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Enjoy working outside? How about giving a hand-up to nature? JDCF is looking for volunteers to help with a variety of land stewardship projects. This is your chance to participate on a prescribed burn, join workday teams to battle invasive species at one of our preserves, or plant trees as part of ongoing restoration plans. Great opportunities for individuals, Scout troops, church and school groups looking to give back to their community.
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Have you ever thought about becoming a citizen-scientist? How about giving tours of beautiful places to area residents and visiting tourists? Maybe you enjoy planning outdoor events like mothing parties, luminaria hikes, or experiences in nature for youth? JDCF offers many volunteer opportunities to people of all ages through our Education and Outreach Program.
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Looking for a way to get your steps in while exploring spectacular pieces of property? JDCF is looking for volunteers to monitor our preserves and lands under conservation easement by walking them and taking photos for documentation. Many of these properties are privately owned making this a unique opportunity to see new parts of Jo Daviess County.
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November 16 @ 1:30 pm - 4:00 pm
Guided Migrating Waterfowl Field Trip with JDCF & NW IL Audubon
Guided Migrating Waterfowl Field Trip with Viewing Scopes
Saturday, November 16, 2024
1:30-4:00 PM
Begins at Spring Lake Wildlife Area 2 miles south of Savanna, IL on RT 84 South
JDCF and the Northwest IL Audubon Society (NIAS) invite you to attend a free field trip to observe migrating waterfowl along the Mississippi River. This field trip involves viewing from automobiles and shorelines with some walking on level ground. The field trip will start at Spring Lake Wildlife Area two miles south of Savanna, IL. We will make several more stops along the river including at the Ingersoll Wetlands Learning Center which has a paved lookout over Sloan Marsh, an excellent spot to watch waterfowl during fall migration. Our last stop will be Lock and Dam #13 just north of Fulton, IL.
Some of the waterfowl we can hope to see include late migrating tundra swans, mergansers, buffleheads, and possibly other ducks, pelicans and sandhill cranes. Mary Blackmore from NIAS is leading the field trip and is an excellent birder who has led many birding field trips for Audubon and other organizations. Please dress for the weather, bring binoculars and water. Members of NIAS and JDCF will bring scopes which can be shared to see birds that are at a distance from the shore. Please also bring a scope if you own one.
Since the field trip is weather dependent, please email JDCF at info@jdcf.org to let them know you plan to attend. If cancelled, you will receive an email from JDCF member Pam Johnson the morning of the field trip after 10 am. You are free to drop out at any point along the route. Photo (c) Pam Johnson.
January 8 @ 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Conservation Conversation – JDCF Winter Book Club
JDCF’s winter book club will resume in January, 2025. We will meet once a month via Zoom on the second Wednesday of January, February, and March focusing on one book per session. The final discussion will be held at the Hess House Center for Science and Culture in April, where we will focus on all of the books as a whole and share our thoughts for the future, not only individually but as good caretakers of our one and only Earth. The 2025 reading list is here: Conservation Conversation books 2025.
All are welcome to join our book club! To sign up for the Book Club and to receive the Zoom link for all sessions, please fill out the online form found here. JDCF does not share, sell, or otherwise distribute individuals contact information.
February 12 @ 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Conservation Conversation – JDCF Winter Book Club
JDCF’s winter book club will resume in January, 2025. We will meet once a month via Zoom on the second Wednesday of January, February, and March focusing on one book per session. The final discussion will be held at the Hess House Center for Science and Culture in April, where we will focus on all of the books as a whole and share our thoughts for the future, not only individually but as good caretakers of our one and only Earth. The 2025 reading list is here: Conservation Conversation books 2025.
All are welcome to join our book club! To sign up for the Book Club and to receive the Zoom link for all sessions, please fill out the online form found here. JDCF does not share, sell, or otherwise distribute individuals contact information.
March 12 @ 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Conservation Conversation – JDCF Winter Book Club
JDCF’s winter book club will resume in January, 2025. We will meet once a month via Zoom on the second Wednesday of January, February, and March focusing on one book per session. The final discussion will be held at the Hess House Center for Science and Culture in April, where we will focus on all of the books as a whole and share our thoughts for the future, not only individually but as good caretakers of our one and only Earth. The 2025 reading list is here: Conservation Conversation books 2025.
All are welcome to join our book club! To sign up for the Book Club and to receive the Zoom link for all sessions, please fill out the online form found here. JDCF does not share, sell, or otherwise distribute individuals contact information.
