Tag Archives: nature

A quest to save a rare Michigan butterfly has high hopes; Poweshiek skipperling all but disappeared

Poweshiek skipperlings were once common throughout prairies in the Midwest, but are now found in only two locations: Manitoba, Canada and southeastern Michigan. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Ruth Thornton is a WKTV Contributor. She holds master’s degrees in journalism and fisheries and wildlife, both from Michigan State University. Before working as a journalist, she worked in conservation for many years in Michigan, Minnesota and West Virginia. Her work has appeared in many media outlets, including MLive, the Detroit Free Press, Bridge Michigan, Capital News Service and Great Lakes Echo. You can follow her work via her Substack newsletter, Nature Signals, and at ruththornton.com.

By Ruth Thornton
WKTV Contributor
greer@wktv.org

A small butterfly, once a common sight on the prairies of the Midwest, has suddenly vanished and is now the focus of an international partnership racing against time to save it from the brink of extinction. 

“Just how quickly they disappeared is what’s really the alarming thing,” said David Pavlik, a research assistant with Michigan State University. 

Pavlik is part of an international coalition of scientists and conservationists working to save the Poweshiek skipperling (pronounced POW-uh-SHEEK), an inconspicuous orange butterfly that was once so common in the prairies of the Midwest that collectors largely ignored it. 

Now “there are more giant pandas in the world than there are Poweshiek skipperlings,” Pavlik said.

They were once found from the prairies of Manitoba through Minnesota, the eastern Dakotas, Wisconsin, Iowa and into Michigan. They have disappeared from all but two places at the extremes of their range – Manitoba and southeastern Michigan.

The partnership is working to raise the butterflies in zoos for release back into the wild and restore the natural habitats where they once thrived to ensure their long-term survival. 

What happened to the Poweshiek skipperlings?

Cale Nordmeyer, a conservation specialist at the Minnesota Zoo, said the Poweshiek skipperling was common when he was growing up in Minnesota. 

“As a tallgrass prairie specialist, it really thrived in the mesic prairies, in Minnesota and elsewhere here in the upper Midwest,” he said. Mesic prairie is a type of grassland that once flourished throughout the Midwest.

“If you were out in the right prairie at the right time of year, you were going to see Poweshiek skipperlings,” Nordmeyer said. 


Cale Nordmeyer with the Minnesota Zoo is getting ready to release Poweshiek skipperlings raised at John Ball Zoo in 2024. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Decline began in 2000

That started changing about the year 2000, when researchers noticed they weren’t seeing them as much anymore. 

“Sometime between 2009 and 2012, it looks like we lost all of our Poweshiek skipperling sites in Minnesota,” he said. They also disappeared from most of the rest of their range. 

“Suddenly, these last couple of little populations, many of which were never that big here in far eastern Michigan, suddenly became incredibly important,” Nordmeyer said.

It isn’t obvious why they disappeared, he said. He and other biologists are still trying to understand what happened, what’s killing them and what the solutions might be. 

Pavlik said it’s likely a combination of reasons, including habitat loss. 

“Habitat loss historically is a huge one,” he said. “The species requires tall grass prairies and prairie fens here in Michigan.” Prairie fens are rare and unique grassy wetlands that are fed by groundwater instead of creeks or streams. 

“Over 99% of that habitat is gone,” he said. 

Additionally, he said widespread aerial spraying of insecticides has affected the last remaining strongholds of the butterflies, and climate change is probably contributing as well. 

“The species overwinters as a caterpillar, and so they can be especially susceptible to changes in winter climate,” he said. 

Adding to the difficulty, the butterfly disappeared so quickly researchers weren’t sure what exactly they need to survive, including what plants they feed on.

Learning what the Poweshiek skipperling eats

“They seem to have two major nectar sources,” Pavlik said, referring to the flowers adult butterflies feed on. 

“And that’s black-eyed Susan – which seems to be their favorite – and then shrubby cinquefoil,” another relatively common yellow prairie flower, he said.

The butterfly’s caterpillars, on the other hand, have been found on prairie dropseed, a fairly common prairie grass, and on a rarer grass called mat muhly. Both occur in high-quality native prairies and in prairie fens.

When biologists realized how precipitously the Poweshiek skipperling was declining, they convened a meeting of researchers and conservation partners, said Tam Smith, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the national recovery lead for the butterfly.

