NaSA PoD Update #5

Recently, Jim and I worked together to carefully machine some specialized support pieces for the Solar Inverter Battery Support Structure (SIBaSS – pronounced “Sea Bass” – LOL).

Take a look at some of the photos from that adventure below.

Drilling precision holes in a block of aluminum is fun!

Drilling a hole in a piece of T-Slot aluminum.

Aluminum blocks, strap cleats, and T-Slots in the process of being assembled.

Precision work.

All these parts were then applied to the SIBaSS and, with the webbing straps I will add soon, will all work together to hold the batteries and inverter securely in place.

At this point in the build, this is what the SIBaSS looks like. The solar inverter is on the top of the structure and the four batteries are below.

The aluminum blocks and yellow T-slot battery spacers are now in their final positions.

The back of the assembly. The large triangular gussets in the corners will serve to further strengthen the structure keeping it rigid and secure when the PoD is rolling down the road. A few small parts are still needed before the SiBaSS is complete and can finally be installed in the PoD.

In other news, we have transported the PoD to the Red Dog the welder who is working his magic and, as I write this, installing the solar array support structure onto the PoD. Here are a few photos of this major step in the process. Below, Red is toting the PoD into the shop with his forklift.

The PoD in the shop. Note the plastic shields I installed over the future window holes and air conditioner service port in the side – it was raining. Of note – the skylight Jim and I fabricated and installed a few days ago had a very good test today and I am happy to report that it passed with zero leaks.

Day One: Getting ready to begin the welding job.

Hmmm, I might need to re-locate the brake lights to the other side of the steel support beams.

Getting things perfectly aligned before the welding begins.

Array support structure taking shape.

Precision cuts require precision tools.

The solar array support rack being aligned. The solar modules (panels) will bolt directly to the shiny pieces of aluminum in the below photo.

This rack system is a special challenge since the roof of the PoD is made of fiberglass. The next photo shows one of the long “foot-like” structures Red is fabricating that will help to distribute the weight of the solar array and the awning over the entire rooftop.

Day Two of the construction: the rack is starting to come together.

One of the three brackets where the awning will attach.

Stay tuned – there is much more to come.

In closing, this is Tripod the Eastern box turtle – the ENP mascot. It will not be long before the warm sun of springtime awakens her from her long winter’s nap 🙂

Please subscribe and follow this blog for more updates.

We hope to have the ENP NaSA PoD in service on or before Earth Day 2022!

This amazing project will serve to inspire and educate all the curiosity seekers it will meet. But to do this right – we do still need your support. If you choose to assist us in making this project a reality, this unique mobile classroom will greatly benefit the nature and wildlife conservation, science, reality, common sense, and renewable energy awareness education for all our outreach program participants in the WNC region as well as our wonderful students at Trails Carolina and Trails Momentum who will all greatly benefit from the wonders it will contain while they are in class and in the field on expedition. 

 Please consider supporting this project via the donate link on our website or our GoFundMe page:   www.gofundme.com/lets-build-a-mobile-outreach-classroom

The construction and use of this unique mobile classroom will be documented on this blog, our end-of-year newsletter, and soon on our YouTube channel.  

 The ENP NaSA PoD and the Mighty Bolt EV (our primary outreach vehicle) are owned by ENP and used primarily as the ENP company outreach vehicle and mobile outreach classroom.  They will be charged and fueled primarily with cleanly generated electricity provided by the ENP/Trails student-built classroom solar array and NaSA PoD’s rooftop solar array. They will both serve as outstanding teaching tools for our Trails students, ENP outreach program participants, and everyone we meet via our outreach programs.

Please note: any/all ads that appear below this post are not provided or endorsed by ENP nor are we supported in any way by these ads – they are an automated feature of WordPress.com.

NaSA PoD Project Update #4

Yesterday I took the PoD to meet metal fabricator Tim from Appalachian Sheet Metal and Fabrication in Weaverville, NC. Tim made some detailed measurements of the side of the Casita where the custom windows will be installed. Below is a photo of Tim making his measurements in preparation for the fabrication of the window frames.

It will take a few weeks for Tim to work his magic but hopefully, by early April I will be able to share the details of what Tim has created for us.

Also today Jim and I installed the PoD’s new skylight in the hole left by the removal of the old roof vent fan. In the next sequence of photos, you will see the process from start to finish. The first photo is taken from the roof of the Casita before I prepped the area around the hole in the roof. You can see the remnants of the old sealant as well as several broken screws sticking through the roof.