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JDCF Celebrates Fall Harvest of “Teejop Wicawas” Ho-Chunk Corn
September 23rd, 2024
Open Position – Ecological Restoration Lead Specialist
September 17th, 2024
JDCF seeks an Ecological Restoration Lead Specialist to work with our Driftless Stewardship Initiative located in the scenic Driftless Area of northwest Illinois. We’re looking for a motivated individual who […]
JDCF Opens New Center for Science & Culture
July 31st, 2024
Through a survey many of our members participated in in 2021, we learned that they would like to see our educational programming expand. The goal? To develop the next generation […]
Driftless Stewardship Initiative
May 9th, 2024
Carrying the Torch ~ A Prescribed Fire Seminar
March 12th, 2024
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November 28th, 2023
After a lengthy and rigorous application process, we received the good news that JDCF has been reaccredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission. The Commission is an independent program of […]
“Big Sky Nature Preserve” – JDCF Announces Largest Land Donation to Date
August 9th, 2023
This is the story of one of the most incredible gifts ever given: to JDCF, to the natural world, and to the people of Jo Daviess County. A gift over […]
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August 9th, 2023
Over the last decade, JDCF has worked hard to greatly expanded our stewardship capacity. From 1 dedicated staff member using a DR push mower and a well-used, donated truck to […]
Unique Conservation Model Preserves Bedford Hollow
April 11th, 2023
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April 11th, 2023
Rutherford Refuge at Twin Bridges Becomes JDCF’s First Nature Preserve
February 17th, 2022
After reading this headline, you may be asking yourself, “What do you mean ‘first’ Nature Preserve?” What about Schurmeier Teaching Forest? What about Wapello? What about Casper Bluff, Horseshoe Mound, Valley of Eden, and all the other natural areas that JDCF has protected over the last 29 years? Yes, JDCF has preserved these natural areas in perpetuity for future generations to enjoy. But the title of “Nature Preserve” carries a very special meaning within the State of Illinois, and it’s not a title that is easily attained. “Nature Preserve” is an official legal status bestowed on certain special natural areas by a little-known state government agency called the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission (INPC). While INPC does not own any land itself, INPC uses Nature Preserve dedications in order to permanently protect land that is owned by nonprofit organizations like JDCF, governmental entities, and private landowners. A Nature Preserve dedication is the highest form of legal protection that a natural area can achieve in the State of Illinois without an act of Congress. “Nature Preserve” is also an official status that is reserved for only the rarest and highest-quality natural areas in Illinois. The Rutherford Refuge at Twin Bridges is one such natural area. It contains the “best of kind” wet-mesic prairie and sedge meadow habitats located within Illinois’s portion of Driftless Area. The refuge also contains dry-mesic prairie, oak barrens, oak savanna, upland forest, and coolwater stream habitats that paint a unique mosaic of habitat types on the landscape, which are home to several rare plant and insect species. Acquired by JDCF in December 2020, the Rutherford Refuge at Twin Bridges was founded with generous financial support from the Rutherford Family and the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation. It’s named in memory of John and Barbara Rutherford who owned and stewarded the property from 1988 to 2018. “Our mom had a vision,” said Bryn Davis, one of John and Barbara Rutherford’s four children that helped create the refuge. “I know she and dad would be thrilled beyond words at the fact that Twin Bridges has been dedicated as a Nature Preserve! They knew that it was a special place and they wanted it to be protected and available for others to enjoy. This dedication just reinforces what our parents and JDCF saw in this little gem of a place.” The Rutherford Refuge at Twin Bridges Nature Preserve joins the ranks of more than 400 dedicated Nature Preserves across Illinois totaling more than 60,000 acres. It is only the fourth Nature Preserve to be dedicated in Jo Daviess County and the only Nature Preserve in the county that is not owned by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. In addition to over 400 Nature Preserves, INPC has registered 196 “Land and Water Reserves” totaling more than 54,000 acres across Illinois. Similar to Nature Preserve dedications, INPC uses Land and Water Reserve registrations to permanently protect Illinois’s most important natural and archaeological areas. However, unlike Nature Preserves, Land and Water Reserves allow for a wider variety of recreational uses to occur onsite and are used to protect sites that may be of slightly lower quality and may not qualify for Nature Preserve status. JDCF’s Land and Water Reserves include Wapello, Casper Bluff, and Keough Effigy Mounds. The Rutherford Refuge at Twin Bridges Nature Preserve is located at 9532 East Twin Bridges Road, Warren, Illinois. It’s open to the public for passive outdoor recreation daily from dawn to dusk.
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