The experts at the meeting “recognized that (the Poweshiek) was going down this spiral of extinction,” Smith said. 

The species was officially listed as federally endangered in 2014. 

In 2022, the agency released a 50-year recovery plan for the butterfly, listing the actions scientists had determined were necessary for its full recovery. The cost for all activities over the five decades was estimated at just over $57 million.

One of the main proposed actions at the meeting was to start a captive breeding program.

Smith said the Minnesota Zoo stepped in first to start rearing the butterflies in captivity, using eggs that had been collected from females in Michigan. 

But with so much uncertainty about the basic biology of the species, it was difficult going at first – they quickly found out how sensitive the species was to temperature and humidity, Smith said. 

“One of the first years they started, the temperature was off,” Smith said. That caused the caterpillars to develop too quickly. But then the attempts were more successful.

Later a zoo in Canada, Assiniboine Park Zoo in Winnipeg, joined the effort, and a few years after that John Ball Zoo in Grand Rapids, Michigan, helped as well, Smith said.  

Rearing baby butterflies at John Ball Zoo

“Our prairie butterfly program here at the zoo has just grown enormously since 2020,” said Bill Flanagan, the conservation director at John Ball Zoo. 

The goal is to “make lots of baby Poweshieks so we can do releases and bolster those wild populations to the point where we can start to do reintroductions and start to recover the species,” Flanagan said.

The first caterpillars arrived in 2021 from the Minnesota Zoo, he said.

“We turned 32 caterpillars into somewhere in the neighborhood of 150 caterpillars” the next year, Flanagan said. “The next year, (in 2023,) we had something like 500 caterpillars in the program.”

A very close call

It was a close call – in 2022 only nine Poweshieks, the lowest number ever, were observed in the wild in Michigan, Pavlik said. 


David Pavlik, research assistant with Michigan State University, is working with John Ball Zoo to raise Poweshiek skipperlings for release into the wild. Shown here are cages with grasses that hold the caterpillars. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


But given the success of the zoos’ captive rearing programs, biologists were able to release more than 100 butterflies that year, just in the nick of time. 

The following year they saw more butterflies in the wild again. 

In 2023 they had bred enough butterflies to release more than 500, and in 2024 and 2025 more than 1,000 each year. 

Breeding butterflies: a year at John Ball Zoo

With a short flight period of only a few weeks, things get hectic at John Ball Zoo in July when the adult butterflies emerge and start laying eggs. 

“We have one shot,” Pavlik said. “In three weeks we have to do all of the breeding, all of the releases. It’s a pretty crazy time.”

After the adults emerge, biologists pair up a male and female butterfly – first making sure they are compatible genetically – and place them in what they call a “breeding tent,” a sheer cloth-covered square frame about 12 inches to a side. 


Bill Flanagan, conservation director at John Ball Zoo, shows off Poweshiek skipperling breeding cages in front of a hoop house with more caterpillar cages. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Then “we monitor them throughout the day to see if they do breed,” he said. “And if they do, we’ll release the male into the wild the next day, and then the female gets transferred to an egg laying enclosure, where she’ll lay the eggs that we’ll collect every morning.”

Almost every morning someone from the zoo drives the newly hatched butterflies to southeastern Michigan, a couple hours’ drive away, for release into the wild, Pavlik said. 


Many species fly for a short time only

When people think about butterflies, they often picture the adults they see flying about. But many species fly for only a couple of weeks during the year, including the Poweshiek. 

Each butterfly lives for only about four to six days in the wild, he said. “Most of the year, we’re taking care of the caterpillars.” 

The caterpillars – also called larvae – feed on the host grasses and go through several “instars,” progressive stages where they shed their skin and grow. Eventually they enter what’s called a “diapause” and overwinter, resting head-down on grass blades. 

A spring awakening

When they wake up in the spring, usually around April or May, they resume feeding and go through additional instars before finally turning into the familiar butterflies.

The zoo recreates the natural conditions as best as it can, transferring the caterpillars to a freezer during their diapause stage. 

“When winter comes, we’ll take those caterpillars off of the plant and put them in a very special and highly controlled overwintering chamber where we can control the temperature and the humidity for exactly what the species needs to survive for nearly six months,” Pavlik said. 