The old sealant came off easily with a razor blade but the old screw shafts had to be filed down to the roof-line with a metal file – that took a while. In the next photo, the surface has been prepped and cleaned and all screw shafts have been filed down.

Next Jim and I constructed the aluminum frames to hold the Lexan skylight. This was not as easy as it sounds and I could never have done it alone – Jim’s knowledge, expertise, and very nice tools allowed us to miter the corners of the frames and get everything lined up in preparation for installation

THANK YOU JIM!!

This is a photo of the skylight in its frame (with protective blue plastic coverings) just before I installed it on the roof.

In this next photo, we see the skylight installed in its final location on the rooftop with plenty of sealant under and around the skylight.

We needed to create a custom ultra-low-profile skylight since the solar array and its frame will need to be placed as close to the roofline as possible. An interesting point of note is that soon, with the placement of the solar array above the roof – the sky will not be very visible through this skylight. Maybe when that happens we will need to call it a solar array viewing port.

Soon, when the weather returns to something like spring (it is now 20F and windy with a dusting of snow on the ground!) I will work to install a trim piece around the interior of the skylight port…which at the moment appears as in the next photo (taken before I installed the skylight). The top layer is the fiberglass shell of the RV. Below that is a gap of about 1/2 inch, then the foam backing of the carpet, and finally the carpet itself. I plan to install an edge-hiding trim piece around the carpet and then glue the carpet up to the ceiling with construction glue…but to do that we will need warmer weather.

That is where we are in the build at the moment and we hope to have much warmer weather soon – so hopefully, more modifications will happen much faster.

I leave you with two of my furry family members who were enjoying the sunshine while Jim and I worked on the PoD. That is Cosmo the cat in the foreground rolling in the warm moss, and Tangie the “Carolina Mountain Red Dog” (rescued mixed-breed terrier thing) in the background. They both love the warmth of the early spring sunshine 🙂

We hope to have the ENP NaSA PoD in service on or before Earth Day 2022!

Stay tuned – there is much more to come.

Please subscribe and follow this blog for more updates.

This is an amazing project that will serve to educate and inspire all the curiosity seekers it meets. But to do this thing right – we do still need your support. If you choose to assist us in making this project a reality, this unique mobile classroom will greatly benefit the nature and wildlife conservation, science, and renewable energy awareness education of all of our outreach program participants in the WNC region as well as our wonderful students at Trails Carolina and Trails Momentum who will all greatly benefit from the wonders it will contain while they are in the field on expedition. 

 Please consider supporting this project via the donate link on our website or our GoFundMe page:   www.gofundme.com/lets-build-a-mobile-outreach-classroom

The construction and use of this unique mobile classroom will be documented on this blog, our end-of-year newsletter, and soon on our YouTube channel.  

 The ENP NaSA PoD and the Mighty Bolt EV (our primary outreach vehicle) are owned by ENP and used primarily as the ENP company outreach vehicle and mobile outreach classroom.  They will be charged and fueled primarily with cleanly generated electricity provided by the ENP/Trails student-built classroom solar array and NaSA PoD’s rooftop solar array. They will serve as outstanding teaching tools for our Trails students, ENP outreach program participants, and everyone we meet via our outreach programs.

Please note: any/all ads that appear below this post are not provided or endorsed by ENP nor are we supported in any way by these ads – they are an automated feature of WordPress.com.

NaSA PoD Project Update #3

Over the past few days, much progress has been made.

The new door latch has been installed and works fabulously!

Over the last week or so I have also been working to get the PoD’s water system installed. This will be needed to supply the PoD’s human and animal inhabitants with life-giving water during outreach events -especially multi-day events – and allow the humans to grab a shower after the end of a long day of bringing nature and science knowledge to the masses 🙂 The mass of the 25 gallons (200 lbs) of water in the two tanks (the 3rd is the water heater) will also serve as a ballast system to help counter-balance the added mass in the solar-electronics cabinet.

Step one: Find a place to install the new water tank – this looks like a good location.

Step two: move the water pump to a new location.

Step Three: replace old water pipes with new PEX water pipes.

…and even more new pipes. In the next photo, you can see how all the various water pipes connect the two tanks allowing them to balance the water supply between the two tanks. The off-white upper tank pictured in this image is also where the water filler is located – its fill hatch is on the outside of the vehicle at the end of the white PVC tube on top of the tank. Also in this photo, you can see the new 50 Amp shore power connection cable coiled on the bottom right of the image.

We also installed the new water filler hatch – but we first had to make a larger hole. We made the new hatch hole using an existing hole – the old 12-volt battery off-gassing hole – a bit larger to accommodate the new fill point.

