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An Urban Waters Update

As we shared in September, NeighborSpace was awarded a $60,000 grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation through its Five Star and Urban Waters program for a project that blends hands-on restoration with public educational opportunities and a community science program and that will run through February 2026.* The ultimate goal is to restore and sustain healthy habitat at the three NeighborSpace sites that serve as riparian forest buffers: Levickas Woods (Catonsville), Tollgate Wyndham Preserve (Owings Mills) and Volz Neighborhood Park (Middle River).

The first step is to thoroughly get to know these sites, on a number of levels. 

Mature, adolescent and baby trees at Tollgate Wyndham Preserve
Layers at Levickas Woods, including: English Ivy on the forest floor (non-native invasive vine), spicebush in the understory (native shrub) and beech in the canopy (native tree).

From left to right: juvenile red-shouldered hawk at Levickas Woods, wood frog and humans at Tollgate Wyndham Preserve, green frog at Volz Neighborhood Park

A portion of the streams at Tollgate Wyndham Preserve (left) and Levickas Woods (right). Being able to see rocks clearly in a stream is one visual indicator of good stream health. The spaces between layers of gravel, small stones and boulders provide crucial habitat for small aquatic bugs such as caddisflies.

These observations will inform which restoration actions we take in the next phase of the project. For example, Yellow Warblers prefer to nest in dense shrubs, so if we observe Setophaga petechia at one of our sites, we might plant alder or willow shrubs along the stream, and maybe some wax myrtle to supplement their summer diet. Or if stream banks are eroded and suitable tree species are present, such as willows or red twig dogwood, we might consider live staking as an effort to stabilize the banks. If we uncover healthy sedges while removing invasives, for example, the best approach might be to keep the area clear to allow them to spread or we might choose to fill in the cleared soil with additional quarts of Carex pensylvanica.

A sedge (left) and a rush (right) at Volz Neighborhood Park. If you have trouble remembering which is which, the rhyme “sedges have edges and rushes are round” can prove helpful.

All this to say, we want to understand the existing ecosystem and establish a baseline to measure future progress against. Restoration activities should strengthen the existing ecosystem by allowing species that are already doing well to flourish and by supporting struggling species by removing threats and bringing in missing elements. By continuing to make observations on a regular basis, we’ll be able to track the impact of our restoration efforts, observe which techniques are successful and adjust our approach where needed.

Over the winter, NeighborSpace staff has consulted a variety of resources and a number of experts and we are working to finalize a new assessment protocol to collect, document and track data on trees, other plant growth, wildlife, stream health and possibly soil health.

This is where we could use your help! If you would like to assist in surveying NeighborSpace sites, please let us know. If you are a plant ID expert, a birder, an amateur entomologist or herpetologist, and you are willing to donate a few hours to make observations at one or more NeighborSpace parks, we would greatly appreciate it. If you don’t fall in any of those categories but you are an outdoor enthusiast willing to share your time with NeighborSpace, we would welcome your help. Please reach out to me at phyllis@neighborspacebaltimorecounty.org or (443)850-2756 to set up a meeting with a staff member.

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