the sun.Honeycombs trays use a unique, waxy smell the teenagers will invariably don't forget (Photo bysimply Greg Peterson)

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Mother of Monarchs:

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"The Butterfly Lady" Susan Payant regarding Marquette reads the short story concerning Monarchsentitled: "Waiting for Wings" by simply author/poet Lois Ehlert throughout July 2009 in the annualnonprofit Cedar Tree Institute Mi-Summer Festival throughout Marquette. (Photos simply by GregPeterson) Pertaining To any 2nd year, Susan Payant of Marquette, nicknamed "The Butterfly Lady,"taught Zaagkii Project teens in regards in order to the significance regarding Monarch butterflies aswell as native plants. at the particular nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute 2009 Mid-Summer Festival atPresque Isle Pavilion inside Marquette in your course of July, Payant reads any childrens shortstory/poem entitled: "Waiting regarding Wings" through Lois Ehlert, author, poet, designer,illustrator.

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The Butterfly Lady:

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For the 2nd year, Susan Payant involving Marquette taught Zaagkii Project teens concerningMonarchs as well as other butterflies as well as why they might be second only to bees when itcomes for you to pollination.

The popular, pleasant and passionate Payant will be well-known around northern Michigan and islovingly called "The Butterfly Lady" simply because associated with your ex adore for butterflies andtheir life-cycle. (Photos through Erika Niebler)

Hundreds associated with 1000s of Monarchs pass by means of the U.P. annually enroute into afamous gathering spot inside Mexico where millions of Monarchs converge coming from across theworld.

The teenagers visited Laughing White Fish Falls throughout Alger County, the actual organicGrooving Crane Farm operate through Natasha along with David Gill throughout Skandia, andplanted native species plants at the Borealis Seed Organization owned through Sue Rabitaille withinHuge Bay.

Meeting 3 times a week pertaining to 5 weeks, the young adults walked dozens involving milesthroughout numerous hikes, climbed Sugar Loaf, along with swam throughout Lake Superior as wellas the Dead River.

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Cedar Tree Fans:

Zaagkii Project supporters enjoy themselves at the July 2009 Mid-Summer Festival within thepavilion from Presque Isle throughout Marquette. (Photos by Greg Peterson)

The young adults built an enormous beehive using aid from Jim Edwards in the U.P. Children'sMuseum, who produced a big butterfly for your Zaagkii Project within 2008.

Using hoops, bottle of spray paint, and other tricks, Edwards confirmed the actual adolescents thatnumerous items can be built from daily products such as the beehive, bees and the butterfly.

(Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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Rockin' Rick:

Soothing Thai Chi coming from expert Rick Pietila can be sought by simply famous bands withregard to his techie expertise:

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Relaxation techniques just like Tai Chi are now a portion of the actual Zaagkii teenagers repertoirethanks in order to martial artist Rick Pietila regarding Marquette, MI who gave numerousdemonstrations including Tai Chi fundamentals. (Above Photo through Greg Peterson)

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The students discovered Tai Chi along the calming Lower Harbor in Marquette, MI with a refreshingLake Superior breeze a significant section of your June 23, 2009 experience.

Rick Pietila's some other ongoing amazing adventures contain vacationing with numerous legendaryRock and also Roll teams including being an acoustic guitar tech for the band Boston along withtraveled in to South Usa with all the band Stryper and may be the road techie for a excellent deal ofsome other iconic bands. (Photos by Erika Niebler)

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Native Senses:

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The students discovered regarding different species regarding native plants as well as insects duringa quantity of outings by having an Ojibwa brother as well as sister âEUR" Levi as well as LeoraTadgerson - who're Zaagkii Project interns from your NMU Department regarding Native AmericanStudies. (Above as well as under photographs simply by Greg Peterson)

The students learned "different makes use of the Ojibwa had regarding edible as well as medicinalplants" similar to "the saps of numerous trees and also the roots," mentioned Levi Tadgerson, 22,involving Marquette, an NMU senior.

"We explained this plant will be best for maintaining bugs from you and in addition this plant is nicefor any breath mint," Tadgerson said.

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Native American Heritage:

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The Tadgersons had been impressed with the teens' capability to grasp Chippewa language because"we would tell these people the actual different native names for plants and two times later that theywould keep inside mind it," stated Leora Tadgerson associated with Negaunee.

"I think our planet can be suffering," she said. "Indicator plants like wild rice that do not grow asmuch anymore simply because regarding the way in which we've abused the particular earth."

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Heritage and also Culture:

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Zaagkii Project instructors Levi Tadgerson and also Leora Tadgerson involving Negaunee, MI areusually interns from your Northern Michigan university middle with regard to Native AmericanResearch throughout Marquette. Leora can be pictured teaching your teenagers how an individualcan recognized numerous plants indigenous towards the central Upper Peninsula of Michigan closeto Lake Superior. (Photo simply by Greg Peterson)

The pair taught the actual adolescents to seek any "symbiotic relationship" using the earth simplybecause "nowadays we are a lot more of your parasite for the planet," Levi Tadgerson said. "Wemust respect your gift we happen to be provided by Mother Earth."

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The Actual

Anishinaabemowin Way

Northern Michigan university Middle regarding Native American Research AnishinaabemowinProfessor Kenneth Pitawanakwat explained why and the particular way Native Americansdemonstrate respect for your earth after which led the actual closing prayer at the CTI Mid-SummerFestival within July 2009. (Photo through Greg Peterson)

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"There tend to be approaches to heal simply by just receiving to the woods and understandingknowledge via elders," he said. "There are generally gifts as well as teachings each day that anyonesimply can get from your earth."

Both passed on respect for that earth inherited through elders and knowledge regarding nativeplants discovered through NMU Anishinaabemowin Professor Kenneth Pitawanakwat, which offeredthe closing prayer in the CTI midsummer festival.

"We greet daily and end every day with a many thanks prayer," Pitawanakwat said.

"In Native America, almost all events begin as well as end with prayer. It's a new spiritualcomponent that's all finished with prayer. Generally there is not any such thing like a separationregarding church and state."

Martial arts coaching and also Tai Chi lessons, techniques with regard to relaxation, had been givenfor the teens by simply Rick Pietila regarding Marquette. they performed their own new skills art atthe CTI Mid-Summer Festival throughout Marquette.

Noting a new Tai Chi performance from the Zaagkii Project teens, Pitawanakwat said:

"The sounds in the soft fluttering moves involving Tai Chi had been extremely helpful to all or anyinvolving us."

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nature Moves:

Zaagkii Project instructor Rick Pietila involving Marquette taught the actual teens many relaxationtechniques including Tai Chi that the group performed at the Cedar Tree Institute 2009 Mid-Summer Festival. (Photo through Greg Peterson)

Turning to the band, Terracotta half-life (pictured below) involving Marquette, Pitawanakwat stated"megwich for the inspirational songs."

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Live with Terracotta half-life

Scroll down to credits to understand more about Terracotta half-life.

A few weeks earlier, the actual sounds regarding hammers and saws filled the actual Grace UnitedMethodist Church inside Marquette regarding several days since the teenagers built as well aspainted 36 mason bee houses with assist via carpenter/retired teacher Bruce Ventura as well asartist Diana Magnuson, both regarding Marquette.

In 2008, some other Zaagkii Project teenagers built and also painted 17 butterfly houses at thechurch.