This is what the old battery vent port looked like before we modified it.

Marking the new hole…

Cutting the new hole…

The new water filler port installed.

We also installed a new shore power cord port after the original unit suffered a RUD (Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly) while I was attempting to open it one cold day in February – the plastic was old and brittle and just fell apart in my hands. Hopefully, this new one will serve us for many years.

Back to the water system.

After the pump and all the pipes were in place, we then installed the new 9-gallon water tank.

The system is not yet connected and tested since we are missing a few small water line adapters that we could not source locally. They should arrive later this week and will complete the final connections that will make the new water system complete. If you look closely in this image and to the left of the center you will see where the adapters are needed – where the blue water line ends in a brass 90-degree elbow fitting – it is at this location where we need to have a unique small adapter to connect the water line to the tank. We also need to install a system drain valve – it will go in the space above the brass elbow I just mentioned and will have an outlet tube that passes through the RV’s floor allowing the system to be fully drained in the event of cold weather.

We also installed a clean-out port (the circular white port in the top of the original water tank in the below photo) as well as the new filler line between the tank and the externally mounted gravity fill port we mentioned earlier. The clear hose on the right is part of the water system’s air venting system.

We filled some old gas line and drain holes with body putty then drilled some huge holes through the floor of the RV and into the frame and then preliminarily installed the raised and strengthened sub-floor in the soon-to-be solar-electronics cabinet. It is not bolted in place just yet – we still need to sand and paint the fiberglass walls, let them dry, then we will be able to bolt it all together – but to do that, we need warmer weather…

We installed an external weather-proof heavy-duty outlet. This will be used to power the presentation monitor as well as the microscope station and Level 1 EVSE (electric car charger).

Lastly, we preliminarily mounted the final two Victron solar storage batteries on their support structure and then compared them to the cardboard analogue we constructed several weeks ago. The cardboard unit is smaller because it was constructed without a frame – but not to worry – the support frame’s measurements were accounted for so all should fit nicely in the new solar-electronics cabinet.

The carport staging area is looking crowded. Hopefully, we will soon be able to start putting all these parts back into the PoD.

A great photo from many years ago. During this week in 2017, I took this photo of the first toad of spring. Note: the First Phase of our classroom solar array is in the process of being constructed in the background 🙂

That is where we are in the build at the moment and we hope to have much warmer weather soon – so hopefully, more modifications will happen much faster.

Currently, we are still waiting for word from the welder and trying to find a sheet metal fabricator. Once they work their magic we will be able to install the solar modules and continue with the installation of further components. Warmer weather in the early spring will be most helpful and much will happen fast so please subscribe and follow this blog for more updates on this unique project!

We hope to have the ENP NaSA PoD in service on or before Earth Day 2022!

Stay tuned – there is much more to come.

Please subscribe and follow this blog for more updates.

This is an amazing project that will serve to educate and inspire all the curiosity seekers it meets. But to do this thing right – we do still need your support. If you choose to assist us in making this project a reality, this unique mobile classroom will greatly benefit the nature and wildlife conservation, science, and renewable energy awareness education of all of our outreach program participants in the WNC region as well as our wonderful students at Trails Carolina and Trails Momentum who will all greatly benefit from the wonders it will contain while they are in the field on expedition. 

 Please consider supporting this project via the donate link on our website or our GoFundMe page:   www.gofundme.com/lets-build-a-mobile-outreach-classroom

The construction and use of this unique mobile classroom will be documented on this blog, our end-of-year newsletter, and soon on our YouTube channel.  

 The ENP NaSA PoD and the Mighty Bolt EV (our primary outreach vehicle) are owned by ENP and used primarily as the ENP company outreach vehicle and mobile outreach classroom.  They will be charged and fueled primarily with cleanly generated electricity provided by the ENP/Trails student-built classroom solar array and NaSA PoD’s rooftop solar array. They will serve as outstanding teaching tools for our Trails students, ENP outreach program participants, and everyone we meet via our outreach programs.

Please note: any/all ads that appear below this post are not provided or endorsed by ENP nor are we supported in any way by these ads – they are an automated feature of WordPress.com.

Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Didgeridoo–a one of a kind experience!