David Pavlik and Cinnamon Mittan, a postdoctoral researcher in Sarah Fitzpatrick’s lab, are preparing caterpillars to be placed in the overwintering chambers, located behind them. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


In the spring, when the host plants start growing again, zookeepers bring the caterpillars out of the freezer and put them back on their plants.

“From May until the end of June, we’re taking care of those caterpillars again until they become adult butterflies,” he said. “And then we repeat the cycle all over again.”

Protecting the butterfly’s remaining habitat

“It doesn’t matter how many butterflies we can produce here at the zoo, we could release 5,000,” Pavlik said. “But if the habitat is not there for them, or if the habitat’s been taken over by invasive species, it doesn’t matter how many we release, it’s not going to work.”

He said that’s why the international partnership is so important – various organizations working on different parts of the problem. 

“I don’t think I’ve heard of a butterfly that has this big of a coalition of people working to save it from extinction,” Pavlik said. 

Members include not only federal and state agencies from the U.S. and Canada, but also universities, nonprofit conservation organizations and land managers maintaining and restoring the natural areas the butterfly needs to survive.

In 2024 the researchers attempted the first reintroduction of the butterfly in Michigan at a site where they once occurred, but had disappeared from. 

The site had become overgrown with buckthorn, an invasive woody species that quickly takes over grassy areas, including prairies and prairie fens. 

Nordmeyer said land managers in southeast Michigan had spent five years removing the buckthorn and other invasive species from the area.

Secret locations help the butterflies thrive

The locations where the butterflies still occur and where they are released are kept secret, however, because of incidents in the past few years when people trampled the fragile habitat when the butterflies were flying. 

With such low population numbers, Smith said, any trampling of eggs or caterpillars, or chasing away the adult butterflies, could be devastating for the species. 



Cale Nordmeyer with the Minnesota Zoo releases Poweshiek skipperlings in an undisclosed location in southeast Michigan in 2024. (Video Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)



Signs of a larger problem?

The decline of the butterflies is a warning sign that the natural areas it occurs in could be in trouble. 

“It’s a really good indicator species,” Pavlik said. “When we see these declines happening for a butterfly so quickly, we know that whatever is affecting that species is probably affecting a lot of other species.”

“It’s important to know that it’s not just Poweshieks,” he said. “Pollinator and insect declines are happening very quickly worldwide.” 

A promising recovery amid an uncertain future

“If you plant native pollinator gardens in your yard, you’ll be helping so many other species. And don’t spray pesticides,” Pavlik said. “Those are two of the biggest things you can do to have a positive impact for pollinators across the world.”

While the Poweshiek skipperling is not out of the woods yet, preliminary results from this year’s field season are promising, Nordmeyer said. 

“We were able to confirm survivorship of last year’s offspring at the (reintroduction) site,” he wrote in an email. 

The situation for Poweshieks is still dire, he said, but this year biologists saw more butterflies than in recent years, and a similar number as before the 2013 population crash. 

“It’s too early to declare victory,” he said, but thanks to the hard work of the partnership working together to breed the butterfly and restore its habitat, “the downward trend of the Poweshiek skipperling is tangibly reversing.”

Save the Date: “CHIHULY at Meijer Gardens” art exhibition to open in 2026 at Frederik Meijer Gardens

CHIHULY at Meijer Gardens will transform both the outdoor gardens and indoor galleries, showcasing the artist’s dynamic range and masterful creativity (Courtesy, Frederik Meijer Gardens)


By WKTV Staff

deborah@wktv.org


Continuing a decades-old relationship with internationally acclaimed artist Dale Chihuly, Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park announces a major exhibition of his work: CHIHULY at Meijer Gardens. The exhibit will open on May 1, 2026 and run through Nov. 1, 2026.

“We are delighted to welcome Dale Chihuly back to Meijer Gardens,” said Charles Burke, President & CEO at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. “His groundbreaking art creates unforgettable connections between nature, culture, and human creativity.

“Guests will be captivated by the dynamic interplay between Chihuly’s spectacular art and our gardens’ natural beauty.”

An immersive transformation

CHIHULY at Meijer Gardens will transform both the outdoor gardens and indoor galleries, showcasing the artist’s dynamic range and masterful creativity. The exhibition will feature monumental outdoor installations such as Chihuly’s towering glass sculptures, vibrant Reeds, and other site-specific artworks nestled within Meijer Gardens’ landscapes.