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Carpentry skills:

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Former college teacher Bruce Ventura (pictured within higher than collage) involving Marquettetaught the Zaagkii Project students to construct mason bee houses during the summer regarding2009 in the Grace United Methodist Church within Marquette.(Photos through Greg Peterson)

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Mason Bee Houses:

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Shaped being a birdhouse, your mason bee houses get 5 pieces of wood down below the rooftopusing 33 holes that are each turned in in order to a private nursery. (Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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Imaginative Teens:

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Zaagkii Project students paint the actual mason bee houses on July 8, 2009 that they built a coupleof times earlier at the Grace United Methodist Church throughout Marquette, MI. (Photos throughGreg Peterson)

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Mason bees "are very particular" as well as "want the five-sixteenths inch diameter hole," Venturasaid. "If the particular holes are generally too big various other insects get into them, and in theevent the holes are generally as well tiny the mason bees can't find in."

After laying a new single egg directly into each and also every hole, the actual mason bees "deposit anumber of pollen and also mud that will hole closed hence your identify mason bee," Ventura said.

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Mason Bee Motivation

Zaagkii Project students paint the particular mason bee houses on July 8, 2009 that they built a fewdays earlier in the Grace United Methodist Church in Marquette, MI. (Photos by simply GregPeterson)

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Mason bees "make these holes 40974 inches deep depending about the size of your tree," he said."Mason bees tend to be solitary bees, they aren't colonial like honey bees."

While mason bees do certainly not help make honey, Ventura mentioned "they're excellentpollinators similar to honeybees."

Ventura can be impressed using the teen's carpentry along with artistic skills.

"The young individuals are terrific," he said. "They do an excellent task putting the particular masonbee houses collectively and also decorating. They Will would the large amount of sawing as well asnailing as well as screwed in the tops."

Lessons about protecting pollinators was not lost around the Zaagkii Project teens.

"I discovered that will you will find 4,000 distinct species associated with bees," Bobbie Weymouth,14, involving Beaver Grove informed project supporters at the CTI Midsummer Festival.

Earlier, Weymouth explained what he'd discovered with regards to mason bees because he nailed aswell as sanded mason bee houses.

"The bees are usually going to put pollen it these holes and place mud throughout then they willhatch an egg," said Weymouth, whose brother Daniel participated in the Manoomin Project, any CTIenvironment initiative in which paired Marquette teenagers using Native American elders to restorewild rice to seven remote rivers and also lakes across the U.P.

While screwing on the mason bee house roof and also sanding the particular edges, Elliott Burdick,17, associated with Marquette said "pollinators are essential to all or even any lifestyle about earthsince they pollinate all associated with the fruit along with veggies we eat."

"I am screwing inside the roof for the base of the bees houses right now," Burdick said. "Then I'msanding it down and so the edges usually are usually not sharp and also making all involving it flush.The Particular mason bees will possibly be likely inside these holes."

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Searching Sharp:

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Artistic Appreciation:

Zaagkii Project teenagers gave presents in order to children's guide illustrator Diana Magnuson(center) regarding Marquette and also artist Sherri Bohjanen-Hutter (right), a Marquette native viaAnchorage, Alaska. The Particular artists assisted the particular Zaagkii teenagers discovered withregards to various kids associated with paint and techniques because they used colorful designsabout their mason bee houses. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

Zaagkii Project founder Rev. Jon Magnuson talks for you to Cedar Tree Institute supportersthroughout July 2009 since the Zaagkii students cook about the pavilion grill about Presque Isleinside Marquette, MI in the annual CTI Mid-Summer Festival. (Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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An Excellent Sign:

Page 43: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project adolescents hold signs concerning the pollinator initiative throughout a summer2009 team discussion on protecting pollinators. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

The students learned that will butterflies are simply as vital pollinators as bees.

"I learned that will Monarch butterflies just consume along with lay their particular eggs uponmilkweed," mentioned Jake Gentz, 16, which will be a new senior this fall from Marquette Seniorhigh Schools

Student Brandon Maki regarding Marquette said he "learned we are usually in a position to help tomake natural teas out of spruce trees and also pine trees."

The mason bee houses are now in yards across Marquette County. Your mason bee houses as well aslast summer's butterfly houses were put up round the Keweenaw Bay Indian Neighborhood andamong each had been positioned by the USFS in the "The People's Garden" from U.S. Departmentassociated with Agriculture Headquarters around the National Mall in Washington D.C.

Teen Devon Myers associated with Marquette advised Zaagkii Project supporters at the CTIMidsummer Festival that the students "made 36 mason bee houses as well as we're giving several ofthese away tonight."

USFS officials said the Zaagkii Project can be successfully spreading the word about the significanceregarding native plants and the adolescent mason bee as well as butterfly houses have a positiveimpact about the survival involving pollinators.

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The Actual U.S. Forest service (USFS):

The USFS can be part of the Usa Department regarding Agriculture (USDA)

Page 44: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

U.S. Forest Services official Jan Schultz gives an update on the Zaagkii Project and also the forestservice extensive efforts to be able to protect pollinators and also promote native species plantsthroughout July 2008 in the annual Cedar Tree Institute Summer Festival inside Marquette, MI.Schultz may become the USFS botany and also non-native species program leader inside Milwaukee,WI. (Photos by simply Greg Peterson)

"In point involving fact, the actual mason bee houses are very useful," said Jan Schultz, USFS botanyas well as non-native species plan leader within Milwaukee, WI. "The mason bee houses tend to beemployed by mason bees and other types of solitary bees. That They really such as all of them plusthey may have customers."

"The insect pollinators throughout America evolved using indigenous plants therefore they're reallywell-suited to pollinate them," Schultz stated following watching the teenagers result in the housesin Marquette.

Schultz declared "native plants and the native insects in which pollinate these people represent thesymbiotic relationship" and cannot survive without having every other.

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Native Species Plants:

Page 45: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project teams spent hours along with hours in the deep northwoods studying about nativespecies plants which includes learning concerning the distinct advantages of the plants such asmedicinal coming from Native American teachings thanks to become able to NMU Middle for NativeAmerican Research Zaagkii project interns Leora along with Levi Tadgerson. (Photos simply by ErikaNiebler)

"In a few instances they possess a mutualistic relationship, where they may well be pollinated by 1insect and one plant species, therefore it can be actually specific," your woman said.

Vegetable and also flower garden production increases when "native plants have been in closeproximity," your woman said, "because the actual pollinators that individuals need to pollinate his orher squash or tomatoes must have meals almost all summer long."

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Life-Giving Water:

Page 46: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

The significance associated with northern Michigan's huge water resources for the health insurancevitality of indigenous plants, pollinators and humans has been absorbed through Zaagkii Projectteenagers who furthermore took the time for an individual personally to swim along with relaxthroughout frigid but pristine Lake Superior along with a range of rivers/streams inside Marquetteand Alger counties in the summers of 2008 along with 2009 (Photos simply by Erika Niebler)

Pollinators "are not planning to magically seem in front of a new tomato flower in a suitable time,"Schultz said. "So planting together with native plants in proximity with their garden helps make toobtain a much more productive garden and more produce."

"Milkweeds along with monarchs are a stunning instance ," she said. "The monarch larva favor to eata variety of milkweed species."

"The more of the particular milkweed which monarchs eat, the less palatable they will are going topredators since apparently these people taste truly horrible," Schultz said. "So that's advantageousto the monarch butterfly and thus they in addition pollinate the particular milkweed flower."