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While on family vacation over the last week of June I visited the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse National Monument. While there I had a wild idea: would it be possible to play my didgeridoo inside the tallest lighthouse in North America! I doubted that the National Park Service would say yes but it never hurts to ask. I did and they said go for it! I could not believe my luck so I grabbed my didgeridoo, followed a ranger inside, set up some cameras and started to play. The video below shows just a small part of my experience. In reality the camera can show only a one dimensional picture of what I have to say was one of the most unique didgeridoo experiences I have ever had–it was a four dimensional experience for sure. The reverberations of my drones off of the inner walls of the cylindrical brick structure were unbelievably haunting and powerful and a musical memory of the highest level for me. Also, as far as the park service rangers knew it was the first time the drones of the didgeridoo have ever been heard in the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse!
Check out the video below for just a taste of my amazing experience. Be sure to turn up the volume!

Special thanks to the National Park Service for making this possible!

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Earthshine Nature Programs to run in the Mad Mountain Mud Run!

Yes, you heard it right–Earthshine Nature Programs Executive Director Steve O’Neil has formed a mud running team with three of his nature loving friends.  They will be running in the Mad Mountain Mud Run 5K in Hendersonville, NC on Saturday June 1st 2013!

The name of our team is

The Earthshine Nature Nerds

The Nature Nerds are;

Steve O’Neil (captain),

Jenny Geer-Hardwick,

Will Thomas

Steve Atkins

(Hog not included and no animals will be harmed during the mud run)

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Our community goal is to run in support of the Hands On A Child’s Gallery based in Hendersonville, NC with our entry fees and afternoon of muddy fun!

Our nerdy nature goal is to run representing Earthshine Nature Programs as our 2013  fundraiser.  To do this we will need to find sponsors that are willing to support Earthshine Nature Programs with a pledge.  Your pledge will provide direct support to our environmental education and conservation programs and projects and it is tax deductible.

Take a look at the course map below for what we have in store for us!  It should be a muddy fun day!

Mud-Run-Course-2013

Sponsor Awards

Those who sponsor us for $50 or more will receive your logo or name and weblink* on the ENP supporters website (to be updated after the race) and this blog, and on the back of our custom mud run t-shirt that we will proudly wear during the race.

Those who sponsor us for $100 or more will receive your logo or name and weblink* on the ENP supporters website and this blog, and your own custom mud run t-shirt–mud not included.

Those who sponsor us for $500 or more will receive your logo or name and weblink* on the ENP supporters website and this blog, your own custom mud run t-shirt,  and one “Honored Supporter” custom made (by Steve) award which includes a certificate of appreciation and small glass vial filled with a small amount of the actual mud from the race course that we will run through on June first

Those who sponsor us for $1000 or more will receive your logo or name and weblink* on the ENP supporters website and this blog, your own custom mud run t-shirt, one “Honored Supporter” custom made (by Steve) award which includes a certificate of appreciation and small glass vial filled with a small amount of the actual mud from the race course that we will run through on June first, and Steve and his animals will come to you and present one of his Misunderstand Wildlife animal shows with live animals at your birthday party, school or other gathering!

*You can opt-out of having your personal/company information publicized on our shirts/websites if you choose.

The nitty gritty muddy dirt of the sponsorship (rules)

If the Earthshine Nature Nerds team completes the race–all sponsored pledges will be collected from the sponsors by June 15th, 2013.  Supporter awards will be awarded within 30 days following the race.

If the Earthshine Nature Nerds team does not complete the race–no donations will be collected unless you choose to support us despite the fact.

If the race is cancelled due to weather or other circumstances beyond our control you may choose to honor your sponsorship agreement or not.  All donations will be used to provide direct support to our environmental conservation projects and programs and it is tax deductible.

If you would like to sponsor our team please contact me and we will make arrangements.

You may sponsor us with either monetary pledges or supplies.  If you would like to pledge supplies please contact us for a list of our current needs.

No matter if you choose to support us or not,  please do come out to Berkley Park and watch all of the mud runners get muddy and have fun for a couple of great causes–the education of children and conservation of wildlife and nature!

If you know anyone who may like to support ENP with a sponsorship or donation please forward this post on to them–THANK YOU!

NOTE: The Nature Nerds will video/photograph their perspective of the race using the latest technology including HD GoPro cameras and more so that their nerdy muddy experience will be able to be shared by all!  A few days following the race look for the video to be posted here on the ENP Nature Blog!

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THANK YOU!!

That’s all for now…I need to go train!

Steve O’Neil, ENP Executive Director and Mad Mountain Mud Runner

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Earthshine Nature Programs Year End Report and New Beginnings!

2012 was a great year for Earthshine Nature Programs!  We have had many great high notes, a couple of low points–but change is the way of nature.  Scroll down for a recap of last year and a taste of what is to come for the future of ENP!

Tracking Catherine!

Tracking Catherine in the spring!