Chihuly’s “Gilded Champagne Gardens Chandelier” showcases the artist’s masterful creativity (Courtesy, Frederik Meijer Gardens)

Indoors, visitors will experience a varied survey of works highlighting more than four decades of Chihuly’s artistic evolution. Featured series include: Baskets, Macchia, Seaforms, Putti, Ikebana, Persians, Venetians, Cylinders and Rotolo. Each piece is complemented by original drawings offering insight into his creative process.

The exhibition promises to be an extraordinary and immersive experience for visitors of all ages, celebrating the profound impact of one of the world’s most innovative artists.

Celebrating the arts

Presented by Macatawa Bank, a Wintrust Community Bank, the exhibition runs from May 1, 2026 through Nov. 1, 2026 and is the third time Chihuly’s art has been presented at Meijer Gardens. Previous Meijer Gardens exhibitions include an indoor exhibition in 2002 and a sprawling outdoor experience in 2010.

“At Macatawa Bank, we celebrate the arts and the important role creativity and artistic abilities play in fostering strong, vibrant communities,” said Jon Swets, Macatawa Chief Executive Officer. “We’re honored to be a part of this inspiring exhibition displayed upon the beautiful backdrop of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park.”

Guests will enjoy the dynamic interplay between Chihuly’s art and the Gardens’ natural beauty (Courtesy, Frederik Meijer Gardens)

Additional information about the CHIHULY exhibition and the permanent sculpture collection at Meijer Gardens can be found here.


*This exhibition is organized by Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park in cooperation with Dale Chihuly and Chihuly Studio. The work displayed is protected by copyright, any copying is expressly prohibited.

Buck Creek Nature Preserve is springing forth with fresh blossoms and energetic critters!

By Deborah Reed

WKTV Managing Editor

deborah@wktv.org


Check out these signs of spring at the local Buck Creek Nature Preserve in Wyoming!

During a walk through Buck Creek’s Nature Preserve, this energetic squirrel – let’s call him Sebastian – played peek-a-boo for a several minutes before WKTV’s managing editor Deborah Reed managed to capture his mischievous antics on camera.

While dandelions are often thought of as a nuisance and nothing more than a common weed. However, they are also viewed as symbols of hope, freedom, and transformation.

It is said that when the seeds of a dandelion are blown away, your wish is carried into the wind and into the universe. Read more here!

This shy deer was munching on grass when Reed walked closer than expected. The doe and managing editor contemplated each other for several seconds before the deer wandered away with two other family members.

Colorful flowers are springing forth amidst the grass, on bushes and along tree branches. Some of those blossoms have begun transforming into leaves that will remain through the summer months.

Small turtles can often be found sunning themselves in the pond near the start of Buck Creek’s walking trail located off Burlingame Avenue.

Growths of fungus called shelf or bracket fungi, related to puffballs and mushrooms, can be found adorning some nature preserve tree trunks.

A group of adult geese ushered their goslings around the nature preserve while side-eyeing Reed to make sure the managing editor did not wander too close.

Frederik Meijer Gardens unveils landmark exhibition David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture

David Smith’s Helmholtzian Landscape, 1946 (Courtesy, FMG)



By WKTV Staff

deborah@wktv.org


Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park is proud to announce the groundbreaking exhibition David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture, showcasing the prolific and inventive work of David Smith (1906–1965). This landmark exhibition, the first to explore Smith’s deep engagement with nature, will open on Sept. 23, 2024, and will be on view through March 2, 2025.

The art of David Smith is profuse and inventive. Working in multiple media, formats, and scales, he blurred boundaries between painting and sculpture and between traditional genres such as landscape and figuration.

Smith’s bountiful oeuvre has secured him a firm place within art history, and his adventurous approach to three-dimensional form has permanently expanded the vocabulary and range of sculptural practice.

Forging new ground

Smith is widely hailed as the first American artist to make welded metal sculpture and to absorb industrial methods and materials into his creative repertoire. His inventiveness and contributions to sculptural practice extend far beyond machine vernacular and technique, however. Many have traced the origins of modern sculpture parks to Smith’s unprecedented outdoor installations on his Bolton Landing property in upstate New York.

David Smith’s Raven IV, 1957 (Courtesy, FMG)

For Smith, nature was not only a source of inspiration but also served as studio, accomplice and staging ground for his complex sculptural works.