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Protecting Pollinators:

Working Together: Native Americans, non-natives, younger and old, young adults and university

Page 47: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

students ...

During the particular CTI Midsummer festival, KBIC Tribal President Chris Swartz Jr. (bottom leftphoto within collage) announced the particular building of the native plants greenhouse that willscheduled to be built-in 2010 in tribal property close to Baraga. (Photos by simply Greg Peterson)

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Native Understanding:

Page 48: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

In 2010, the Keweenaw Bay Indian community will develop the first native species plantsgreenhouse on a Native American reservation that will is planning to be comparable towards theHiawatha National Forest Greenhouse (Upper left photo in collage) inside Marquette, MI.

Zaagkii students (upper right photo) plants seeds inside the summer regarding 2008 and possess getplanted/distributed tens regarding 1000s of native species plants along with seeds.

The plants were later on planted across the KBIC Sand Point beach in Baraga County which was assoon as polluted by simply copper mining operations. 2 photographs on bottom correct present theSand Point beach following your copper tailings were covered along with ahead of the native plantswere planted.

Cedar Tree Institute/Zaagkii project organizers meet using officials using the KBIC Organic resourceDepartment (bottom center photo) in the summer involving 2008 to strategy the actual Sand Pointnative plants project.

(Photos simply by Greg Peterson)

KBIC "is happy being partnering with the Cedar Tree Institute and the U.S. Forest servicethroughout attempting to protect native plants and convey them back home," Swartz said.

"One day we hope (KBIC) will be viewed as pioneers to be able to deliver these native plants backagain here," he said. "So it's only appropriate that the (KBIC) grow to become able to be involved inhelping save individuals native plants."

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A New History regarding Cooperation:

The

Keweenaw Bay Indian community (KBIC), the

United States Forest Support (USFS) and the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute

Page 49: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

in Marquette, MI

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Hiawatha National Forest Greenhouse:

Page 50: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Using spades, wheelbarrows as well as gardener's gloves, Zaagkii Project teenagersplanted/distributed tens of 1000s of native species plant seeds along with harvested seedlings at theHiawatha National Forest Greenhouse inside Marquette, MI. (Photos simply by Erika Niebler)

"We have been working with almost all the Cedar Tree Institute to acquire a quantity of many yearsand they are excellent to function with," said Swartz, noting the Manoomin Project to restore wild

Page 51: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

rice as well as native plants restoration project in the KBIC Sand Point beach upon Lake Superior.

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Honoring Mother Earth:

Teaching respect for Native American culture and the planet are generally goals your CTI intends tocarry on with regard to an additional decade, CTI officials mentioned through the festival.

Nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute board member Steve Mattson speaks to end up being able tosupports throughout July 2009 in the annual CTI Mid-Summer Festival throughout Marquette, MI

(Photo Through Greg Peterson)

"We honor the presence of the Native Americans," said Marquette banker and CTI board memberSteve Mattson.

"It's tremendous that the (KBIC) possess shown the particular leadership and furthermore the vision

Page 52: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

to possess the first greenhouse with regard to native species plants within the U.S. about their ownnative land," Mattson said.

Working "behind your scenes," the particular CTI will carry on efforts such as the Zaagkii and alsoManoomin tasks because "they tend to be important," Mattson said.

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Philanthropic Mattson Family:

Steve Mattson and the loved ones (and friends) possess a lengthy good reputation for supporting theparticular Upper Peninsula business community, nonprofit initiatives and people ...

"We're the quiet individuals and in which we like to maintain it that will way"

Page 53: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

"We're your quiet people and that we such as to keep it that way," Mattson said. "We such as toaccomplish large things along with we are generally in any position to just do huge things by meansof everyone of you."

The Zaagkii Project contributors include the Marquette community Foundation, Marquette CountyJuvenile Court, the particular M.E. Davenport Foundation, the particular Kaufman Basis andadditionally the Phyllis as well as Max Reynolds Foundation.

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Peter White Library :

Pollinating the actual Minds in our Youth in regards for you to the significance of bees, butterfliesand other pollinators

Page 54: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project adolescents visited the actual Peter White Public Library within Marquette, MIthroughout the summer of 2009to learn facts regarding pollinators, native species plants andfurthermore the effect regarding both about the meals these people eat. The Actual teenagerslearned concerning the different species of indigenous plants throughout northern Michigan andMidwest - along with spread their particular knowledge to others including your undeniable fact thatpollinators tend to be keystone towards the survival of most lifestyle about this planet since thesupport given by bees, butterflies and other pollinators are usually the reason plants, trees, greensand also fruit grow - and also that will your meals are important to almost all or even any typesinvolving life. (Photos simply by Erika Niebler)

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Native Plants Northern Light:

Page 55: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

The Borealis Seed Business inside big Bay, MI actually brought Zaagkii projects students for theirknees because the adolescents helped the proprietors manage the actual operation who hasspecialized in native species plants as well as seeds.

Borealis Seed Business is operate through the mother-daughter team involving Judy Keast and alsoSuzanne Rabitaille on a 20-acre spread 3 miles south of Large Bay associated with which in turnregarding 5 acres is cultivated. (Photos through Erika Niebler)

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Organic Farm:

Turkeys, Goats, Pigs ...

Butterflies, Bees, Cranes along with Things...

Page 56: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

The Zaagkii students were amazed by all the animals that will roam your organic Bouncing CraneFarm run by simply Natasha as well as David Gill, who view the significance regarding protectingpollinators.

Page 57: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

With numerous wildlife, Grooving Crane Farm in Skandia, MI provides naturally grown as well asraised vegetables, flowers and a lot more in twenty acres along with almost 5 acres cultivated.(Photos simply by Erika Niebler)

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Zaagkii Project Fellowship:

Teens, college students and older adults ...

Page 58: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

When these folks were not really constructing butterfly houses, mason bee houses and alsodistributing/planting native species plants, the particular Zaagkii Project students had time to growfor you to be friends, reflect upon his or her function along with enhance social skills during lunches,outdoor bar-b-ques along together with other time regarding bonding as well as fun. (Photos throughErika Niebler)

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Nature Naturally:

Page 59: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii project young adults have learned a new deep appreciation with regard to naturel duringtheir many hours invested in the majestic northwoods associated with Michigan's Upper Peninsulaalongside breath-taking waterfalls along with winding streams using the pungent smell of pollinationand bees wafting through the warm air. (Photos by simply Erika Niebler)

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Healthy Lunch thanks in order to Pollinators:

Page 60: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project Northern Michigan University Or College volunteer and also student leader ErikaNiebler prepared healthy lunches for your students including a sizable salad throughout July 2009.The Actual Zaagkii Project students stated their salad using a wide array of veggies would not arealready possible with out pollinators to create the actual lettuce, tomatoes, along together with otherveggies grow. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

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Transplanting Native Species:

Herbs/Veggies/Mushrooms ...

Page 61: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Getting their own hands inside the soil from at Gather'n Greens throughout Negaunee Township, MI,Zaagkii Project students learned regarding organic vegetables, indigenous herbs - and thetransplanting associated with veggie and also herb seedlings. Beekeeper Lee Ossenheimer alongwith wife Dr. Lisa Extended very own the organic farm Gather'n Greens across the Dead River insidenorthern Michigan. (Photos through Erika Niebler)

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Organic Mushrooms:

Zaagkii Project teenagers discovered in regards to always be able to the challenges of growingmushrooms during the chilly, windy and also rainy "summer that will wasn't" inside Michigan'sUpper Peninsula along a new Lake Superior tributary.