We started off with a wonderful second annual open house and benefit in the spring!  We had a great turn out,  Potter the Opossum made an appearance and we learned great information about the beautiful and endangered Green Salamander from Alan Cameron–aka “The Salamander Whisperer”–and amazing details on the life of the Eastern Hellbender from NC Wildlife Resources Commission Biologist Lori Williams.

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Biologist Lori Williams with a young Hellbender in July!

We ate copious amounts of wonderful Gelato from Kiwi Gelato in Brevard, drank Buchi Kombucha from Asheville and listened to  great music from the Naughty Pillows as well as a didgeridoo/drum Concert from didgeridoo master John Vorus, Jason Alfrey and yours truly.  Our friend Ben Prater from Wild South spoke to folks about protecting the biodiversity of our beautiful mountains and  Jenny and her mom made tie die with the kids while several volunteers gave great tours of the nature center.

Jenny and her mom running the tie dye area

Jenny and her mom running the tie dye area

Later, naturalist Clint Calhoun and I took a crowd of folks on a turtle tracking hike to find Jimmy Irwin the box turtle and then we took a hike in the forest searching for anything wild an wonderful that we could find.

Clint showing us wonders of botany!

Visiting naturalist Clint Calhoun showing us the wonders of botany during our annual open house!

The silent auction was a huge success and proceeds funded the operation of the nature center, wildlife rehabilitation program and projects for the summer and fall.  Thank you all who visited with us on our second annual fundraiser and supported us with your donations–without you Earthshine Nature Programs would not exist.  THANK YOU ALL!

Beth and a sleepy youngun
Beth and a sleepy youngun

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Cayden Calhoun learning all about botany and box turtles!

Throughout this last year I have presented dozens of wildlife and nature outreach presentations and didgeridoo classes all over western North Carolina.  The photo below was taken at my first program of the year for Brevard Middle School students.

Field day for BMS!

We have spent hundreds of hours in the field visiting with the beautiful nature and wildlife of the woods, fields and streams surrounding Earthshine Lodge.  Many of you joined me on exciting and informative Turtle Tracks tracking expeditions where together we located our radio-tagged Eastern box turtles Jimmy Irwin and Catherine.  We are also continuing to follow the travels of Mrs. Bones the box turtle at our other study site in Cedar Mountain.  Mrs. Bones has continued to follow here annual patterns as she has done over since 2008.  Mr. Bones continues to evade us but I have no doubt that we will find him one day and continue tracking his movements again.  In September I replaced the transmitters on all three turtles so we will now be able to track them for another two years.  Together with your support we have learned a great many things about nature, ecology, biology and beauty of the North Carolina mountains—especially “our” mountain.

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We tracked turtles in the woods…

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We tracked turtles in the fields…

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We tracked turtles on the hills…

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We tracked turtles everywhere!

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We even tracked turtles beside houses!

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And yes, we did find turtles!  Below is the gorgeous Jimmy Irwin–his face is covered in yummy blackberry juice! !

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We also tracked the Timber Rattlesnakes…well, I tracked them actually.

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I am calling 2012 The Summer of the Rattlesnake because I had so many wonderful encounters with rattlesnakes over the last year and learned so much about their ecology and natural movements.  You would think that tracking rattlesnakes would be exciting.  Well, it is not.  It is loads of hard work scrambling through thick brush and brambles, getting scratched, cut, bit by mosquitoes, spiders and biting flies, falling down and getting almost skewered by pointy sticks, boiling in the heat, drenched by heavy rains, wandering in the dark with only a tiny flashlight and even hitching rides from friends…only to usually find your study subject coiled in a resting coil…in other words, asleep.  Yes, that is what Timber rattlesnakes do most of the time…sleep….and wait for prey to come to them.

Now tiger tracking–that would be exciting!

I also helped state biologists install a covert wildlife camera to monitor rattlesnake poaching at a remote den site in the national forest–but that is another story.

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I attempted to win a new didgeridoo by submitting photos to a photo contest on Facebook–below were two of my possible entries.  Can you find the Timber rattlesnake in the first one?

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This next photo was the one I submitted to the contest.  Even though it did not win I owe a HUGE THANK YOU to those of you that voted for me and a special thanks to Steve and Mason Atkins for trekking to the waterfall to get the photo for me.

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The highlight of my “summer of the rattlesnake” came when I was invited to visit a Timber rattlesnake den site where we saw seven large and possibly gravid (pregnant) rattlesnakes–it was an amazing experience and a great honor to be able to share space with such beautiful creatures.  Take a look some video I shot of the encounter below!

