Students engage in an Equitable Climate Action Project By Ada Mahood

Currently, the Food & Forest systems class is working on an Equitable Climate Action Project with other students in the Upper Valley. Here is the ECAP project described by Hannah Gelroth, Senior Director of VINS as, “Through this endeavor, students have been exploring changes in our local environment while actively engaging in activities designed to enhance their sense of agency “I can do this!” and contribute to making the Upper Valley an even better place to live In.”

The Food and Forest systems class made the decision that for their equitable climate action project they were going to help the riparian buffer by the river that runs through the back of our sports fields where heavy flooding occurred last summer. A riparian buffer is a strip of vegetation along the riverside to help prevent erosion. The students collected data from the riparian zone at our school and researched different plants and other aspects that would help strengthen the riparian buffer along our river.

Each of the students were assigned a different zone and researched which plants would thrive best in that zone. They also came up with a hypothesis of what would happen when they executed their plans. The group also touched upon what climate challenge they were addressing. “A Riparian buffer prevents pollution from entering the river,reduces flooding and the river and trees are a sink for CO2.”

They used their research to build the riparian buffer along the river bank and were thoroughly satisfied with their work. They harvested and planted live stakes of shrub willow and red osier dogwood in the first zone of their buffer. They are going to plan and plant zone 2 in the coming weeks. They planned some more data collection for the future to monitor their zones and if the buffer

is effective.