Livestock Farmhands Volunteers

Godiva

Godiva, one of our spring Hog Island Sheep lambs.

If you love animals and would like to spend a few hours each week working on the farm, join the Livestock Farmhands volunteer team on Saturday mornings from 9 am to 12 pm to assist with the successful management of our Heritage Livestock Program. Volunteers will work closely with staff members to help feed, clean the barn, repair livestock fencing, clear brush, maintain pasture and barnyard areas, and more.

Livestock Farmhands also assist the livestock team during lambing and calving season, help with spring sheep shearing, and assist in the fall at the Charles County Fair. The animals we manage as part of our program are: American Milking Devon Cattle, Black Turkeys, Hog Island Sheep, Ossabaw Hogs, and various heritage chickens including Buckeyes. No previous experience is necessary to join, but volunteers must be comfortable around large animals and animals with horns.

If you are interested in becoming a part of the Livestock Farmhands team, please e-mail the Volunteer Coordinator, Casey, at volunteers@accokeek.org.

For more information on this volunteer program, check out the Position Description.

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It’s Amazing What an Eagle Scout Can Do

In January, a young man named Ian (the son of one of our bluebird monitors) contacted us to see if he could do his Eagle Scout Service Project at the foundation. I had just attended my cousin’s Court of Honor ceremony and I was so impressed with everything he did in order to achieve the rank that I was really excited to get the chance to work with Ian. Ian did not disappoint, and less than four months later, we have an absolutely beautifully renovated Event Kitchen to share with our visitors as we head into our busiest season.

When we first started meeting with Ian, we presented him with several things on site in desperate need of attention–broken and rotting bird blinds, certain sections of trail, the pavilion, and our Event Kitchen. Luckily for us, he decided to go with the biggest project, and the one that we needed the most help with–the renovation of our Event Kitchen. It would be a huge undertaking and require a lot of manpower, but Ian entered the planning phase of his project with the goal of a late spring completion date.

Over the next couple months, Ian spent 25 hours planning and preparing for the project. He completed an incredibly detailed project proposal, calculated the amount of material that would need to be ordered, planned for tools and other supplies, and recruited a group of volunteers that would help with the renovation on the two days he designated for the project–April 27 and May 4.

A total of 24 volunteers showed up over two days and put in about 185 hours to completely re-side and stain the entire building. It was not all smooth sailing, and Ian and Matt worked together to figure out what to do about rotted posts, bent door hinges, and a variety of other surprise challenges, but we made it through under Ian’s guidance and somehow managed to finish in those two days. I cannot speak highly enough about the amount of time and the quality of the work that Ian put in to his project with us, and we will forever be grateful that he chose us for his project.

Check out the photos below to see the Event Kitchen’s amazing transformation over two weekends:

A "before" shot of the siding

A “before” shot of the siding

The demolition phase begins!

The demolition phase begins!

Pulling off the old siding was fairly quick work...Now on to the hard part!

Pulling off the old siding was fairly quick work…Now on to the hard part!

First side is on and ready to be stained

First side is on and ready to be stained

Beginning of Day 2--Starting off with a safety briefing

Beginning of Day 2–Starting off with a safety briefing

Almost finished with the siding

Almost finished with the siding

Ian overseeing one of our biggest challenges--the doors

Ian overseeing one of our biggest challenges–the doors

The Survivors celebrating the end of Day 2

The Survivors celebrating the end of Day 2

The finished Event Kitchen--isn't she beautiful?

The finished Event Kitchen–isn’t she beautiful?

Thank you again to Ian and all of the volunteers who came out on April 27 and May 4 to make this transformation possible. I had so much fun being a part of this project and the time and skill you dedicated to it is truly remarkable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Denison Landscaping Selects Accokeek Foundation as a “40 Green Initiatives” Project Site

To commemorate their 40th Anniversary, Denison Landscaping is giving back to the communities it serves by conducting 40 in-kind landscaping projects to be completed throughout the year.

As a part of this “40 Green Initiatives” project, the Accokeek Foundation was selected to identify a landscaping project on site that would improve its daily operations. After discussing the various needs of the site with members of the Denison staff, installing an irrigation system in the Accokeek Foundation’s Museum Garden was identified as the project. Maintained with the help of volunteers, the Museum Garden is an educational space filled with modern and heirloom herbs, flowers, and vegetables. This quiet spot on Cedar Lane is used as a venue for educational programs, workshops, and performances, and is designed to teach visitors about agriculture and the environment on a small scale.

David Bise, Denison Landscaping’s irrigation specialist, brought his team to the garden last Thursday to work on the project. Through initial survey of the garden they discovered waterlines that had been installed many years ago but had not been used in at least 20 years. Luckily, through the expertise of Bise and his team, they were able to get the previous system working with minimal disruption to the garden and by utilizing the resources already in place. They updated the original system by replacing a couple of pipes and installing two additional quick couplers to ensure accurate irrigation throughout the garden.