One of the biggest reptile discoveries of the summer was that—like Eastern box turtles, Timber rattlesnakes have high site fidelity.  This simply means that they return annually to the same places within their habitat to meet their survival needs.  I documented both Utsanati and Zoe using many of the exact locations that they have used over the past year, for example–in the spring Utsanati returned to within 30 feet of the site where I first discovered him at about the same time as he did in June of 2011.  A few weeks later I found him in the woodpile where he had sheltered for several weeks after his transmitter implantation surgery in the summer of 2011.  Then in the late summer he returned to the same area of the power line access-way where he spent several weeks at the same time last year.  Then, at the end of the season he moved back to the exact same den site that he used last winter.  Zoe, the female rattler also seems to use the same sites time and again.

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Although I have only been tracking them for a little over a year and a half it is my belief that, like the box turtles,  Timber rattlesnakes are creatures of habit and use the same sites on an annual basis.  This knowledge along with the data collected from almost 5 years of tracking the box turtles tells me that moving a wild reptile more than a few hundred yards could be very detrimental to its survival.  I also believe that Timber rattlesnakes seem to prefer edge habitat (the edges of fields, forests and areas that have been disturbed or modified by humans) to the cover of the dense woods.  These edge habitats provide great cover in the form of dense brush and downed timber as well as rock and brush piles–great places to take shelter and hunt for food.  These edges also provide great opportunities for thermoregulation–i.e. sunbathing–which as we all know the reptiles must have due to their ectothermic (cold blooded) nature.  What does this mean for those of you with box turtles and rattlesnakes on your land?

Utsanati on October 04 2012

Utsanati on October 04 2012

Well, you must be doing something right to play host to these remarkable creatures so keep doing whatever it is you are doing and the wildlife will be happy and continue to visit your property.  If you encounter a box turtle in your garden or yard simply thank him for eating all the slugs, snails and beetles that would have otherwise eaten your garden veggies.  He may occasionally eat a strawberry or tomato or two but I think that is a small price to pay for you to not have to use pesticides to poison your property and your food.  The rattlesnake and his kin are a friend of man because they eat countless rodents that would otherwise destroy your crops, invade your homes and spread diseases to your family and pets.  It is up to you to watch where you walk when outside during the warm months of the year.  Use a flashlight when walking outside at night and use caution at dusk and dawn.  If you have small children or pets and believe that you have Timber rattlesnakes and Copperheads on your property–please do not kill them,  just call me if you are in the WNC area and I will come out and survey your site and help you decide how to manage the situation in a more sustainable way.  If you live far away from my stomping grounds feel free to give me a call and we can chat about snakes anytime.

They cannot adapt to our way of life,  so we must adapt to theirs.

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Betty the young box turtle was released back into the wild late in the summer.  She was one of our head start turtles and had lived with Meredith for awhile,  then she lived at the nature center for the last couple of years until she was large enough to fend for herself.  Good luck Betty!  THANK YOU Meredith and Betty (the human)  for rescuing her!

With the good always comes the not so good.  Sadly, in the spring I was called on a wildlife rescue to pick up a strangely acting snake.  It turned out to be a Black ratsnake and it was acting very lethargic.  I immediately rushed the snake to our reptile vet a Dr. Chris Coleman and he treated it but sadly it was too sick to survive.

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I believe that it had been poisoned indirectly via a rat or mouse that it had recently eaten and that the rodent had recently eaten rodent bait–which in turn poisoned the snake.  Yet another great reason to live an organic lifestyle and not put out poisons and baits to kill wildlife–let the snakes, hawks and other predators live and they will control the rodents for you.

Then, last June, we said goodbye to our sweet friend Potter the Opossum.  He was attacked by an unknown predator that broke into his enclosure dealing him great damage that he was unable to recover from.  Below are a couple of the last photographs of Potter O. Possum.  The first one is from when he made his second appearance on local television just before the open house.

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This photo was taken by friend of ENP Steve Atkins on the day of the Open House.  That is Steve’s son Mason feeding Potter a treat.

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A few months after Potter passed away we acquired a hand raised young Opossum named Crash from our friends at the WNC Nature Center.  Like Potter, Crash is very sweet and has a gentle personality and wants to eat everything all the time.  Here is a photo of Crash and I the day I brought him home.

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Crash is much larger now and he has become a wonderful education Opossum.  He will live with us at ENP in a large, custom built, heavy duty enclosure that our friend Jim Hardy is building as I write this–THANK YOU Jim! .  If you would like to meet him just contact us and we can set up an appointment with Crash.  Below is a great photo of my friend Saya–Mo and Jenny’s daughter–Crash and I in September.