“While David Smith is recognized as the most important sculptor of the 20th century, there is still much to be learned about his expansive art, especially as it relates to the natural world,” says Suzanne Ramljak, Vice President of Collections & Curatorial Affairs at Meijer Gardens.

“We are excited to reveal this crucial and lesser-known aspect of Smith’s career at Meijer Gardens, where sculpture and nature are so intimately bound.”

What to expect:

David Smith’s Cubi XII, 1963 (Courtesy, FMG)

David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture will feature a selection of some 40 sculptures, alongside related paintings, reliefs, and works on paper, providing an in-depth exploration of Smith’s sustaining connection with nature.

Uniting key loans from major lenders—including The Whitney Museum of American Art, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and Storm King Art Center—the exhibition will be arranged in loose chronological order, beginning with Smith’s earliest sculptures from 1932 to the year before his accidental death in 1965.

Viewers will encounter nature-based work from every decade of Smith’s career, including:

  • 1930s constructions with stones, shells, coral, and wood, along with biomorphic cast metal sculptures.
  • 1940s and 1950s pictorial sculpture landscapes, a genre of Smith’s own invention, which he enlisted to address an array of themes—from autobiography, House in a Landscape and his epic Hudson River Landscape; to color theory, Helmholtzian Landscape; to social norms, Cloistral Landscape.
  • Mid-1950s bronze reliefs depicting botanic motifs such as Rose Garden, Wild Plums, and Skull and Tree.
  • Late 1950s and early 1960s avian sculptures, including a series focused on ravens.
  • A selection of outdoor works that find their completion in the company of sky, wind and earth, as Smith intended.

This exhibition will have a particularly strong resonance at Meijer Gardens, where Smith’s work will be in direct dialogue with the natural environment, including larger pieces situated out of doors. Witness David Smith’s thrilling sculptural translations of the natural world he knew and loved in this exclusive Grand Rapids exhibition.

For more information, click here.

Exhibition Catalogue:

David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture will be accompanied by an exhibition catalogue co-published by Meijer Gardens and Hirmer/University of Chicago Press.

The publication will feature contributions by the artist’s daughters, reflecting on Smith’s lived domestic experience of nature; an essay by curator Suzanne Ramljak, surveying Smith’s engagement with nature as material source, subject matter, and preferred site for his sculpture; appreciations by contemporary artists Beatriz Cortez and Mark di Suvero, addressing Smith’s contributions and connections to current art practice; and an illustrated artist’s chronology highlighting key nature-based events in David Smith’s life and art.

David Smith’s Steel Drawing, 1945 (Courtesy, FMG)

Exhibition Programming:

Unless otherwise noted, programs are included in the cost of admission and registration is not required.

Moving Out: David Smith & Outdoor Sculpture

Join Suzanne Ramljak, exhibition curator and Vice President of Collections & Curatorial Affairs, and Amber Oudsema, Curator of Arts Education, on a walk to explore David Smith’s lasting legacy. Discover his influence on sculpture parks as we know them and the many successful artists who followed in Smith’s creative footsteps.

This event will take place Wednesday, Oct. 9 from 2-3 p.m.

A full list of exhibition-related activities can be found here.

Extending gratitude

David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture is made possible by the Louis and Helen Padnos Foundation, Meijer Foundation, Bill Padnos and Margy Kaye, Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Foundation and Botanic and Sculpture Societies of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park.

Dreams were born, and some fulfilled, at DeVos Place during the Camping, Trailer & RV Show last weekend

By Deborah Reed

WKTV Managing Editor

deborah@wktv.org

Over 200,000 square feet of RVs and a dozen West Michigan RV dealers representing over 100+ lines descended upon DeVos Place in Grand Rapids last weekend, Jan. 18-21.

Camping and travel mean different things to different people – but they all involve dreams (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

Grand Rapids Camper, Travel & RV Show – Michigan’s largest RV and family vacation show – offered visitors hundreds of RV options and accessories, as well as campgrounds and travel destinations. Children’s activities, a pancake breakfast and free seminars rounded out the event.

Detroit residents Chris and Kate Ahlgren were among thousands who came to look at available RV options.

Dreaming big

When asked why they chose to attend the GR Show, Kate said they were looking to “keep up on current trends so when it is time to buy, we know what’s out there.”

Current owners of a 2012 Rockwood Signature Ultralight 35-foot travel trailer, the Ahlgrens have decided it is time for an upgrade.

