Meadowood Special Recreation Management Area Shines on NPLD 2012

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Meadowood Special Recreation Management Area Shines on NPLD 2012

The following press releases was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management on Oct. 4, 2012. It is reproduced in full below.

On Sept. 29, BLM-Eastern States Meadowood Special Recreation Area (SRMA) staff and volunteers celebrated National Public Lands Day 2012 by painting fences, surveying boundary lines with cadastral staff, painting bird feeders and weeding the Pollinator Garden. As a part of the BLM's NPLD 2012 social media meet up, BLM Acting Deputy Director Neil Kornze tweeted about the day's events from the @BLMDirector account:

* National Public Lands Day 2012 logo

* Painting team

* @BLMDirector: The painting team is on a roll! #NPLD Meadowood.

* NPLD 2012 Volunteers

* @BLMDirector: Bird feeders decorated, weeds pulled, fences painted. Quite a day at Meadowood #NPLD.

BLM-Eastern States Director John Lyon thanked all volunteers for their contributions on NPLD 2012. "My son Ben and I have made NPLD and Meadowood a regular destination since coming to Virginia two years ago. I am always proud to see what is accomplished by our volunteers and particularly our Meadowood Friends group members accomplish in such a short time."BLM-Eastern States celebrated NPLD 2012 the two weeks prior to the September 29 event as well. On Sept. 12, Earth Sangha - a Challenge Cost Share partner - and Lower Potomac Field Station staff led a meadow planting event. September 22 brought 51 volunteers from REI (Recreation Equipment, Inc.) in Woodbridge, Virginia, who painted 4,300 feet of 4-board perimeter fence.The Meadowood SRMA offers 13 miles of hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding trails including a universally accessible trail to Hidden Pond; two fishing ponds, 800 acres of forest and meadows, geocaching, picnicking and bird watching. The SRMA is the site of environmental education programs for homeschoolers, public and private schools, local 4-H groups and community youth agencies. Programs consist of bird identification, fishing, habitat hikes, tree identification, Urban Leave No Trace, tracking, invasive weed removal, clean-up days, in addition to activities for the classroom.

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management

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