Saya and I with Crash

Saya and me with Crash

Over the summer I also worked part time at Camp Illahee as a naturalist and environmental educator.  I worked to teach the girls about the value of nature, reptiles, opossum’s and the didgeridoo–it was a wonderful summer at a wonderful camp!

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With the help of the campers at Camp Illahee we rehabilitated seven baby Opossums during the summer and then released them at Earthshine.  It was a great learning experience for the girls and life for the young Opossums.  If you are looking for a great resident summer camp to send your daughter to please consider Camp Illahee in Brevard, NC.

During the summer I was awarded the Turtle of Change award from “Salamander Whisperer “Alan Cameron–that is Alan passing the turtle to me in the below photo.  I feel greatly honored to have been a recipient of this beautiful award promoting good and lasting change in the world–we need it now more than ever.  alansteve

Over the next few weeks I carried the Turtle of Change with me on my travels and in my field work.  The turtle was with some friends and I as when we played didgeridoo for the turtle on the street in Asheville, NC and then journeyed to a very powerful performance by folk/didgeridoo musician and wildlife conservationist Xavier Rudd.

Busking in Asheville for the Turtle of Change with John Vorus and Chance Feimster

Busking in Asheville for the Turtle of Change with John Vorus and Chance Feimster

Check out this video of our Turtle of Change/didgeridoo experience in Asheville and Pisgah Forest!

Below is a photo of the Turtle of Change with Veterinarian Dr. Lee bolt and Dr. Ron Davis just before we implanted a radio transmitter into a Timber Rattlesnake in the name of wildlife conservation and education.

The Turtle of Change with Dr. Bolt and Dr. Davis and a Timber rattlesnake.  The snake was about to have a tiny radio transmitter implanted to facilitate tracking it in the wild.

The Turtle of Change with Dr. Bolt and Dr. Davis and a Timber rattlesnake. The snake was about to have a tiny radio transmitter implanted to facilitate tracking it in the wild.

John Vorus and I playing didgeridoo for the Turtle of Change on a remote rock outcrop in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Didgeridoo and the Turtle of Change on top of a remote rock outcrop.

Didgeridoo and the Turtle of Change on top of a remote rock outcrop.

Presenting the Turtle of Change to John Rucker and his Turtledogs

Presenting the Turtle of Change to John Rucker and his Turtledogs

I then passed the turtle off to John Rucker and his Turtledogs so that it could continue it’s travels across the earth.  I wrote three different blog postings about the turtle of change and it’s journey with me.  You can read those postings by following these links: part 1, part 2 and part 3.  

Speaking of change we know that the only thing constant in nature is change and that without change things stagnate.

That being said…things are going to change for Earthshine Nature Programs.  We are in the process of moving most of our operation to the campus of Trails Momentum near Dupont State Forest in Little River, NC.  As you can imagine, this is a HUGE change for us however, we believe that change is good.  This move will be a good thing for many reasons.  Momentum will have three times the space as in the Rabbit Hole at Earthshine–space in which to expand in the future!  We have already moved almost all of our animals and habitats to the new site and built a predator proof, walk-in Opossum habitat for our resident Opossum “Crash.” We will use his previous,  smaller habitat as a rehab pen for the orphaned and injured opossums we will undoubtedly take in during the spring and summer.  We have also built five, 8 foot long heavy duty tables for all of our habitats and aquariums and we will soon be building a custom walk-in tortoise and Iguana “jungle room” habitat so that we can house large tortoises and iguanas that have outgrown their suburban homes.  ENP friend and supporter Steve Atkins was instrumental in setting up a donation to ENP that included a 225 gallon aquarium with all hardware that will be used as a habitat for “Crikey” the Cayman!  Coming in the early spring of 2013 will be an outdoor box turtle rehabilitation enclosure similar to the one at Earthshine–only it will be larger and have a quarantine area for new arrivals as well as an area for non-releasable “wildlife ambassador” education turtles.  There will be two ponds with solar powered water circulation/filtration systems and several wild blueberry bushes for the turtles to munch on.  We also have plans to set up a box turtle tracking program similar to Turtle Tracks project and possibly a snake tracking program as well.  We plan to stock the new nature center with new education and science exhibits, a larger resource library as well as technology such as a flat screen TV and USB microscope and now we even have a full size refrigerator (donated by Earthshine!), and a dedicated storage, food prep, and triage room for injured wildlife–how is all that for moving up in the world!