Frequent campers during the spring through fall months, the Ahlgrens and their four children have been dedicated campers for 16 years. Beginning with a tent and then borrowing a pop-up camper (“That is not for us!” said both Ahlgrens simultaneously), the couple moved on to a small travel trailer, finally purchasing the Rockwood in 2012.

Patrons could find everything from bare essentials to decorative accents (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

Though the Rockwood is holding up well, the Ahlgrens are looking to move into a fifth wheel RV.

Why a fifth wheel?

“I was looking for the flexibility to sleep lots of different people in lots of different combinations,” said Kate, adding that they can have upwards of 10 people or more camping with them at one time.

Chris liked the ease and safety of a fifth wheel. “Fifth wheels are easier and safer to tow because of the hitch point,” said Chris. “The pivot point moves versus your bumper. so they’re easier to back in and tow.

“And they’re safer because it’s a more solid connection versus just a two-inch ball.”

The small things matter

Ben Swathwood talks with the Ahlgrens about the Paradigm fifth wheel and Alliance mission (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

While at the Show, the Ahlgrens found an RV that “checked all the boxes” in a 41-foot Alliance Paradigm 380MP fifth wheel.

What helped check all of those boxes, the Ahlgrens said, were small things that Alliance took into consideration that most other RV companies do not.

And a lot of those “small things” revolved around Alliance’s choice to focus on communication and relationships with their customers versus simply following the latest trend.

“It all goes back to what’s best for our retail customers,” said Ben Swathwood, Alliance Regional Sales Manager. “Before we built a single unit, we crowdsourced from full-time RVers.

“We’re not just throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks and making changes later. We’re really taking our cues from them.”

A customer talks with Never Enough Auto Accessories vendor (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

And what was important to customers were high-quality parts and pieces, and a need for more efficiency. This increased the number of Alliance menu options available to retailers.

“That’s been revolutionary for us, to have that relationship,” said Swathwood. “And then our independence, being privately owned, allows us to say: This is what we’re going to do.”

Paradigm shows some of these customer-driven adjustments in several areas. Four flush slide-outs, large pass-through storage areas, dual power gas and electric water heaters, shut-off valves at every plumbing fixture, Azdel Onboard composite sidewalls, PVC roof material with a life-time warranty, fully functional windows, hardwood cabinetry, hardwired switches, and no carpet or floor vents were a few items on that list.

“We don’t use any Bluetooth technology,” Swathwood added. “We don’t have any tablets, so you don’t have to worry about connectivity issues.

“What happens if you can’t connect to that tablet? What happens if that tablet breaks?”

“Just listen…”

“Find joy in the journey” (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

The pillars of Alliance, Swathwood said, are: “Do the right thing, customer-obsessed, and then a relentless improvement on our side from the ground up. All of those things go back to that point of, let’s just listen.”

Chris and Kate Ahlgren appreciate that attention to detail and listening ear. For the Ahlgren family, camping is more than a cheap way to have a vacation.

“It’s time spent with our family with a whole lot less distractions,” said Kate, mentioning work, house chores and electronics as examples.

“Originally, when we started camping, the rule was no electronics,” said Kate. “We didn’t allow our kids to have them while camping. Our kids were outside and playing in the woods and building forts.”

And even though the Ahlgren’s trailer has a television, they do not use it.

“I couldn’t even tell you if my TV antenna goes up on the trailer,” Chris said with a shrug.

The Ahlgrens were pleased to find new options for campgrounds and details on towing equipment, though a larger number of accessory vendors in 2025 would be welcomed.

For more information on 2024 events/expos at DeVos Place, click here.

Outdoor Explorers program gets kids outside examining nature

(WKTV/Deborah Reed)



By D.A. Reed, WKTV Contributor


Designed to spark a love of science and biology in children, the new Kentwood Parks and Recreation Outdoor Explorers program offers a nature-focused curriculum.

Basic survival skills, plant identification, campfire safety and cooking are just some of the activities taught in the program.

“Our goal is to get kids outside and exploring nature,” said Cassie Wielard, Outdoor Explorers program leader.

Outdoor Explorers Leader Cassie Wielard prepares the group for their adventure in Covenant Park. (WKTV/Deborah Reed)



Designed for children ages 6-12, the Outdoor Explorers meet Tuesdays from 5:30 to 7 p.m. primarily within Covenant Park. The program offers many of the same skills and experiences kids may find through a scouting program, but with much greater flexibility.