The project was completed in less than a day and with great accuracy and persistence. The everyday tending to the Museum Garden is now a much simpler and less time consuming task. The Accokeek Foundation is proud to have been a part of this commemoration of 40 years of business for Denison Landscaping.

Denison Landscaping and Nursery, Inc. was formed in 1973 and has grown from a three-man operation into one of the most successful landscaping companies in the Mid-Atlantic region. Denison Landscaping is a family owned business and they strive to maintain a people-oriented philosophy that will ensure the delivery of the quality landscaping product their customers expect and deserve.

Presently, they own and operate growing nurseries totaling over 700 acres. They also own a 9 acre wholesale facility in Southern Maryland and a 40 acre Garden Center/Nursery in Fort Washington, Maryland.

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In honor of National Volunteer Week

In the wake of the bombing this month at the Boston Marathon, my facebook newsfeed was inundated with posts and statuses lamenting the state of the world today. Friends and family were sharing thoughts like “what is society coming to?,” “people are pure evil,” and “I fear for my children and their future.” This certainly isn’t anything new–it was the same story after the shootings in Newtown, Connecticut and Aurora, Colorado, and countless other tragedies since, excuse my cliche, the dawn of time. But this time these statuses gave me pause in a way they never really had before. Spending the last few months working with volunteers at the Accokeek Foundation through an AmeriCorps State program has given me an entirely new perspective. After spending so much time with so many wonderful and selfless individuals it’s impossible for me to feel so pessimistic about the “state of the world” today. My volunteers have shown me that for every tragedy like the Boston bombing there are just as many, if not more, acts of kindness happening every day.

My first real glimpse of what dedicated service to others looks like came in the form of our three volunteer winter farm assistants. In just three months, these individuals donated 235.75 hours to help run a winter farm market that would provide the community with fresh local farm produce throughout the cold winter months. They each spent about 20 hours a week working out in the fields in the middle of January and February to maintain and harvest the vegetables sold at the market they ran at the end of each week.

The farm market has since been followed by a string of volunteers who constantly challenge the idea that “no one would ever want to do that for free.” We now have with us a group of three volunteers who come every week to tend to the colonial cornfields in order to save our heritage breed of Virginia gourdseed corn; three volunteers who work in our gardens and take time to answer questions for visitors that stop by; two volunteers that work alongside farm staff on the Ecosystem Farm to share local, organic produce with the community; 11 volunteers that walk our trails each weekend to monitor the native bluebird population; nine volunteers who process wool from our heritage breed sheep and help teach others colonial textile arts; three volunteers who help educate the public about Southern Maryland food traditions; and two volunteers who are here every weekend to work with our heritage breed animals (everything from mucking the stalls to shearing our sheep). Each month, this dependable core of volunteers give the foundation and the community a resource which no one really has extra to spare–time. Time that could be spent doing a million other things, but which they choose to give in service of their community.

And it’s not just our regular volunteers that inspire me to feel this way. It’s the student service learning volunteers who come because a class required it of them, and stay because they found a community need they wanted to help satisfy. It’s the 11 students from Brandeis University in Massachusetts who gave up their spring break to volunteer. It’s the 62 people who gave up their Saturday morning to brave the cold and wind while picking up trash from the Potomac River shoreline. And it’s the 57 people who kicked off National Volunteer Week by spending a Sunday morning removing invasive species and preparing garden beds for Earth Day.

It is all of these people that I want to thank and honor this National Volunteer Week. I want to thank them not only for their service to our foundation, but also for what their service means and what their service inspires. In times of cynicism and despair, they remind us that if you take the time to look around your community, there are people there trying to make it a better place.

 

staff thank you website

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Volunteer Spring Clean-Up Day

spring laurel branch websiteSpring is in the air at the Accokeek Foundation–which means there is a lot to do to prepare for the summer season! Come out and join foundation staff on Thursday, June 13 from 10am-12pm for an afternoon of spring cleaning! Help us paint, plant, trim, weed, prune, mulch, replace, remove, and pick-up around the site. This is a great volunteering opportunity for families, service-learning students, as well as Boy/Girl Scout and corporate groups. Please wear attire appropriate for working outdoors and bring work gloves if you have them.

For more information, and to sign up, please contact Casey Lowe at volunteers@accokeek.org

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Volunteer Spring Clean-Up Day

spring laurel branch websiteSpring is in the air at the Accokeek Foundation–which means there is a lot to do to prepare for the summer season! Come out and join foundation staff on Thursday, June 6 from 10am-12pm for an afternoon of spring cleaning! Help us paint, plant, trim, weed, prune, mulch, replace, remove, and pick-up around the site. This is a great volunteering opportunity for families, service-learning students, as well as Boy/Girl Scout and corporate groups. Please wear attire appropriate for working outdoors and bring work gloves if you have them.