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You may be asking yourself what will happen to the Nature Center at Earthshine?  It will continue but it will be small at first with only a few animals and habitats.  Over the next few months I plan to construct/purchase and install several new habitats when funds allow and then stock them with ex-pets and other non-releasable rescue animals that need forever homes.  The outdoor box turtle enclosure will remain at Earthshine with Tripod, Rowdy, Crash and the other resident turtles so you will still get to visit with your favorite turtles when you visit Earthshine.   I will also be switching out animals from time to time to give the ones at each location a rest form the daily grind.

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As far as for me–sadly, I will be leaving Earthshine as a full time employee.  My time with you at  Earthshine I will always cherish as one of the most important and productive times in my life and you have all touched my life as I hope I have touched yours.  The winds of change are taking me in a new direction and now I will be working with the Trails Carolina / Trails Momentum as a science, nature and ecology teacher/field educator.  I will continue to work for Earthshine as a part-time employee and if you want to see me at the lodge during your visit please contact the lodge and make arrangements in advance so that I can make it a point to be there for you if at all possible.  I will continue to assist the crew in the maintenance of the nature center and turtle habitat and I will also be continuing to track Catherine and Jimmy Irwin the Eastern box turtles and Usanati and Zoe the Timber rattlesnakes for as long as possible.

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I will also continue to run Earthshine Nature Programs as a non profit separate from Earthshine.  I will continue to present my wildlife, nature and didgeridoo outreach programs and edit the ENP website, Facebook page and  this blog in order to bring the wonders of nature to you so you can count on many more interesting nature stories in the future.

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The last group of Turtle Trackers of 2012 with one of the largest trees on the property!!

Speaking of stories, the most recent stories I have for you are actually videos! The first one is “Crikey” the Cayman eating his lunch!

How cool was that!

The next two videos are on Vimeo so you will have to follow this link to view the first one.  It is a professional clip done by friend of Earthshine Kevin Wild of Drawbridge Media–it is very well done!  Here is another great video about Earthshine by Drawbridge–Thanks Kevin!

Now is the time for you to consider making a donation to help us fund the new Earthshine Nature Programs.  If you are unable to donate, please feel free to share our information with friends and contacts who may want to support our cause.  Monetary donations are gladly accepted but if you you have supplies/materials that you think we may be able to use or unwanted pet reptiles/amphibians that are looking for a new home please contact us anytime so we can discuss it.  Receipts available upon request.  Earthshine Nature Programs is 100% volunteer operated so 100% of your donation will be used for the care and feeding of our rescue and resident animals and in support of our wildlife conservation projects and outreach programs at both nature centers and on the road.

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THANK YOU ALL for making Earthshine Nature Programs a reality!

MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR to everyone!

Merry Christmas!

Steve O’Neil

Naturalist

Earthshine Nature Programs

I leave those of you that have read this far a quote from my favorite musician Xavier Rudd:

“Our world keeps spinning round and round it goes, human nature keeps spreading its disease, and our children keep growing up with what they know through what we teach and what they see.
And so its only a question of the time we have, and the lives that our children need.  As they can only keep growing up with what they know through what we teach and what they see.”–from Better People by Xavier Rudd

New nature photos from ENP!

Check out several new photos from adventures with Earthshine Nature Programs from over the last few weeks–enjoy!

Turtle of Change visit’s Asheville, NC street buskers and Xavier Rudd in concert!

On October 20th the Blue Turtle award known as “Turtle Grupo Tortuguero” made a special trip to Asheville, North Carolina. While there it witnessed some street buskers playing their didgeridoo (yidaki) for good and positive change. The turtle then was present at a concert by “multi-instrumentalist, world class surfer, animal rights activist and nature conservationist” Xavier Rudd. The next day the turtle journeyed to the top of a remote granitic dome in the middle of the Pisgah National Forest near Brevard, NC for a look at the fall scenery and a special didgeridoo performance by Earthshine Nature Programs Naturalist Steve O’Neil. View the video of highlights from the adventure below.

My challenge for you reading this: PLEASE do something good today for your family, friends, community, animals and Nature. Pass the positive energy along and keep it moving. Let’s create a wave of good and positive, lasting change that will make your communities and the world a better place for all creatures.

Musicians in order of appearance: Steve O’Neil, Chance Feimster, John Vorus and Xavier Rudd.

For more about Earthshine Nature Programs and Steve O’Neil visit: www.earthshinenature.com and www.earthshinenature.wordpress.com

For John Vorus visit: www.johnvorus.com

For Xavier Rudd visit: www.xavierrudd.com

Learn more about the Blue Turtle/Turtle of Change Award at www.blueturtle.com