|
Rapid
City Journal June 7, 2007
Pampering for
Mary Hall
Volunteers continue to
nurture Mary Hall park
By Tom Allen, Journal correspondent
Volunteers
are the life blood of many important projects in Rapid City, and
this is definitely true of the development of Kiwanis-Mary Hall
Park.
Garrett Chappell, left, and
a classmate prepare to plant one of the trees he received from
the Arbor Day Foundation. He raised money to buy trees, then
donated them to be planted in Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park.
(Courtesy photo)
In 2006
and 2007, volunteers have kept areas of the park manicured and
the newly planted trees watered, and they have planted more
trees and shrubs. Area businesses and civic groups continue to
work at making the park a treasure. Members of the
Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park Committee, which consists of 10 members
of the two Rapid City Kiwanis clubs, have been working to
develop the park into a hands-on learning environment for the
youths of Rapid City for nearly 10 years. The 9.7 acre park was
donated to the city of Rapid City in 1952 by members of the
William and Mary Hall family. Work to develop the park wasn’t
begun until 1999 when the committee was formed to develop the
park.
No group of volunteers has been more important to the
development of the park than the eighth-grade science classes at
West Middle School and their teachers. Ann Hast, a science
teacher at West Middle School, has been bringing her class to
the park for the past three years. The students have helped
clean the park during the city-wide cleanup each spring, and
they have helped plant trees and shrubs in the park as well.
Why study at Mary Hall Park? West eighth graders have been
studying the environment and the condition of the planet this
year. A hands-on opportunity to investigate and to help the
environment around them gives them ownership in the area and
empowers them to know that they can make a positive difference.
They made three visits to the park this year.
First, students visited differing ecosystems that exist within
the park itself to identify the diversity of plant life in each
and the adaptations that the flora has developed for survival in
that ecosystem. Ecosystems were the riparian (stream-side)
system, a bog, a marsh, grassland, deciduous forest and the
native plant garden. Students also used this opportunity to pick
up garbage in the park.
Second, students performed a stream analysis on Lime Creek and
springs in Mary Hall Park. They have learned how tiny
macro-invertebrates, which dwell under rocks and leaves and in
the silt, can be indicators of the quality of the water in a
stream. Students collected and identified the
macro-invertebrates in the creek and, fortunately, they found
that the macro-invertebrates most sensitive and unable to
survive pollutants were alive and thriving in the stream,
indicating excellent water quality. Once again, students used
this opportunity to clean up the creek and remove litter in the
water.
Third, after studying the value of trees in cleaning the air, in
providing information through dendrochronology and in providing
wildlife habitat, the students assisted the Kiwanis club in
the second annual tree planting event. Students and adult
volunteers planted more than 90 trees and shrubs. As an
independent study project, one student, Garrett Chappell, held
an Earth Day raffle and raised more than $60 to buy trees and
shrubs from the Arbor Day Foundation. This endeavor helped
educate the whole school about the importance of planting trees.
The students and volunteers planted those, along with trees
bought from the Pennington County Conservation District.
Grants from the Rapid City Garden Club, Pennington County Master
Gardeners and Modern Woodmen of America enabled the Kiwanis-Mary
Hall Park Committee to buy trees and shrubs from local
nurseries, as well. Thanks to a grant from the Public School
Foundation, Hast assembled two environmental study kits that are
available for checkout by area school groups. The stream study
kit will allow students to conduct the macro-invertebrate
analysis. A botany kit contains a study of dendrochronology, as
well as riker mounts of trees from the area, soil samples and
testing equipment. As an advanced extension project, some West
eighth graders created a Mary Hall Park field guide of flora and
fauna to be included in the kit.
Hast was surprised to learn that most of her students were not
aware of Mary Hall Park. These students now have adopted the
park and are proud of the work they have contributed to the
environment. This real-life project helps the students develop
responsibility for their environment and, it is hoped, carry
this sense of commitment to planet Earth throughout their
lifetime. Even though Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park continues to be a
well-kept secret to most Rapid City citizens, and relatively few
take advantage of the relative wildness of the park, you can get
to it in one of two ways. It is just a short detour off the main
bicycle path along Canyon Lake Drive, north of the Rapid City
Parks office. The park is off West South Street, just a block
east of Soo San Drive.
A park shelter was completed in 2004, and tables and benches
have been added in the past couple of years. The Kiwanis-Mary
Hall Park Committee is beginning a capital fund drive this
summer to enable them to complete the electrical work and
bathroom facilities in the shelter.
For more information about the park, go to
www.kiwanis-maryhallpark.org. The Web site lists many of the
plants growing in the park and contains many pictures. Visitors
to the Web site also may make donations to enable the committee
to complete the park.
More information about Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park also is available
by writing to Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park Committee, P.O. Box 9711,
Rapid City, SD 57709 or calling 721-3538.
Tom Allen lives in Rapid City and is a SDSU/Pennington
County Extension Service Master Gardener. He volunteers in the
Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park and the Journey Museum gardens. Readers
may send comments or questions to him in care of the
Kiwanis-Mary Hall Park Committee, P.O. Box 9711, Rapid City, SD,
57709 or call 721-3538.
|