An organic Mushroom expanding operation can be part of Gather'n Greens, an organic farm close toNegaunee, MI owned simply by Lee Ossenheimer as well as wife Dr. Lisa Long.

Page 62: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

The students discovered the mushrooms are generally grown through drilling holes inside logswhich are full of mushroom spawn. (Photos by simply Erika Niebler)

Zaagkii Wings as well as Seeds Project Contacts and Links:

Larry Stritch

National Botanist USDA U.S. Forest Service

1400 Independence Ave., SW

Mail quit 1103

Washington, D.C.

20090-6090

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1-202-205-1279 (Office)

email USFS National Botanist Larry Stritch

Larry Stritch honored pertaining to USFS Celebrating Wildflowers website

Above Photo of Larry Stritch in the Arizona Native Plant Society publication entitled "The PlantPress"

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Page 63: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

USFS wildflowers page

Wildflowers inside the Eastern Region

Jan Schultz, USFS

Botany, Non-native Invasive Species

Special Forest Items program Leader

USDA Forest Services Eastern Region

626 Wisconsin Avenue, 7th Floor

Milwaukee, WI

53203

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1-414-297-1189 (wk)

1-414-944-3963 (fax)

Page 64: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

email Jan Schultz

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USFS back links and data web page about plants, botany, the actual Zaagkii Project and otherefforts to become able to protect pollinators as well as the importance involving native speciesplants

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Rev. Jon Magnuson

Page 65: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Founder of the three-year (2008-2010) Zaagkii Project

Executive Director in the Nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute

402 E. Michigan St.

Marquette, MI

49855

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email Rev. Jon Magnuson

906-228-5494 (hm)

906-360-5072 (cell)

Cedar Tree Institute (CTI) Winter 2009 Newsletter

Illustrator Diana Magnuson

Diana Magnuson biography

email Diana Magnuson

Kids Guide web site about illustrator Diana Magnuson of Marquette, MI

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NMU Students Leaders along with volunteers for your Cedar Tree Institute and the Zaagkii Wingsand Seeds Project:

Page 66: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Erika Niebler

Erika is a Northern Michigan university (NMU) student and volunteers for numerous NonprofitCedar Tree Institute initiatives which includes your Zaagkii Project, Zaagkii Project photographer,NMU Lutheran Campus Ministry student leader and also photographer

1-763-670-0611

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Sarah Swanson

Sarah is truly a NMU student leader, volunteers pertaining to numerous nonprofit Cedar TreeInstitute Tasks including the particular Zaagkii Project, Northern Michigan university (NMU)Student leader, Lutheran Campus Ministry leader such as visited Nicaragua and educatedAmericans on significance involving fair trade with Nicaraguan coffee farmers along with others,served as NMU EarthKeeper (NMU EK) Student Team project director.

1-906-399-7113

email NMU Lutheran Campus Ministry

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Page 67: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Amanda Emerson

Amanda can always be a NMU student leader, along with volunteers for numerous nonprofit CedarTree Institute tasks such as the particular Zaagkii Project along with may serve as projectcoordinator for the NMU EarthKeeper Student team

847-791-5693

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Keweenaw Bay Indian Neighborhood (KBIC)

KBIC Tribal Council President Warren C. "Chris" Swartz Jr.

KBIC Vice Chair Susan LaFernier

906-353-6623

Todd Warner, Director regarding KBIC All-natural Source Department (NRD)

906-524-5757

Page 68: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Evelyn Ravindran, KBIC NRD natural resources Specialist

KBIC NRD employees help build butterfly houses throughout 2008:

Katie Kruse, NRD Environment specialist

Char Beesley, Environment Specialist

Kit Laux, NRD water Top Quality Specialist

Kim Klopstein, certainly one of the summertime youth supervisors for the KBIC Summer YouthProgram

906-201-0020

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Northern Michigan College Middle for Native American Studies (CNAS)

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Page 69: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

April Lindala, Director

112F Whitman Hall

906-227-1397 (office)

906-227-1396 (fax)

NMU Zaagkii Project Brochure:

http://webb.nmu.edu/Centers/NativeAmericanStudies/SiteSections/AboutUs/CommunityOutreach/zaagkii_brochure_inside_pages.pdf

NMU Anishinaabemowin Professor Kenneth Pitawanakwat

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NMU CNAS Zaagkii Project interns: Levi Tadgerson regarding Negaunee as well as sister, LeoraTadgerson involving Marquette, members associated with Bay Mills Indian Community

906-360-0451 (Levi)

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USFS Zaagkii Project contacts:

Page 70: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Jane Cliff, USFS public Relations in Milwaukee

414-297-3664

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Angie Lucas, contractor, Hiawatha National Forest Greenhouse Manager

906-228-8491

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Terry Miller, forest botanist in the Hiawatha National Forest office in Escanaba, MI

Botanist Terry Miller is actually pictured planting plugs in this USFS photo

USDA USFS Hiawatha Forest District

2727 North Lincoln Road

Escanaba, MI

49825

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906-786-4062

906-789-3319

Page 71: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Hiawatha National Forest website

Hiawatha National Forest Services offices

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Deb Le Blanc, WestSide Plant Ecologist at the Hiawatha National Forest workplace throughoutMunising, MI

(Does Monarch Workshops)

Hiawatha National Forest hosted a new National Monarch Butterfly Workshop in your course of June2008 in Marquette, MI

Deb Le Blanc, USDA

400 Munising Ave.

Munising, MI

49862

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email Deb Le Blanc

906-387-2512 ext. 19

Page 72: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

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Martial artist Rick Pietila

of Marquette, MI

Pietilla is an teacher of San Shou, Tai Chi as well as other martial arts.

Rick Pietila's other ongoing amazing adventures consist of traveling with numerous legendary Rockas well as Roll groups such as getting a guitar tech for your band Boston along with traveled in toLatin America with the band Stryper.

Page 73: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute Winter 2008 newsletter that mentions Rick Pietila

Nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute Winter 2009 newsletter that will mentions Rick Pietila

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Zaagkii Project story within Sept. 2009 Marquette Monthly

Zaagkii Project videos on youtube

Zaagkii Project videos about bliptv

Zaagkii Project wordpress blog

United State Forest Services (USFS) Celebrating Wildflowers as well as Pollinators websites

Nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute within Marquette, MI

Keweenaw Bay Indian Neighborhood (KBIC)

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Marquette County Juvenile Court

Marquette County Juvenile Court along with Project WEAVE

Jim Rule, a younger child treatment counselor with Marquette County Youth Home, is actuallypictured upon June 25, 2009 on the Zaagkii Project outing towards the apiary owned throughbeekeeper Jim Hayward

Page 74: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

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Borealis Seed Company

Big Bay, Michigan

Run by simply mother-daughter team associated with Judy Keast as well as Suzanne Rabitaillecultivating concerning 5 acres of your 20-acre spread three miles south involving Huge Bay,Michigan.

http://www.ltbbodawa-nsn.gov/index.html

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Dancing Crane Farm

Owned by Natasha and David Gill

Dancing Crane Farm has obviously grown as well as raised vegetables, flowers and much more intwenty acres with nearly five acres cultvated

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Page 75: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Natasha and also David Gill

Dancing Crane Farm

348 Lawson Road

Skandia, MI 49885

906-942-7975

[email protected]

http://www.dancingcranefarm.com

http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/internships/farmdetails.php?FarmName=&City=&State=MI&Keyword=&allDate=0&page=1&FarmID=1957

Assorted vegetables, herbs,flowers,and seedlings

Custom workshops, ongoing classes, farm tours, apprenticeships, volunteer opportunities, as well asan annual Harvest Party open to the public.

