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Polar Bear Nightmare? More Record-Breaking Warmth In St. Louis In Year 2024

by Don Corrigan

When St. Louis saw its first fall freeze Nov. 26, residents thought the winter season had finally arrived. However, temperatures below 32 degrees have been scarce since Thanksgiving, and 2024 may be the hottest year ever.

Nationally, 2024 will be the hottest year in America since record-keeping began. The Year 2023 was recorded as hottest previously. Climate change is at work, according to scientists, and 2025 also is shaping up to be hot, hot, hot.

Jared Rennie, a research meteorologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told NPR after Christmas this year that records for heat have been falling left and right.

“The last 10 years, most if not all of them are in the Top 10 as hottest,” Rennie noted. “So, we’re all pretty much clustered – all the recent years are pretty much clustered as the warmest on record.”

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Happy Birthday To Us! Environmental Echo Eyes Its Future On 10-Year Anniversary

How many blogs last 10 years? Or even one year?

Statistics show the average life of a blog is less than two years. There are literally hundreds of millions of abandoned blogs on the worldwide web. In 2023, there were 600 million active blogs worldwide.

If each of those blogs had as many hits as EE has had over its 10 years, we would be talking 36,000,000,000,000 hits. Environmental Echo is happy to report it will celebrate 10 years this October! Hurray for us! The blog started as a class project in an environmental communications class at Webster University in October 2014.

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Montauk State Park Remains Closed Due to Flood Cleanup

Montauk State Park will be closed to guests until at least Feb. 21, 2025. Park crews are actively assessing safety concerns and addressing damage to park infrastructure caused by early November flooding. The extent of the destruction and the work required to reopen the park is substantial.

While the park remains closed to the public, the Missouri Department of Conservation announced that winter catch-and-release trout season at Montauk State Park has also been cancelled. Winter catch-and-release trout season remains open at Roaring River and Bennett Spring state parks and Maramec Spring Park.

When heavy equipment use is complete, opportunities for volunteer cleanup efforts may become available. If you are interested in helping, please email dspvolunteercoordinator@dnr.mo.gov. Montauk State Park is located at 345 State Road 6670 in Salem.

Missouri House Resolution: Environmental Editor Recognized For Books Published

State Rep. Deb Lavender, D-98th District, presented journalist Don Corrigan with a Missouri House Resolution recognizing his recent work as an author of pop culture books, all with an environmental component.

Author Don Corrigan of Environmental Echo was recognized at a Dec. 12 lunch event with a Missouri House Resolution recognizing his recent work as a writer of pop culture books – all with an environmental component.

Corrigan, who is journalism faculty emeritus at Webster University, was joined for the award presentation by teaching colleagues: Kit Jenkins, public relations; Barry Hufker, audio studies; Van McElwee, video studies; Art Silverblatt, media literacy studies; Kathy Corley, film studies.

Corrigan received the House Resolution from Missouri Rep. Deb Lavender, who represents the 98th District. The official recognition was signed by House Speaker Dean Plocher of Des Peres, who recorded its adoption on Nov. 8.

Rep. Lavender noted that Corrigan has served more than four full decades as newspaper editor of the Webster-Kirkwood Times; and as a professor of journalism for four decades at Webster University.

“Corrigan appears to have chosen a third career now as a prolific author of books and as a presenter and regular contributor to the national Popular Culture Association,” Lavender said.

“He has published five books in five years, including Amazing Webster Groves, which celebrates the town where he was editor-in-chief of the local newspaper for 40 years” Lavender added.

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Missouri: A Sinkhole State Karst Geology Accounts For Show-Me-State Sinkholes

Sinkholes in Blackburn Park in Webster Groves are relatively small, but can clog with leaves and brush.

by Don Corrigan

Missouri is famous for mood rings, monster trucks, ice cream cones, toasted ravioli, floatable streams and show caves. Something the Show-Me-State should also be known for is its sinkholes.

Missouri is the Sinkhole State with huge, medium and teeny sinkholes. It has urban and rural, prairie and forest sinkholes. Technically a sinkhole is defined as a natural depression in the ground that can swallow lots of rain, but also on occasion a car or even a house.

For a good look at some small suburban sinkholes, take a walk in Blackburn Park in the St. Louis suburb of Webster Groves. For a good look at rural sinkholes, take a drive to Boone County south of Columbia.

The largest known sinkhole in Missouri encompasses approximately 700 acres southeast of where Interstate 70 crosses the Missouri River. Records are not kept about depth, but some sinkholes in Boone County are greater than 100 feet deep.

Rock Bridge Memorial State Park, located five miles south of Columbia, is a  2,273-acre park with sinkholes, a rock bridge, and an underground stream. The park also has a trail called the Sinkhole Trail.

Heavy rain across southern Missouri this fall opened up a new set of problems beyond flooding – sinkholes. When they open, they can swallow garages, houses and drain lakes and ponds.

The suburb of Webster Groves and parts of South St. Louis County are dotted with sinkholes, according to Missouri Department of Natural Resource geologic maps.

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Experience An 1860s Victorian Christmas At Hunter-Dawson State Historic Site

Friday, Dec. 13 and Saturday, Dec. 14, 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. – Christmas Candlelight Open House at Hunter-Dawson State Historic Site.

The public is invited Friday, Dec. 13 and Saturday, Dec. 14 from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. to experience an 1860s Victorian Christmas during a candlelight open house of the Hunter-Dawson home.

