Friday, April 17, 2015

Glocester Town Annual Rabies Clinic

DOG LICENSES & RABIES CLINIC   POSTED APRIL 17, 2015
2015 DOG LICENSES ARE DUE DURING THE MONTH OF APRIL
To obtain a dog license, you must show proof of rabies inoculation.
  • DOG LICENSE FEE: $7.00
No license is required for any dog under the age of age (6) months. (RIGL 4-13-9)
Licenses may also be obtained in the Office of the Town Clerk, Town Hall, 1145 Putnam Pike, Chepachet, RI, Monday - Friday 8:00am to 4:30pm.
RABIES CLINIC WILL BE HELD SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015
Rabies Clinic will be held at Chepachet Fire Station, 1170 Putnam Pike, Chepachet, RI.
Cats & Ferrets: 10:00AM - 11:30AM
Dogs: 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM (Dogs MUST be leashed) — NO DOGS WILL BE ACCEPTED FOR RABIES VACCINATION BEFORE 11:30 AM.
Proof of current rabies vaccination is necessary to receive a three year shot.
You do not need to be a resident to obtain a rabies vaccination for your cat, dog or ferret.  By Wayne G. Barber
  • RABIES SHOTS: $13.

Burrillville News, Read All About It !


Burrillville News

Annual Earth Day Clean Up
Saturday, April 18, 2015
9:00 - 10:00 pm

The first Earth Day in 1970 capitalized on the emerging consciousness, channeling the energy of the anti-war protest movement and putting environmental concerns front and center. Fast forward 45 years to 2015, more than 1 billion people in 192 countries will participate in Earth Day activities and events, making it the largest civic observance in the world.

Sponsored by Burrillville Lions Club, Burrillville Conservation Commission, Waste Management, Burrillville Parks & Recreation, Blackstone Valley Tourism Council, Burrillville Department of Public Works and Dan's Management/Dunkin' Donuts, this annual event will kick off at 8:30 at DPW headquarters (65 Union Avenue, Harrisville).  There you will get your designated clean up area assigned and your gloves and pick up bags.

Sign up to be a part of their Green Team to help with litter clean ups all year long.  If you can't make this event organize your own neighborhood clean up.  


Burrillville Land Trust

The Burrillville Land Trust is dedicated to maintaining the town’s rural character by preserving open space, protecting the beauty and viability of our farms, and preserving the woodlands, meadows, ponds and rivers around us.

During the month of April the Land Trust has many events planned. These events include their monthly meeting, Earth Day cleanup and stone wall repair, movies and a walk in the woods with a master of the forest to name a few.  Visit their Northwest Greener Living Meet Up page online.


Burrillville Bike Path

Almost three years old now the Burrillville Bike Path is enjoyed by familes, walkers, bike riders, roller bladers, and people walking their dogs.  The bike path has entrances along Mowry Road, Railroad Avenue and Eastern Avenue.  The path connects the villages of Harrisville and Pascoag with an extension down to Duck Pond offering access to a wooded path around the pond.

Now that most of the snow is finally gone the trash littering the bike path has become evident. There is not only a lot of paper trash but dog waste as well.

Burrillville ordinance Sec. 4-44 states:

It shall be unlawful for any person to fail to promptly remove and dispose of, in a sanitary manner, feces left by a dog being handled by that person on property, public or private, other than the premises of the owner or handler of such dog.

Please remember that dog waste carries many germs and families with small children use the path.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

The Legendary Peeper !

                       The scientific name of Hyla crucifer, the tiny tree toad with the shrill, bell-toned April voice, reaches back into Greek legend. Hercules, says the legend, was fond of a boy named Hylas. While they were adventuring with the Argonauts, Hercules sent the boy to bring water from a spring; but the water nymphs captured Hylas and thereafter he lived in the water, calling for Hercules in his sweet young treble voice. ever since, that voice has been heard in swamp and bogland in the Spring of the year.

There is really nothing strange about a hyla we know except that it is a small frog with a very large voice. It Lives and grows as much as any frog, from egg to tadpole to adult frog. It hibernates, and emerges in the burgeoning Spring hungry for food and mate. It belongs to a family very old upon this earth, and in a sense it represents the very Springtime of life.