Produce may be found in the Marquette, Gwinn, along with Munising Farmers Markets at theGrooving Crane Farm.

Open June-October.

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Beekeepers:

Dr. Jim Hayward

Page 76: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Dr. Jim as well as Martha Hayward

103A Buffalo Rd.

Negaunee, MI

49866

906-475-7582

email Negaunee, MI beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward

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Beekeepers:

Gather'n Greens

Negaunee Township, Michigan

906-475-9338

(no web site yet)

Owned through Lee Ossenheimer and his wife, Dr. Lisa Lengthy in Negaunee Township, MI alongthe Dead River.

Page 77: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

The couple raise bees, help make honey, grow mushrooms and develop seedlings regardingtransplanting such as peppers, tomatoes and regarding numerous herbs for example basil.

The couple offers 3 kids active inside their nature-oriented, organic business:

Jesse Ossenheimer, 8; Lauren Ossenheimer, 5; as well as Alex Ossenheimer, 4.

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Beekeeper:

Jon Kniskern

Marquette, MI

Beekeeper Jon Kniskern is actually quoted in a March 3, 2009 article on the university regardingMinnesota annual "Short Course" entitled âEURoeBeekeeping within Northern ClimatesâEUR�in Borlaug Hall around the St. Paul campus

The story has been printed inside the Minnesota daily newspaper inside Minneapolis/St. Paul

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Page 78: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Jim Edwards in the Upper Peninsula Children's Museum that is in cost regarding "GeneralProgramming along with Explainers Director"

Edwards teamed with all the Zaagkii Project students to create a giant monarch butterfly in 2008 aswell as a large bee hive in 2009 making use of art-related objects at the museum inside Marquette,MI

Upper Peninsula Children's Museum

123 W. Baraga Avenue

Marquette, MI

49855

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1-906-226-3911 (office)

1-906- 226-7065 (fax)

email Nheena Weyer Ittner, director with the U.P. Children's Museum

email Jim Edwards, museum General Programming along with Explainers Director

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Page 79: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Nativevillage.org main Zaagkii Page:

http://www.nativevillage.org/Messages%20from%20the%20People/KBIC%20Tribal%20Youth%20Zaagkii%20Project/Zaagkii%20Wings%20and%20Seeds%20Home.htm

NativeVillage.org 2009 Zaagkii Story along with photos:

http://www.nativevillage.org/Messages%20from%20the%20People/KBIC%20Tribal%20Youth%20Zaagkii%20Project/Teens%20Help%20with%20Sweet%20Nature%20Project.htm

NativeVillage.org 2008 Zaagkii Story as well as photos:

http://www.nativevillage.org/Messages%20from%20the%20People/KBIC%20Tribal%20Youth%20Zaagkii%20Project/kbic_tribal_youth_protect_pollin1.htm

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Video Credit:

Music courtesy regarding Chicago area band Dragon Fire Parade, that features Upper Peninsularoots.

Dragon Fire Parade:

Andy Wicklund, Guitar

Tim Obert, Guitar

Peter Nemanich, Bass

Chris Hammond, Drums

Page 80: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

email Dragon Fire Parade:

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[email protected]

Photo caption:

Members with the Chicago region band Dragon Fire Parade pictured tend to be Andy Wicklund(upper left), Chris Hammond (upper right), Peter Nemanich (lower left) and also Tim Obert (lowerright).

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Official band of the Cedar Tree Institute/Zaagkii Project annual Midsummer Festival:

Terracotta half-life

Terracotta half-life biography

Bio concerning the primary one in assistance of Obadiah Metivier, the band member, overall techiegenious along with Zaagkii Project volunteer webmaster and also technical guru

Jerry Kippola, Guitar

Page 81: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Aaron Kippola, Alto Saxophone, Percussion

Obadiah Metivier, Bass Guitar, Vocals, Percussion

Jennie Peano, Vocals, Percussion

Steve Leuthold, Baritone and also Tenor Saxophone, Flute

Dan Schaefer, Drums

Emmanuel Kawedi, Congas, Percussion, Vocals

Alumni - Keyboards, Guitars, Drums, Sax, Trumpet, Congas, Timbales, etc.

Upcoming Shows:

Wed 2/10/2010: Upfront

Fri 2/26/2010: Harley's Lounge

Fri 3/12/2010: Marquette food Co-op Meeting involving Owners

Wed 3/24/2010: Upfront

Tue 7/13/2010: Menominee Summer Concert Series

Page 82: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

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Marquette Mining Journal feature story #2 about Zaagkii Project on 12-13-08 with regards to theinitial 12 months associated with protecting pollinators

Marquette Mining Journal feature story #1 in Zaagkii Project on 7-14-08 about 208 annual CedarTree Institute annual Mid-Summer Festival throughout Marquette, MI

News Through Indian Nation (NFIC) feature story in Zaagkii Project

Indian country today feature stories upon Zaagkii Project:

Part 1: Pollinator Preservation

Part 2: Sand Point Restoration

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Zaakii Project intern Leora Tadgerson to sign up in the roundtable at the Native American as well asIndigenous Research Association (NAISA) 2010 National Conference on Might 20-22, 2010 withinTuscon, AZ

Zaagkii Project along with Northern Michigan Middle with regard to Native American Scientificstudies (NMU CNAS) participants:

NMU CNAS Conference info:

Page 83: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 2010

12:00-1:45 p.m.

118 ROUNDTABLE:

"Engaging Students by means of community action along with Service"

Organizer & Chair:

Adriana Greci Green, Northern Michigan University

Participants include:

Leora Tadgerson, Zaagkii Project intern through Northern Michigan University Or College Middlefor Native American Studies

Damien Lee, Trent University, Canada

Nicholas Estes, University Or College of South Dakota

Karla Tait, University Or College associated with South Dakota

Leya Hale, School regarding South Dakota

Linc Kesler, School of British Columbia, Canada

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NAISA 2010 Conference program details

Preliminary Every Day Schedule

The NAISA 2010 Conference will be sponsored through the American Indian Studies at TheParticular School associated with Arizona

NAISA staff photo

Robert Warrior, NAISA President 2009-2010

email organizers with the NAISA 2010 Conference

Page 84: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Contact information:

Sunny Lybarger

1-520-626-7695

Tsianina Lomawaima

1-520-621-5083

Hotel registration info and furthermore the deadline for NAISA group Space Charge April 18, 2010

1-520-742-6000

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Westin La Paloma

3800 East Sunrise Drive

Tucson, AZ

85718

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Native times Zaagkii pollinators story:

http://nativetimes.bizweb5.tulsaconnect.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=439&Itemid=0

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Turtle Island News:

http://www.turtleisland.org/discussion/viewtopic.php?p=9683#9683

---

Marquette Month-to-month Nov. 2008 (scroll down):

http://www.mmnow.com/z_current_a/b/c/city_notes.html

---

Tree Hugger: (This article appeared in over 1,000 websites)

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/10/zaagkii--wings-seeds-project.php

---

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Zaagkii KBIC newsletter (scroll as a new outcome of page 4):

http://www.kbic-nsn.gov/files/newsletter/Sept_2008.pdf

---

Sault Ste. Marie Band regarding Chippewa Story upon Zaagkii Project (Scroll right down to webpage 7)

http://www.saulttribe.com/index2.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_view&gid=959&Itemid=266

---

Great Story inside Native Villge Web:

0" width="298" />

http://www.nativevillage.org/Messages%20from%20the%20People/MesPeo%20KBIC%20Tribal%20Youth%20Zaagkii%20Project/kbic_tribal_youth_protect_pollin1.htm

---

Earth times - London:

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/michigan-teens-native-american-youth,593342.shtml

---

Good news Network National Newspaper:

http://www.goodnewsnetwork.org

To notice story - join totally free thirty day trial simply by click in headline of story

---

Monarch Watch:

Monarch Author Lynn M. Rosenblatt which wrote it MONARCH MAGIC!

