What are you doing April 23-25? If you love your lake,
you might want to consider attending the 2015 Wisconsin Lakes Partnership Convention,
or at least a part of it.
I’ll attend this year for the fifth time, and I wish I
had started long ago. It’s an inspiring event. You spend a couple of days
surrounded by scientists, communicators, lake association leaders, advocacy
group representatives and others all interested in one thing: making lakes
better.
For a few days you shed your political affiliation, forget
what you do for a living and just learn, in hands-on workshops, field trips,
lecture sessions, poster presentations, an exhibit hall, and casual break-time
and lunchtime conversations.
Sessions cover all manner of subjects: aquatic
invasive species, wetland protection, fishery surveys, nutrients and algae,
shoreland zoning and other government policies and, perhaps most important, how
to get involved in improving the lakes you care most about.
My all-time favorite session, during my first trip to
the convention, was a half-day workshop on aquatic plants. There were slide
presentations followed by hands-on exercises examining specimens of common and
less common plants and using what’s called a taxonomic key to identify them by
name. I’m a fisherman by avocation, but now when I’m out on the water, I am
much more attuned to the greenery below and on the surface – it’s no longer
just “weeds.”
Also of note are the plenary (whole-group) sessions,
which generally feature inspiring speakers. This year, the keynote speaker is Marion
Stoddart, a citizen leader and grassroots organizer who is largely responsible
for the conversion of New England’s Nashua River, once among the nation’s most
polluted rivers, into a candidate for the National Wild and Scenic Rivers
System.
I can’t wait to hear her talk. I know I haven’t done
as much as I could for lakes, including my own, and her words may help nudge me
into more action.
The convention will be at the Holiday Inn Convention
Center in Stevens Point. That’s not so far away, and the registration fees are
affordable. There’s a good chance that one or more leaders of your lake group
plans to attend. If you’re interested in doing more for your lake, you might
want to consider going along.
I know I appreciate lakes more deeply, and feel better
qualified too advocate for them, because I’ve gone to this event.
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