Bats, camp cooking and more at Great Mountain Forest

FALLS VILLAGE — The Great Mountain Forest and Joe Brien of Lost Art Workshops are teaming up to offer four Forest Skills workshops for families.

Brien held demonstrations and workshops at Great Mountain Forest during the “Open Forest Day†last fall. These new workshops are more specific and detailed — part of an effort on the part of Great Mountain Forest to provide more events for the general public, according to business manager and program coordinator Jean Bronson.

The bat boxes  are intriguing. Brien said that bats are increasingly endangered, both by loss of habitat and by White-nose Syndrome, a fungus that is killing hundreds of thousands of bats in states from Vermont to Virginia (according the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service).

Brien said the bat boxes “are like a birdhouse for bats,†with an open slot on the bottom and a narrow space within.

Bats like dark, narrow, warm spaces, Brien said, so to best accomodate them the boxes are treated with a dark, water-based stain and hung on the south side of a building or tree. Wasps might venture in, he added, but the boxes do not attract birds.

The boxes need to have at least 4 feet of clearance below them, added Brien. “When they leave they drop out and spread their wings,†and they need some room for the maneuver.

Brien said he once saw a cupola on a barn that was raised up about 3 feet. When he asked why the cupola was on what amounted to stilts, he was told it was to accommodate bats.

Alas, in that instance the builders did not leave enough dropping room.

Camp Fire Cooking (Saturday, April 24, 9 a.m. to noon) — Learn how to build a campfire and cook meals. For children 8 years and up, accompanied by an adult. $15 per adults, $10 per child.

Spoon Carving (Saturday, May 8, 9 a.m. and noon) — Learn how to safely carve a functional wooden spoon, using a whittling knife.  For children 8 years and up, accompanied by an adult. $15 per adult, $10 per child.

Build a Bat Box (Saturday, May 22, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.) — Learn how to safely use hand tools while crafting a secure shelter for a struggling species. For children 8 years and up, accompanied by an adult. $20 per adult, $10 per child.

Cordage Making (Saturday, June 5, 9 a.m. to noon) — An introduction to wilderness survival. For children 8 years and up, accompanied by an adult. $15 per adult, $10 per child.

The workshops will be held at “The Shelter,†90 Golf Drive in Norfolk. Space is liimited; e-mail Bronson at jean@greatmountainforest.org or call 860-542-5422 to register.

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