Numerous Monarch related links:

Page 86: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

http://www.kidsgardening.com/pollinator/curriculum/resources.php

http://www.insecta-inspecta.com/butterflies/monarch/index.html

http://www.nhptv.org/natureworks/monarch.htm

http://www.learner.org/jnorth/monarch

---

Wikipedia upon Monarch butterflies as well as Lepidotera migration, a new phenomenon wherebutterflies as well as moths migrate more than lengthy mileage in order to places exactly where theywill can't settle for long durations associated with time.

---

Photo through Mila Zinkova regarding Monarch butterflies migration as well as cluster upon Nov.25, 2007 throughout Santa Cruz for you to commit the winter via Wikipedia Inventive Commons.Throughout migration Monarch butterflies travel up to 3 thousand miles.

email Mila Zinkova

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Photograph through Wikipedia user Bfpage regarding a few regarding the overwintering monarchbutterflies throughout Feb. 2000 in a preserve outside regarding Angangueo, Mexico. 1 tree is verycovered in butterflies.

---

Artwork of Migrating butterflies aka Lepidoptera migration art

Artistic picture by Pilar Murillo associated with Spain

Wikipedia username: Pilar

flickr username: izarbeltza

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Wikipedia on Goldenrod

---

Goldenrod photo through Kurt Stueber aka Kurt St�¼ber by method of Wikipedia imaginativecommons

email Kurt Stueber

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Page 87: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Goldenrod Photo by simply Huw Williams - Wikipedia username Huwmanbeing

Goldenrod flowers photographed in western Fountain County, Indiana upon September 15, 207 bymeans of Wikipedia imaginative commons

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Goldenrod as well as going to Cerceris wasp by Wiki user Hardyplants by way of Wikipediaimaginative commons

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Goldenrod Photo simply by Georg Slickers taken in August 15, 2005 within Berlin, Germany throughWikipedia creative commons

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Pollinator Partnership

Pollinator Week is June 21-27, 2010

The fourth annual National Pollinator Week will possibly be held through June 21-27th. Feel withregards to an event with your current school, garden, church, store, etc.

Pollinators positively effect the whole lives- let's SAVE them along with CELEBRATE them!

Pollinator Partnership Movie

Pollinator Information through Pollinator Partnership

---

North American Pollinator Protection Marketing Campaign Operating to protect your pollinators ofthe North American continent

North American Pollinator Protection campaign #2 (NAPPC)

Page 88: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

emails:

[email protected]; [email protected]

Laurie Davies Adams

Executive Director

Pollinator Partnership

423 Washington Street

5th floor

San Francisco, CA

94111

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415-362-1137(wk)

415-362-3070 (fax)

Lots of various handouts & tips pertaining to National Pollinator Week

---

Wikipedia upon Monarchs:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarch_Butterfly

Female Monarch photo:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/63/Monarch_In_May.jpg

Wiki may 2007 Photograph of the Monarch Butterfly simply by Kenneth Dwain Harrelson

Male Monarch Photo through Derek Ramsey (Ram-Man) in the Tyler Arboretum

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Monarch_Butterfly_Danaus_plexippus_Male_2664px.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Ram-Man

---

Bees disappearing across the world:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollinator_decline

Page 89: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bees_and_toxic_chemicals

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pesticide_toxicity_to_bees

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imidacloprid_effects_on_bee_population

http://www.burtsbees.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ContentView?contentPageId=531&catalogId=10051&storeId=10001&langId=-1

http://www.polinator.org

http://www.vanishingbees.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diseases_of_the_honey_bee

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endangered_arthropod

Wikipedia Honeybee Photographs simply by Bj�¶rn Appel, Wikipedia Username Warden.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Warden

Edit by Waugsberg (cropped)

A honeybee with an apiary, cooling by simply flapping its wings inside T�¼bingen-Hagelloch.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c5/Honeybee-cooling_cropped.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/df/Honeybee-cooling.jpg

Wiki Bee photographs by simply Waugsberg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Waugsberg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/dc/Biene_88a.jpg

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Biene_88a.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b8/Bienen_im_Flug_52e.jpg

---

Bumblebees: Area Pertaining To Naturel Garden biodiversity forum

http://www.wildlife-gardening.org.uk/default.asp?gallery=Galleries\Animals\Insects\Bumblebees\bombus-pascuorum-040616.xml

Bumblebee Photo Copyright Richard Burkmar 2004. Permission is hereby granted for one to use thisimage regarding non-commercial purposes which are involving advantage to the naturalenvironment.

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Richard Burkmar (editor of space for Nature) graduated in the university School of Cardiff twentysix many years ago with a degree within zoology plus a PhD within avian ecology inside 1989. Hecurrently works with regard to Merseyside Environmental Advisory service where he manages theNorth Merseyside Biodiversity Motion Strategy (Liverpool, St. Helens, Knowsley along with SeftonBoroughs).

---

Bumblebees: Buckingham Nurseries as well as Garden Centre

http://www.buckingham-nurseries.co.uk/acatalog/bumblebees.html

Bumblebee photo simply by Oxford Bee Company/Buckingham Nurseries along with Garden Centre

Bumblebees simply by Christopher O'Toole

http://www.buckingham-nurseries.co.uk/acatalog/Index_Pollination_Bees_27.html#33171

Chris O'Toole will be the director involving Bee Systematics along with Biology Unit at the OxfordCollege Museum of natural History.

He features written many books on insect organic history such as Bees with the Globe and also AlienEmpire.

Pictures and information provided from the Oxford Golf Course Lots Mount Pleasant DC Beecompany & Buckingham Nurseries as well as Garden Centre website

---

Wind Pollinated plants like Rye are essential yet usually are generally not food resources withregard to pollinators:

Wind Pollinated Rye photo by Paul Billiet along with Shirley Burchill

http://www.saburchill.com/chapters/chap0044.html

---

Wikipedia upon Pollination:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollination

---

Photo by Simply By Debi Vort (Wikipedia Username Debivort) associated with an Andrena beecollects pollen among the stamens of your rose. The Particular female carpel structure appearsrough as well as globular towards the left. the bee's stash of pollen is on its hind leg.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Bee_pollenating_a_rose.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Debivort

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A European honey bee collects nectar, although pollen collects on its body.

A European honey bee (Apis mellifera) extracts nectar coming from an Aster flower making use of itsproboscis. Tiny hairs covering the bee's entire body conserve a slight electrostatic charge, causingpollen from your flower's anthers to stay for the bee, enabling pollination when the bee moves to anadditional flower.