The mansion will be aglow with the warmth of oil lamps and candles and decorated with fresh greenery, Christmas trees and 1860s-style ornaments. Site staff will be dressed in period clothing and will be present to answer any questions. Standard daytime tours on those days will be offered from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The open house is free and open to the public, and reservations are not required. However, there are fees for the daytime tours.

For more information about the daytime tours, visit mostateparks.com/page/58550/interpretive-programs-and-tours. Hunter-Dawson State Historic Site is located at 312 Dawson Road in New Madrid.

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Chirping At Mighty Cricket! Sustainable Startup Scores $650,000 In Grant Support

by Don Corrigan

Munching on crickets may not be what you have in mind with a season of Christmas cookies, salty snacks, and New Year’s Eve toasts.  However, delectable crickets are very much on the mind of Sarah Schlafly.

Schlafly is the founder of Mighty Cricket, which this season is celebrating the gift of a grant to further efforts to convert food waste into nutritious cricket feed. The $650,000 nod of support comes from a Small Business Innovation Research grant through the Department of Agriculture.

This is not the first grant that the young cricket lady has scored. Three years ago, her sustainable protein startup, Mighty Cricket, received a $50,000 equity-free grant from Arch Grants. The company competed with hundreds of applicants and was one of 35 chosen.

“We are thrilled to receive this level of acceptance here in the Midwest,” said CEO Schlafly at the of the Arch grant . “Historically, the heartland has lagged behind the east and west coasts in terms of food trends.

“Here is our chance to lead the nation and the world with food options that are better for ourselves and the planet,” said Schlafly, a resident f the St. louis suburb of Des Peres.

Mighty Cricket’s mission is to build a sustainable protein supply. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, the world is projected to run out of natural resources to feed everyone on the planet by 2050.

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MDC Needs Birders to Help with Audubon Christmas Bird Count

MDC needs experienced birders to help with the National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5. Go out over a 24-hour period on one calendar day to count birds, such as these eastern bluebirds.

Become citizen scientists by helping with the National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5.

The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) encourages experienced Missouri birders to become citizen scientists by helping with the National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count (CBC) between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5, 2025.

The CBC is an annual bird census where thousands of volunteers across the U.S., Canada, and other countries go out over a 24-hour period on one calendar day to count birds between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5. The data on winter bird populations helps track the long-term status of species and large-scale trends. Each CBC has a coordinator who assigns portions of a 15-mile diameter count circle to participants to count all birds seen and heard over a 24-hour period.

Missouri hosts about 20 CBCs. Learn more at audubon.org/conservation/join-christmas-bird-count and contact the CBC organizers listed for details on the specific count circles.

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November Flash Floods – Storms Dump Rains: Closing Parks, Altering Ecosystems

by Don Corrigan

After an extended period of drought, historic downpours on Nov. 3 severely damaged state and local parks, closed highways and put cars underwater, and actually scoured away ecosystems crucial to fish species.

Horses enjoyed playing in high water near I-44 and Highway 141, but drivers in the area were not amused by traffic problems. Photo by Ursula Ruhl.

In the St. Louis area, drivers in the Valley Park-Fenton area were frustrated when roads closed at I-44 and Highway 141 due to the flooding Meramec River. Horses had to be moved to higher ground at riding stables near the southwest quadrant of the two highways.

Marshall Road in Valley Park went underwater as did trails along the Meramec in Eureka, Valley Park and Fenton. Minnie HaHa Park in Sunset Hills suffered severe damage to its shoreline with trails and facilities washed out.

The National Weather Service reported rain amounts in the 6 to 8-inch range in the southeast St. Louis County area on Nov. 3. However, rain amounts in the Current River watershed area exceeded one foot.

Bike and hiking trail was washed into the Meramec River at Minnie HaHa Park in Sunset Hills.

Missouri’s Department of Natural Resources reported the closure for days after the deluge of such parks as Onondoga Cave State Park near Leasburg, Meramec State Park near Sullivan and Route 66 State Park near Eureka.

Unprecedented river levels shut the Current River down to recreational activities for several days and severe damage occurred on river sites near Akers and Pulltite and Round Springs. Also shuttered were Montauk State Park near Salem and Current River State Park north of Eminence.

 

Damage was incurred at the trout hatchery at Montauk State Park. Fish and wildlife authorities also expressed concern over habitat destruction for Ozark hellbenders in the streams of the Ozark Scenic National Riverways.

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Tree City USA: Tradition Local Arbor Advocates Plant To Please With Street Trees

Students from Kirkwood High School’s Environmental Club pitched in for the 50 Trees
planting project.

by Don Corrigan

Soggy weather on Saturday, Nov. 9, didn’t dampen the enthusiasm of a self-styled tree-planting brigade. Tree partisans met at Kirkwood Park’s Campbell shelter at 9:30 a.m. and fanned out to plant 65 trees.

Delivery trucks arrived near the shelter early in the morning loaded with trees, mulch, and implements. The green cargo, dropped off at the maintenance yard, was then transferred to more than eight tree planting sites.

Seasoned tree planters were joined in their arbor efforts by a markedly younger work crew. The Kirkwood High School Environmental Awareness Club showed up in force. More than a dozen members arrived early for tree planting duty.

“It was great to have them helping us,” said Kirkwood’s Nancy Luetzow. “Any time I mingle with our high school students, my spirits are lifted by their energy, intellect, and enthusiasm. It’s always heartening.

“Our tree group is never deterred by a cool, cloudy, or clammy start to the day,” added Luetzow. “If anything, the recent 10 inches of rain and the additional showers Saturday, made our job easier and gave the new trees a good first drink.”

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