Focused on the five senses

Outdoor Explorers often focuses on the five senses, encouraging participants to investigate various textures of plants and other aspects of their surroundings through touch, exploring scent as they smell flowers and campfire smoke, and tasting s’mores and other treats.

Leader Cassie Wielard shows the Explorers goldenrod on a walk in Covenant Park. (WKTV/Deborah Reed)



The purpose, Wielard said, is to give children “experiences that maybe not every kid gets to have outside in nature.”

Along with experiencing nature, instilling a respect for the environment also is a central principal of Outdoor Explorers.

“This feels like an extension of things that I love to do, and it’s been really fun,” said Wielard, who has a background in elementary education.

Covenant Park has three color-coded trails located just outside the clubhouse, each offering approximately one mile of natural space to explore. The park also offers an optional “Hide and Seek” activity for each trail along with maps to help guide explorers.

Rain, no worries

Less than ideal weather doesn’t hinder the young explorers from trekking through the park.

“The rain doesn’t faze them,” Wielard said. “To them, it’s fun.”

If a planned activity is not possible due to weather, Wielard and her volunteers easily improvise and ensure explorers are still learning and having fun.

“Last week it was raining, so s’mores were microwaved,” Wielard said.



Outdoor Explorer Kristofer shows off a bat he made with sticks and bark. (WKTV/Deborah Reed)



Simple crafts offered during each class highlight animals and other aspects of the environment. From building bird feeders, to creating owls and bats out of sticks and bark, participants are treated to a lesson about animals and the natural materials used in their creations.

Looking for winter Explorers

Even though the fall Explorers program has wrapped up, plans are already in motion for a winter session with dates and activities in development stages.

“We are hoping to explore Covenant Park in all the seasons,” Wielard said. “Signs of nature (such as animal tracks) should be obvious with snow on the ground. And, of course, snow opens up a lot of opportunities for activities.”

The winter session is seeking participants for early 2023. To find out more about the program and its benefits, contact the Kentwood Parks and Recreation Department.

D. A. (Deborah) Reed is an award-winning author of young adult novels and a creative writing instructor from the Grand Rapids area. To find out more about D.A. Reed, visit her website: D.A. Reed Author

Get ‘illuminated’ on the connections of nature in John Ball Zoo’s returning light show

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


The John Ball Zoo will once again be washed in sound and light as it brings back the popular “IllumiZoo.”

Offered for the first time last year, “IlluniZoo” is a nighttime journey through John Ball Zoo where guests stroll through an illuminated landscape of nature drenched in light and sound. The striking spectacle cycles through creative imagery, music-synchronized animal displays, and animated motifs of moving light.

 

The hues of natures are captured in this year’s IllumiZoo production. (Supplied)

“We are excited to continue creating unique experiences to tell the important story of conservation and bring the community together,” said John Ball Zoo Chief Development and Community Engagement Officer Kelli Smith.

 

Opening Sept. 3 and running through Nov. 14, this year’s “IllumiZoo” theme will be “Wild Hues,” with the many hues of color reflecting the “hues” of species and environments throughout the world. Each have their own unique colors, traits, and stories to tell. The survival of many of these species and enrichments are in jeopardy, with more than 16,000 animal species facing endangerment and extinction in the world.

“‘IllumiZoo Wild Hues’ is an illuminated message about our commotion to each other and our environment, and the power each of us possess to make a positive change in our world,” Smith said

This year’s display will tell the conservation stories by creating illuminating connections between wildlife and wild places. These connections will showcase how we are connected to the land, the water, the air, the trees and all the animals, big and small, with the power to make a positive change in the world.

This year’s pathway will be in the opposite direction of last year’s path and will travel into new areas of the zoo. Returning favorites from last year will be the “fobbles,” the interactive storytelling LED walls, and the Fluorescent Flower Field (formerly the fairy garden).

 

One of the new features to this year’s IllumiZoo is the oversized “campfire.” (Supplied)

New this year, will be an oversized “campfire” With digital embers flickering with color. Colorful animated animal footprints and lush greet leaves will illuminate the trail reacting to visitors steps. The “invisible” animals will also speed up and run away when guests get too close to their footprints. The night sky will also be illuminated with animal constellations, and more.