Photo through John Severns (Wikipedia username Severnjc)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:European_honey_bee_extracts_nectar.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Severnjc

---

Blueberries getting pollinated through bumblebees. Bumblebee hives want to become bought eachyear as the queens must hibernate (unlike honey bees). They Will are employed nonetheless becausethey supply advantages with specific fruits as blueberries (such as the fact that they are active evenin colder outdoor ambient temperature) The picture showing blueberry pollination simply bybumblebees, aswell since the system associated with furrow irrigation utilizing siphon tubes. Imageswere taken at "blueberry fields", Koersel, Belgium.

A picture showing blueberry pollination through bumblebees, as well as the system associated withfurrow irrigation making use of siphon tubes. Images were taken in July 2008 from "blueberryfields", Koersel, Belgium.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:BlueberryPollinationByBumblebees.jpg

Photo simply by Kristof Van der Poorten Wikipedia username KVDP

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:KVDP

http://kvdp.blogspot.com

http://healingweb.blogspot.com

Environmental health Science associated with Columbia University

60 Haven Ave.

Room 100

New York, NY

10032

http://www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu/ehs/index.html

---

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Wikipedia upon Cultivars & Hybrids:

A cultivar is a particular variety of your plant species or hybrid that's getting cultivated and/or isrecognised like a cultivar under the ICNCP. the concept regarding cultivar will be driven bypragmatism, and serves the particular practical requirements regarding horticulture, agriculture,forestry, etc.

The plant chosen as a cultivar could happen in order to be bred deliberately, selected coming fromplants throughout cultivation, as well as discovered within the wild. Cultivars can be asexual clonesas well as seed-raised. Clones are usually genetically identical and will seem consequently whengrown beneath the identical conditions.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultivar

Viola 'Clear Crystals Apricot', any hybrid cross viola (Viola x hybrida), Victoria, Australia. Wikipediaphoto through John O'Neill (Wikipedia username Jjron)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Jjron

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:EmailUser/Jjron

---

Bee Movie:

http://www.beemovie.com

Created in 2007 by simply Jerry Seinfeld as well as DreamWorks Animation

---

Keweenaw Peninsula: Michigan's Copper Country:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_mining_in_Michigan

http://www.unr.edu/sb204/geology/westernh.html

---

West Virginia White Butterfly & killer Garlic Mustard Seed plants:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Virginia_White

http://www.cbgarden.org/blog/index.php/tag/west-virginia-white-butterfly

http://leapbio.org/west_virginia_white.php

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/5a/3402_white_WV_ws.jpg

West Virginia White, Pieris virginiensis in wild mustard Photo through Randy L Emmitt

Page 93: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

http://www.rlephoto.com/butterflies/white_wv01.htm

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Butterflies/Moths:

The Butterfly Site:

http://www.thebutterflysite.com

Children's butterfly links:

http://www.monarchbutterflyusa.com/Links.htm

Butterfly Encounters:

http://www.butterflyencounters.com

Butterflys as well as Moths of North America:

http://www.butterfliesandmoths.org

Opler, Paul A., Harry Pavulaan, Ray E. Stanford, Michael Pogue, coordinators. 2006. Butterflies andMoths involving North America. Bozeman, MT: NBII Mountain Prairie Info Node.http://www.butterfliesandmoths.org

---

Deciduous forests:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deciduous

---

Viceroys:

Viceroy Butterfly mimics Monarchs

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viceroy_butterfly

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/55/Viceroy_Butterfly.jpg

Wikipedia Viceroy photo simply by Piccolo "Pic" Namek

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:PiccoloNamek

Viceroy:

http://www.nhptv.org/natureworks/viceroy.htm

Photo by simply William T. Hark

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Butterfly as well as endangered species hibernacula:

http://www.fws.gov/midwest/Endangered/lists/michigan-cty.html

http://www.naturenorth.com/summer/bgarden/bttgrdF.html

http://entweb.clemson.edu/museum/buttrfly/local/bfly12.htm

http://actazool.nhmus.hu/48/konvicka.pdf

http://earthcaretaker.com/naturalization/llamb.html

---

Mourning Cloaks aka Morning Cloaks:

http://www.sierrapotomac.org/W_Needham/MourningCloak_060319.htm

http://www.bentler.us/eastern-washington/insects/mourning-cloak.aspx

http://www.ivyhall.district96.k12.il.us/4th/kkhp/1insects/mourningcloak.html

http://www.naturenorth.com/spring/bug/mcloak/Fmcloak.html

---

Mason bees - bee houses in wood:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mason_bee

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6c/Osmia_rufa_couple_(aka).jpg

Photo associated with an Red Mason Bee couple (osmia rufa) by Andr�© Karwath regardingGerman Wikipedia additionally known as AKA (Andr�© Karwath):

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Aka

Mason Bees:

http://www.farminfo.org/bees/mason-bees.htm

http://www.everythingabout.net/articles/biology/animals/arthropods/insects/bees/mason_bee

Photo by simply Kim Taylor involving Bruce Coleman Inc.

http://www.masonbeehomes.com/bee_houses.php

http://www.pollinator.com/mason_homes.htm

Page 95: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

http://www.insectpix.net/Homes_for_bees.htm

---

Brownfield sites:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownfields

http://ncrs.fs.fed.us/4902/focus/restoration/brownfield

---

Mass Mill - copper processing waste (stamp sands) cleanup:

(search regarding KBIC inside next document)

http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/tribalgov/ImprovingPartnerships.pdf

http://www.uprcd.org/projects.asp

http://www.upea.com/filesfordownloading/Baragadraft.pdf

---

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Manoomin Project:

Manoomin Project: Restoring wild rice in order to seven remote Upper Peninusla lakes, stream asstudents planted more than 1 ton regarding wild rice seeds using aid via elders with the KeweenawBay Indian Community

Another collaboration between your nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute and furthermore the Keweenawbay Indian Community

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http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096416108

http://www.cedartreeinstitute.org/wildrice2007.html

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/news_press_release,215966.%20shtml

http://blog.americanfeast.com/indigenous_food

http://www.goodnewsdaily.com/show_story.php?ID=3500

Manoomin Project Videos:

http://blip.tv/file/549632

http://blip.tv/file/341528

Manoomin Project counselor Dave Anthony, that belongs to the Small Traverse Bay Bands associatedwith Odawa (Ottawa) Indian, and also Northern Michigan University Or College Middle pertaining toNative American studies:

http://webb.nmu.edu/Centers/NativeAmericanStudies/SiteSections/Calendar/IEDSHighlights.shtml

Page 97: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

http://webb.nmu.edu/Centers/NativeAmericanStudies/SiteSections/AboutUs/AboutUs.shtml

---

Dreamcatcher:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreamcatcher_(Native_American)

http://www.dreamcatcher.com/home.php

---

Northern white cedar:

http://forestry.about.com/library/tree/blntwh.htm

---

More about honeybee decline:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollinator_decline

http://www.masterbeekeeper.org/pdf/pollination.pdf

The Worth regarding Honey Bees While Pollinators of U.S. Crops inside 2000 by simply Drs. RogerMorse along with Nicholas Calderone associated with Cornell College (2000) :

Colony Collapse Disorder (or CCD) is a poorly understood phenomenon by which worker bees from abeehive as well as Western honey bee colony abruptly disappear. Whilst such disappearancespossess occurred all through a history involving apiculture, the actual term Colony CollapseDisorder was first applied into a drastic rise in the quantity of disappearances associated withWestern honey bee colonies throughout north America in late 2006.