We usually call this small tree frog the Spring Peeper, but there are other common names. On Martha's Vineyard it is the pinkle-tink, and on the Cape Cod it is the pinkwink. Both names are, to a degree, imitative of the hyla's call. But no name can more than hint at a sound, which is clamorous and exultant and strangely musical and yet quite unmelodic. A chorus of Spring peepers close at hand can be a din of disorganized sound; yet from a little distance this same chorus can be pulse-lifting and rich with the warmth of Spring itself. There's nothing else quite like it. That is why we  h/b/56



 Vernal pools or seasonal wetlands, are defined as naturally occurring, seasonal bodies of water, free of predatory fish populations, that provide breeding habitat for one or more species of amphibians and salamanders, snakes and fairy shrimp. Of the 13 types of snakes in Rhode Island our pool holds three, garter, ribbon and northern water snake.
Of the 7 species of turtle in Rhode Island our pools support 3, spotted, painted and the snapper.

Spotted salamanders and red spotted newts.
The wood frog, northern spring peeper, gray tree frog, green frog, pickerel frog, American bull frog and the eastern American toad
 

04-08-15 Burrillville Town Council Regular Meeting - Apr 8th, 2015

04-08-15 Burrillville Town Council Regular Meeting - Apr 8th, 2015

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Spring is Here !

   Yes maple syrup time. Some years the maple sap begins to rise in February, but more often it waits for March. It flows best when days are mild, in the 40's and 50's, and when nights are still frosty.
 It's worth noting that the system for grading maple syrup- a classification that rates syrups on color and strength of flavors-recently was updated to make the U.S. and Canadian systems consistent. The previous used "Fancy" and" Grade A" to indicate syrups with lighter flavors and colors, while the "Grade B" was darker and more robust.
  Under the new system, everything is Grade A, but descriptions have been added. The lightest group is now "Grade A: golden color with a delicate taste" and the darkest is "Grade A: very dark with a strong taste. Many people prefer a lighter syrup on pancakes and waffles, but chefs will go with the darker more robust when cooking with it or using it with savory foods.
 The sap may start in a warm spell, stop if the days turn cold, then starts again. Old-time sugarmen think snow on the ground helps. I know when the sap flow starts by watching the gray squirrels. They seem to know instinctively, go into the maples, nip off a few twigs, and lap the sap as it oozes. Then the chickadees also watch the squirrels and then drink at the taps' when the squirrels are away.
   Geese sometimes fly north now. They fly high and their gabble is like the distant barking of dogs. If they fly in fairly regular V's they usually are Canadian geese; if in loose, wavery V's or long, wavy lines they more are likely are the snow geese. Snow geese gather by the thousands and are a famous sight, Spring and Fall, at Fortescue, New Jersey, and Cap Tourments, Quebec.

 Mergansers appear on local rivers, both the American and the hooded mergansers. The males, with lots of snowy white on them, are eye-catching; their heads are green, their beaks are orange-red. The females are drab in grays and browns with only a little white on their sides. Soon after the mergansers come the ducks, black ducks first, then the wood ducks, then our mallards.
 Last week our pair of mallards returned to our vernal pond for the 34th consecutive season and lifted my spirits up naturally. Our children and grand children have all fed them. The mallards mate for life. Every spring they mate, lay the eggs, fight off the raccoons, domestic cats and dogs, hawks, skunks, fisher, coyotes, snakes and drought to beat the odds of raising a brood.
 Skunk cabbage blooms in the bogs; the flower has a carrion odor. Now and then someone finds hepatica in bloom, but I never find them till April. In a very early Spring, anemones may bloom in March; I look for them in damp, leafmoldy places at the edge of the woods.
 Birch catkins fatten around the time of the Equinox. And the pussy willows, the male catkins on the willow, appear.



40 gallons sap to make one gallon of Maple Syrup.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

April and Robins

 People who can't tell a American bald eagle from a wild turkey vulture know what a robin looks like, and they know when a robin struts the lawn April must be here. April just isn't April, in this part of the world, without robin's. Spring couldn't come without them.
  The robin long ago became kind of a national bird without a shred of legal backing. It didn't need legal proclamations, for the robin is one of the best known and widely distributed birds in all these great United States of America. Perhaps most important of all, it is a cosmopolitan bird, equally at home in a big city park, on a suburban lawn and in the open country. Unlike most other thrushes, it prefers to nest near a house. Being a comparatively large bird, big as a blue jay, and a conspicuous bird with its black head and a cinnamon-red breast, the robin simply can't be overlooked. Besides, robins love to strut. And to sing, preferably from a street-side tree.
 The robin's song is often underrated, probably because the robin is so common and so vocal. But the robin,after all, is a thrush, and the thrushes are accomplished songsters. The robin sings long, loudly and rather deliberately. It's notes are clear and rich in tone. And no two robins sing exactly the same way: they vary their songs, put the phrases together differently. An individual robin may as many as ten different songs, varying with the time of day.
  Robins are already singing in many places in New England.

Love to Strut !
Their chorus will increase day by day. After all, it is April, even to a robin.