“We are thrilled to partner with John Ball Zoo again this year,” said Braden Graham, vice president of operations and client services, live events at Bluewater Technologies, which has designed and created the show. “Look for a slightly longer path and new interactive A/V and lighting elements as we bring the grounds of the Zoo to life at night.”

Tickets are $20/adults, $13/children ages 3-12, and free/children 2 and under. Time ticketing will vary as sunset times change. Guests are encouraged to reserve tickets in advance to guarantee dates and times. Tickets are available at www.jbzoo.org/tickets.

John Ball Zoo is located on Fulton Avenue, one mile west of downtown Grand Rapids. For more information, visit www.jbzoo.org, call 616-336-4301, or email info@jbozoo.org.

Blandford Nature Center celebrates its founder with tribute Sept. 8-11

Many of the historic buildings at Blandford will be open during the tribute set for Sept. 8 – 11. (Supplied)

By Jess Bitting
Blandford Nature Center


Blandford Nature Center will be hosting a celebration of the life and achievements of founder Dr. Mary Jane Dockeray, who passed away peacefully in Grand Rapids on August 18, 2020. She was 93 at the time.

From Wednesday, Sept. 8, through Saturday Sept. 11, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., the public can view an exhibit about Dockeray’s life in the auditorium of the Mary Jane Dockeray Visitor Center at Blandford Nature Center. This multiple-day exhibit will highlight her passions and accomplishments over the span of several decades. As a pioneer in environmental education, Dockeray was a local icon who had a passion for inspiring people of all ages to fall in love with and protect nature; and this exhibit documents her journey in doing so. During this four-day exhibit, Blandford’s Historic Buildings will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.

Dockeray will be remembered for many things, but she is perhaps best known for her classroom visits and lectures with her ancient slide projector. With this machine in hand, she brought nature to life through vivid imagery and stories that enthralled children and adults alike. Visitors will be able to see some of her slides, as well as view a documentary about her life and a digitized version of one of her most iconic presentations, “These Things are Ours.” Visitors will be encouraged to share their personal memories of Dockeray.

Prior to Dockeray’s passing, Blandford Nature Center, in collaboration with the Land Conservancy of West Michigan, purchased the Highlands Golf Club and is in the process of implementing the master plan for that property. Dockeray always called this “our last great land conquest” and was proud to be part of saving that property from future development. Now everyone can use the new barrier-free trail that connects the Visitor Center to The Highlands to experience the beauty that Dockeray always imagined could exist on that property.

COVID-19 protocols, including social distancing and required masks for all attendees, will be in place to ensure a safe experience. The Blandford Nature Center is located at 1715 Hillburn Ave. NW.

2021 West Michigan photo contest now accepting entries

A view of the Mackinac Bridge and Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse (Photo Courtesy of Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


The West Michigan Tourist Association (WMTA) has announced the launch of its 2021 West Michigan Photo Contest. With so much beauty found in West Michigan, the West Michigan Tourist Association wants travelers to show off what they love most about this beautiful side of the state, and win some great West Michigan prizes! The contest is looking for traveler photo submissions from all around West Michigan. This region covers the entire west half of Michigan from the Indiana border to Mackinac Island and into the Upper Peninsula.

“Being able to share all of these great photos from around West Michigan is truly a highlight of each year!” said WMTA’s Marketing Director Courtney Sheffer. “We love seeing the community involvement with this contest, and the unique perspectives that each individual shares with their photos.”

The shore of Lake Superior (Photo courtesy of Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

Sheffer also noted that photos do not need to be taken this month in order to submit them to the photo contest. “If you have West Michigan photos from your past visits to the area, we encourage you to enter those as well! West Michigan is photogenic all seasons of the year, so don’t feel that you’re only limited to submitting summer photos.”

All photo entries must be received by July 28, 2021. Judges will be awarding prizes in the categories of “Nature,” “People,” and “Beach/Lake/Lighthouse,” with an additional prize awarded via public voting by WMTA’s Facebook audience. In addition to receiving a West Michigan prize pack, all winning photos will be featured in WMTA’s upcoming West Michigan Carefree Travel Guide, printed in January of 2022.

Photo submissions should include first & last name of photographer, city where the photograph was taken, and a short description of the photo.

The accepted photo formats are high resolution (300 dpi+) jpeg/jpg or tiff. CMYK is preferred. Please visit the Photo Contest Page for full rule and entry requirements: https://www.wmta.org/west-michigan-photo-contest/