European beekeepers observed any similar phenomenon throughout Belgium, France, the particularNetherlands, Greece, Italy, Portugal, as well as Spain, as well as first reports have got in additioncome in via Switzerland along with Germany, albeit to a smaller degree. possible cases of CCD getadditionally been reported in Taiwan since April 2007.

---

NASA, Kids and additionally the Environment:

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-033&cid=release_2010-033&msource=a20100128&tr=y&auid=5868619

---

U.S. Forest Services Celebrating Wildflowers web page:

Page 98: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Two Native American supporters with the Zaagkii Project, going to your July 2009 nonprofit CedarTree Institute Mid-Summer Festival in Presque Isle in Marquette, stand subsequent towards thebeehive created by students with help from the director in the U.P. Childrens Museum. (Photosimply by Greg Peterson)

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Smoking Allowed:

Page 99: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Being calmed by way of a smoker in the hands of beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward, thousands ofhoneybees cling towards the hive frame in June 2009 which is employed by the bees to createhoneycombs. (Photo through Erika Niebler)

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Understanding from a Master:

Zaagkii Project students watch beekeeper Dr. Jim Hayward work with a gripper for you to removeframes in the hives at the actual rear of his home in Negaunee, MI during June 2009. (Photo throughErika Niebler)

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Teenage Beekeepers:

Page 100: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project volunteers Elliott Burdick (left), 17, the Marquette Senior high School (MSHS) senioras well as Taylor Dianich, 16, MSHS junior (right) stand next to be able to honeybee hives in June2009. (Photo through Erika Niebler)

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2008 Zaagkii projects Teens:

In July 2008 at the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute annual Mid-Summer Festival, Zaagkii Projectyoung adults advised supporters what these were mastering with regards to pollinators as well asindigenous plants and wildflowers.

Page 101: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

During the initial summer (2008) of the Zaagkii Wings along with Seeds Project, young adults built,painted as well as handed out butterfly houses - that any slimmer and also more than bird housesusing entries regarding butterflies together with folded wings plus a slab of bark pertaining to restalong with reproduction. (Photo simply by Greg Peterson)

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Youth Protecting Pollinators:

In July 2008 , Zaagkii Project teens along with project founder Rev. Jon Magnuson tell supporters inthe nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute Mid-Summer Festival by what the particular students do duringthe extremely first summer of the some occasion and effort in order to protect pollinators. Magnusonmay end up being the executive director of the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute inside Marquette, MInear Lake Superior. (Photo by simply Greg Peterson)

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Cooking in all Burners:

Page 102: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project teenagers aid prepare the food at the annual Cedar Tree Institute Mid-SummerFestival in the actual program of July 2008 inside Marquette, MI.

During the really first summer (2008) of the Zaagkii Wings along with Seeds Project, adolescentsbuilt, painted as well as handed out butterfly houses - that a new slimmer along with more than birdhouses together with entries with regard to butterflies with folded wings and a slab regarding barkfor rest along with reproduction.

Some with the students returned throughout 2009 to participate in inside the second summer withthe Zaagkii Project during that mason bee houses were built, painted along with distributed.

Both many years the adolescents planted as well as dispersed a significant number of native speciesplants. (Photo simply by Greg Peterson)

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Similar To Look Class:

Page 103: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project young adults use a variety involving resources to be able to construct mason beehouses through the summer involving 2009 throughout Marquette, MI together with assist fromformer shop teacher Bruce Ventura involving Marquette. (Above photographs by Greg Peterson)

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Organic Farm Wildlife:

Page 104: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project adolescents check out a new turkey at the Bouncing Crane Farm within Skandia, MIexactly where that they assisted using the native species plants. (Photo through Erika Niebler)

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Organic Farms:

Learning significance involving Native Species Plants to become able to Pollinators ...

Page 105: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project students work together with native species plants within the summer of 2009 in thedancing Crane Farm throughout Skandia, MI (above 2 photos) at the Borealis Seed company (belowa couple of photos) in big bay, MI throughout the summer of 2009. (Photos by Erika Niebler)

Page 106: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

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Native Species Plants:

The organic Gather'n Greens Farm within Negaunee Township, MI was an additional chance forhigher education kids to grow native species plants during summer involving 2009. (Photo throughErika Niebler)

Page 107: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project teen Jacob Feliciano regarding Skandia, a Gwinn middle school seventh grader,holds the kitten at the Grooving Crane Farm within Skandia, MI. Your farm features lotds associatedwith exotic species regarding ildlife as well as the students discovered respect its nature's beings.(Photo by simply Erika Niebler)

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Outstanding within Their Own Field:

Page 108: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

(Photo simply by Erika Niebler)

Page 109: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii projects students including 13-year-old Tanya Nelson involving ishpeming, MI generatingpals with a Turkey (above) along together with a goat (below) at the Dance Crane Farm insideSkanida, MI. (Photos through Erika Niebler)

Page 110: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

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Tea Time:

Herbal Tea coming from Native plants throughout northern Michigan ...

During summer regarding 2009, Zaagkii Project teens learned how to create a assortment of herbalteas making use of indigenous plants/herbs in Michigan's Upper Peninsula

(Photo by Erika Niebler)

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Food, Meals Food:

Energizing the Zaagkii Project teenagers ...

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Zaagkii Project young adults were often prepared a new nutritional lunch although on many outingsthroughout the summer 2009. Your teens learned which every 1 involving the food they may possiblybe would not be around if nbot with regard to pollinators who help to make plants as well as veggiesgrow regarding salads and furthermore to supply feed for animals.

Page 114: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

(Above photos courtesy Erika Niebler and Greg Peterson)

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Youth, KBIC employees:

Learning the method to respect the surroundings coming from Native American elders as well asyouth ...

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(Photos simply by Greg Peterson)

The Zaagkii Project thanks KBIC official Todd Warner, Director involving KBIC All-natural UsefulResource Department (NRD)

KBIC NRD employees assist build butterfly houses throughout 2008

Those helping were tribal members Evelyn Ravindran, KBIC NRD natural Sources Specialist; KatieKruse, NRD Environment specialist; Char Beesley, Environment Specialist; Kit Laux, NRD H2o HighQuality Specialist; as well as Kim Klopstein, certainly one of the summertime youth supervisors foryour KBIC Summer Youth Program

For a lot more info call 906-201-0020

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KBIC Pow-wow:

Page 118: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project students and additionally the tribe's summer youth were honored the actual 2008Pow-wow in the Keweenaw Bay Indian community in Baraga, MI. (Photo by Greg Peterson)

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Hearty Greens:

Big leafy greens not achievable without having pollinators ...

Behind a few gigantic heads regarding greens, Zaagkii students learned which absolutely nothinggrows with out pollinators. Photo through Erika Niebler)

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a Great Lake:

Page 119: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

Zaagkii Project young adults had been taught an appreciation for all natural issues and enjoyed thisrespite in your course of 2009 in the chilly summer waters of Lake Superior in Marquette, MI - yourworld's largest freshwater lake.

(Photo through Erika Niebler)

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Hanging in Nature:

(Next 5 pictures by Erika Niebler)

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Page 121: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan

(Above 5 photos simply by Erika Niebler)

Page 122: 2009 Zaagkii Project #1: Northern Michigan