For more information, and to sign up, please contact Casey Lowe at volunteers@accokeek.org

Other Clean-Up Dates: June 13, 10am-12pm.

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Volunteer Spring Clean-Up Day

spring laurel branch websiteSpring is in the air at the Accokeek Foundation–which means there is a lot to do to prepare for the summer season! Come out and join foundation staff on Thursday, May 16 from 2pm-5pm for an afternoon of spring cleaning! Help us paint, plant, trim, weed, prune, mulch, replace, remove, and pick-up around the site. This is a great volunteering opportunity for families, service-learning students, as well as Boy/Girl Scout and corporate groups. Please wear attire appropriate for working outdoors and bring work gloves if you have them.

For more information, and to sign up, please contact Casey Lowe at volunteers@accokeek.org

Other Clean-Up Dates: June 6, 10am-12pm; June 13, 10am-12pm.

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CSA Worktrade Positions Available for the 2013 Ecosystem Farm Season

We invite you to join our CSA program through a unique volunteer experience with the Foundation’s Ecosystem Farm, a certified organic farm operation and program that serves as a teaching model for sustainable agriculture and the future of farming. Ecosystem Farm Volunteers will be members of the farm team and will play an important role in helping the farm realize its mission. Volunteers would receive a full season of either a traditional box or market-style CSA subscription in exchange for their fulfillment of one of the following worktrade positions:

Volunteer Ecosystem Farm Gardener - Position FILLED
jose garden SMALLThe Volunteer Ecosystem Farm Gardener will work alongside farm staff to help with the maintenance of the Ecosystem Farm’s perennial herb and flower beds, as well as occasional work in the orchard. Maintenance work may include: weeding, mulching, pruning, and some planting. The Volunteer Ecosystem Farm Gardener should be able to work autonomously as well as take direction from farm staff. There is creative space for the gardener to have input into the garden design, as long as this is approved by farm staff. Download the full position description and apply today!

Volunteer CSA Pick-Up Greeter - Positions FILLED
A Volunteer CSA Pick-Up Greeter will be responsible for overseeing either the Tuesday or Friday CSA pick-up for the entirety of the season. They will act as a liaison between the farm staff and the CSA shareholders and will work with farm  staff to provide the shareholders with information on topics such as: the harvest and produce, ways to prepare and eat  different items on the pick-list, CSA happenings, and other related farm news. The Pick-Up Greeter will also be responsible for greeting CSA members, checking off that they have received their share, supplying them with that week’s Field Notes, and helping farm staff with paperwork and clean up. Download the full position description and apply today!

Volunteer Field Notes Editor - Positions FILLED

field notes box SMALLThe Volunteer Field Notes Editor position was created to help the farm staff with the weekly publication of the CSA newsletter Field Notes.  The Volunteer Field Notes Editor will be responsible for collecting the information for each issue of Field Notes from farm staff, designing and compiling the issue, and submitting it between Sunday evening and Monday at 2 pm in order to share the vision of the farm with CSA members. The volunteer will work from home on their own computer and software (InDesign 4 preferred), and the volunteer may also have the opportunity to act as “photographer” and take photos for Field Notes issues. Download the full position description and apply today!

To learn more about becoming a volunteer with the Ecosystem Farm, contact Casey at volunteers@accokeek.org. Visit the CSA information page for more details on the program.

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AmeriCorps Works. No really, it does!

I am five months and two days (is it really already March?!) into my service year with the Accokeek Foundation, Volunteer Maryland, and AmeriCorps. There are times when I feel as if I haven’t accomplished anything I was sent here to do. I feel as if the weeks are slipping away into months, and there is no way I will possibly meet all of the goals I set for myself in September. The e-mails and calls seem to never stop coming in, the paperwork in all its glorious tediousness seems to never stop piling up, and the cat seems to always want to lay directly on my keyboard. Then there are times like this week,  AmeriCorps Week, which has given me pause to reflect on what my service with Accokeek has meant to me and all that I’ve done up until this point. And I’ve found that what the foundation, Volunteer Maryland, and AmeriCorps have helped me to accomplish is pretty cool.

