- This event has passed.
2023 Berkshire Biodiversity Day (BioBlitz)
September 23, 2023 @ 12:00 pm - September 24, 2023 @ 12:00 pm
UPDATE: BIOBLITZ IS HAPPENING THIS WEEKEND!
Some people have asked what will happen with Biodiversity Day this weekend if it’s raining.
We still plan to go ahead with the programs and the surveying, regardless of the weather forecast. We’re keeping a close eye on it and will keep everyone posted as things develop and change.
The presentations are indoors, so those will happen regardless. We understand that some walks/demos might not be possible if it’s raining. We are letting the specialists leading those activities make the final call on whether they should happen when the time comes. It’s a good idea to bring some rain gear, just in case.
We’ll do our best to get the word out if plans change!
Celebrating local biodiversity during a time of unprecedented global biodiversity loss, the 14th Annual Berkshire Biodiversity Day (aka Berkshire BioBlitz) welcomes community members of all ages to join biologists, naturalists, and environmentalists to identify as many plants, animals, fungi, and other organisms as possible during a 24-hour period!
The event, which is free and open to the public, will take place from noon on Saturday, September 23, to noon on Sunday, September 24, in South Egremont at Greenagers’ April Hill Education and Conservation Center. Members of the public are welcome to stop by anytime for scheduled walks and activities, to record a survey of their findings, and to experience first-hand the importance of a healthy, active ecosystem in their community.
This year’s program is packed with guided walks, presentations, and demonstrations led by experts. Presentation topics include: leaf-mining insects from Charley Eiseman, fungi and mushrooms from John Wheeler, and arachnids from Joseph Warfel. Aliza Fassler will speak about native bees and lead a wild bee walk. Professor Tom Tyning will lead an amphibian and reptile walk that will involve checking under cover boards — a common surveying method used by herpetologists. Rene Wendell from Hoffmann Bird Club will lead an owl prowl and early morning bird walk, and Ben Nickley of Berkshire Bird Observatory will also conduct a bird banding demo.
Click here for a detailed schedule of the program.
DATE: Saturday, September 23 to Sunday, September 24
TIME: Noon to Noon (12pm–12pm)
LOCATION: April Hill Education and Conservation Center, 62 N Undermountain Rd, South Egremont, MA (Link to map)
Biological surveys and expert-led walks will be conducted in Bow Wow Woods – a 50-acre parcel of land just off Rte 41 on Bow Wow Rd – which was recently acquired by Greenagers and will soon be protected by a conservation restriction to be held by the Sheffield and Egremont Land Trusts. There are two half-mile trail loops in Bow Wow Woods: one on relatively flat ground and another that descends a small hillside before running alongside vernal pools and wetlands. All other activities will take place at April Hill.
SEEKING VOLUNTEERS! Volunteers will primarily greet visitors at the registration table, ensure they sign in, and direct folks to ongoing activities; this is an excellent opportunity to meet community members and specialists in all kinds of biological fields! Click here to learn more and sign up.
Following the closing remarks on Sunday, Greenagers is hosting a community celebration with food trucks from 1:00–3:00 PM at April Hill. All are welcome, and the food is free! RSVP here.
If you’d like to learn more about this 24-hour biological survey, visit www.berkshirebioblitz.org.
This year’s program is organized and sponsored by Berkshire Environmental Action Team (BEAT) and Nature Academy of the Berkshires. It’s co-sponsored by Greenagers, Hoffmann Bird Club, Greylock Federal Credit Union, and Panera.
April Hill Education and Conservation Center serves as the headquarters for Greenagers as well as a resource for community gatherings and education. Conserved in perpetuity, April Hill has nature trails, vegetable gardens, orchards, pastures, and hayfields and abuts the Appalachian Trail — linking it to the Berkshire-Taconic range and beyond.
It is with gratitude and humility that Greenagers acknowledges that the land they steward—including April Hill and all of their conservation work sites—is part of the ancestral homelands of the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans, the indigenous peoples of this land. Despite tremendous hardship in being forced from here, today their community resides in Wisconsin and is known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community. Greenagers pays honor and respect to Stockbridge-Munsee Community ancestors, past and present, as they commit to building a more inclusive and equitable space for all. At Greenagers, they commit to educating young people about indigenous inhabitants of this land and their history and incorporating race and land equity into their curricula and practices. They also commit to paying an annual voluntary land tax to the Stockbridge-Munsee Community.