Volunteers Holli and Emily help market customer, Jim, with his purchase

Volunteers Holli and Emily help market customer, Jim, with his purchase

The foundation held its first ever Winter Farm Market in the education building this January and February, and my first big project was helping our Ecosystem Farm manager, Becky, recruit volunteers to help harvest the produce and run the market. The market turned out to be the highlight of my week over the long, cold winter. Not only were we able to connect with community members who had never purchased produce from the farm before, but we were able to connect with local vendors who sold everything from cake-pops to table-top composting systems. It was such a wonderful community space and I met some truly wonderful people through it–not the least of whom were our three volunteers. January and February are miserable months to be farming–it’s cold, it’s brown, and it’s cold. Yet here were three volunteers who came out every single week to care for the produce, harvest the produce, and sell the produce and I don’t think we could have done it without them. One of the volunteers, Holli, liked us so much that she applied for one of our Ecosystem Farm apprentice positions and started working with the foundation last week. It’s so cool to think that her volunteer position with us has helped her get one step closer to her agricultural goals.

Myself and the volunteers from Brandeis University.

Myself and the volunteers from Brandeis University.

At the end of February we were lucky enough to host a group of Alternative Spring Break volunteers from Brandeis University in Massachusetts. I am still amazed when I think about the amount of work that those 11 students were able to accomplish in just four days with us. Through the cold, the rain, and the mud, they worked 170.5 hours. They built a new fence around the Virginia gourdseed corn field on the National Colonial Farm, they cleared brush and low-hanging branches from all of the trails surrounding the Ecosystem Farm, they repaired broken fence-lines in the cow pastures and fed the livestock, and they cleared beds and mulched the walkways in the high tunnel on the Ecosystem farm in preparation for the season. So much of what we do here (seed-saving, historic interpretation, stewardship of Piscataway Park, preserving heritage breeds of livestock, and farmer training) relies on the help and support of volunteer groups just like this one, and getting to work with them each day they were here was not only fun, but refreshing.

I’ve recently been working on recruiting new volunteers for positions on the National Colonial Farm. So far we have six volunteers starting with us in March and April that will be either assisting the Colonial Farm Staff with our monthly Foodways program, or helping with the maintenance of our Virginia gourdseed corn field and our Colonial Kitchen Garden. Both positions are such unique opportunities to learn more about the community and its history while educating others. Our Foodways program focuses on why we eat what we eat, and how what we eat has changed–with particular emphasis on the distinctive (and often peculiar) recipes that distinguish Southern Maryland cuisine from anywhere else in the world. Our Virginia gourdseed corn is an eighteenth century variety that was back-bred by former National Colonial Farm Director, Ralph Singleton. In the last few years, drought and lack of help has made saving this corn seed almost impossible, so these new volunteers will play an integral role in the success of our seed saving program. I can’t wait to see what our Colonial Farm volunteers will be able to accomplish this summer, as they’ve already begun inspiring staff to think about new ways of engaging the community.

Each month when I enter all of the volunteers and their hours into the database and run my volunteer report, I’m so inspired that our volunteers are willing to give so much of their time to this organization. Just this year, in only two months’ time, our volunteers have served over 569 hours in six different program areas. Everyday (well, almost everyday) I come to work, I feel so blessed to have the opportunity to work with volunteers, and though it can be easy to get lost in the mundane of my day-to-day tasks, I’m lucky to be constantly surrounded by people who remind me of the reason I decided to serve through AmeriCorps in the first place. That is how AmeriCorps works for me.

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Earthfest: A Picnic in the Park

7205312972_c770777811_nJoin the Accokeek Foundation on Sunday, April 21st for our first annual Earthfest to celebrate Earth Day and National Volunteer Week. It will be a fun filled day of volunteering and family friendly activities so bring the kids for a beautiful day in Piscataway Park.

In the morning, donate your time to the volunteer activity of your choice–we’ll be working in the Museum Garden, the Pollinator Garden, the Rain Garden, on the National Colonial Farm, and cleaning up around the Visitor Center and Education Center. There will be volunteer opportunities for all ages and skill levels, and it’s a great opportunity for groups to volunteer together.

Make sure to pack a picnic, because in the afternoon, to celebrate our hard work, we’ll be relaxing as we eat lunch, practice yoga for kids, play colonial lawn games, learn how to make seed bombs, and participate in many other activities to promote healthy bodies, healthy minds, and a healthy planet!

If you choose not to bring your own picnic lunch, we will be offering an option to pre-order lunch when you register. For $5 we will provide you with a sandwich, a side (chips or an apple), and a drink. Wear comfortable clothes and shoes fit for working outside, work gloves if you have them, and a re-usable water bottle to fill up from our various hydration stations throughout the day.

You can also bring along the following items, and we will recycle them through our TerraCycle Brigade program. The recycled items will be turned into cool new products while helping to raise money for the foundation.

Recyclable Items:

  • Energy bar wrappers
  • Candy bar wrappers
  • Cell phones
  • Keyboards/mice
  • MP3 players
  • Elmer’s glue containers
  • Corks
  • Chip bags

More information about TerraCycle can be found at www.terracycle.com.

To participate, report to the Education Building on site by 10am to check in with foundation staff. We hope to see you there!

 

 

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