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Volunteering Matters: Deer Exclosure at Apshawa Preserve

Volunteering Matters is an ongoing series where I share photographs & thoughts regarding my favourite volunteer projects.

Volunteering is an important part of my life. I’m always looking for ways to volunteer my time & energy to good, fulfilling causes. While it can be difficult to manage multiple careers, it’s easy to take advantage of numerous volunteer opportunities to satisfy my many passions & interests.

Volunteering allows me to forge friendships, pursue my passions, lift my self-esteem, and build/strengthen my body of knowledge. Perhaps best of all, volunteering just makes me feel good.

Last June, I started working with the New Jersey Conservation Foundation (NJCF). NJCF’s mission is to preserve New Jersey’s land and natural resources for the benefit of all. Since 1960, NJCF has protected over 120,000 acres of natural areas and farmland in New Jersey—from farms to forests to urban and suburban parks.

My first task as a volunteer for NJCF was to create a scavenger hunt for children at Apshawa Preserve.  My next task will be a longer-term project.  Along with a few other volunteers & staff, I will be monitoring the deer exclosure at Apshawa Preserve.

seahorse

Why a deer exclosure?
The 576-acre preserve has an overpopulation of white-tail deer. The deer—being native to the area—eat the native plant life. In turn, the native plant life is disappearing and the invasive species are thriving. The 3.2-mile-long fence will keep deer out and promote reforestation.

purple iris
Native Iris, planted by NJCF Staff & Volunteers

How do you get in & out?
There are self-closing gates placed all along the fence that make it super-easy (for humans!) to get in & out.

What about other animals?
Log bridges are placed along the fence to allow animals like bobcats, foxes, raccoons, possums and even bears to easily cross into and out of the preserve. Additionally small paths are carved beneath the fence in places to allow small reptiles—like turtles & frogs—to pass underneath.

animal crossing bridge

Who is paying for this?
The project is funded by a $125,000 grant from the National Forest Foundation. Volunteers like myself do not get paid. We do it because we want to. (Side note: That’s the point of “volunteering.”) 😉

Is there vandalism?
Sadly, vandalism is an issue. There are people who oppose the fence for various reasons. Hunters do not like the fence (even though there are countless other places to hunt nearby). Local folks—neighbors, hikers, etc.—don’t like the fence because, well, I think it’s because some people don’t like change. ATV riders don’t like the fence though it is illegal to ride in the preserve. And finally, there are others who (seemingly) just like to be difficult.

That said, some of these unhappy people vandalize and cut the fence. I snapped this photograph on Saturday. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t a bear…

vandalism
Don't think it was a bear...

Are you afraid?
No. I am not afraid. I am not afraid of the vandals because they are unlikely to vandalize when there are people around. I do get nervous about bears but the reality is that black bears (the only kind we get around here) are generally docile creatures. So long as you make noise as you walk—set your cell phone to go off every few minutes, make loud footsteps, or (in my case) talk/sing to yourself & your dog—the bears will head away from you, not toward you.

seahorse

Saturday was National Trails Day. To celebrate, an NJCF staff-person lead a group of us on a one-hour hike through Apshawa. Afterward, myself and a couple other volunteers received our orientation about monitoring the deer fence. Our task will be to monitor the fence about once a week & make minor repairs. We will also report back on major damage (fallen trees, vandalism, etc.) so that staff people can come out & make those fixes.

I am so excited to be taking part in this project! Apshawa is such an incredibly beautiful place and knowing that I am helping to keep it that way is overwhelming in such a great way.

Here are a few photographs that I snapped on Saturday.

volunteers
Me & John - NJCF Volunteers
unlikely friends
An unlikely pair!

hikers

pink yellow wildflower

Mountain Laurel
Beautiful stretches of Mountain Laurel in bloom, looks like snow in the middle of June!

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    My Journey to Financial Freedom | Part 1: The Fall

    Three years ago, I was nearly $60,000 in debt. I had a Bachelor’s degree that didn’t appear to be worth its weight in salt and a job that couldn’t cover a fraction of my monthly bills. I was terrified.

    Today, I am closer to complete financial freedom than I ever dreamed possible. Last week, I paid off my last remaining credit card balance. This two-part post is a celebration of this incredible milestone in my journey.

    In part one, I will explain how I got to that terrible place. In part two, I will explain how I’m getting out of it (and how you can do it, too).

    ————————————————————————

    A financial prison is the worst sort of prison to be stuck in. A financial prison does not have steel bars or a prison warden. You will not get sent to financial prison for committing a crime. There is only one person that can sentence you to financial prison. That person is you.

    There are two primary types of financial prisoners:

    1. There are those in financial prison who got there because they truly did not know any better. This type eventually realizes the error of their ways and breaks free.

    2. There are those who knowingly commit themselves to financial prison. This type is well aware of the consequences of living beyond her means; but she does it anyway.

    Of course there are also those who fall somewhere in the middle, like me… (Cue dream sequence.) It all started when I was 18. The guidance counseling systems in my high school and college were either completely inadequate or I simply refused to pay attention. I can’t honestly remember which it was, though I think it was the former. Either way, I was screwed.

    Before me, no one in my family had ever been to college so I didn’t receive much advice. I was thrilled to be out of high school and ready for the next step. I took my SATs one time and applied to one school. My parents, being average folks, made just enough money to prevent me from receiving financial aid; but not enough money to be able to pay my full tuition. For me, this meant loans: “lovely” student loans from “lovely” Sallie Mae.

    My mother co-signed and it was a cinch from there. Each semester I filled out a relatively simple form and like magic, Sallie Mae sent me a check. In fact, Sallie Mae was so generous that they allowed me to take out as much “extra” money as I needed every semester. It was fantastic! Yes, I had money to pay for books, meals, and extra curricula. I also had money to go out and binge drink, buy clothes I didn’t need, designer purses, and more. Sallie Mae was wonderful to me. And the best part if it was that there was no need for discussion. No one guided me, no one advised me, and no one asked me any questions. I showed up at the financial aid office a couple of times each year and it was always smooth sailing.

    On top of that, another great thing happened when I was 18! The credit card companies started to send me applications. And that was just as easy. I got one and then another and then another. Whatever I couldn’t cover with those pretty little checks from Sallie Mae, I could simply charge on my credit cards. College was good to me. I joined a sorority, I partied hard, I shopped until I dropped. What more could a girl ask for?

    It wasn’t all fun & games though. I worked through college. I worked at a children’s camp each summer; I was a Spanish teacher for two years; and toward the end of my college career I was a bookseller at Borders bookstore. All of the money I made working was spending money for me. I had Sallie Mae and the credit cards to pay all of my “real” bills.

    When I finally graduated, I was making a cool $8.25 an hour at Borders. I loved it. I was happy… until one day, out of no where, a letter came in the mail. I had a six month grace period and then I would have to start paying back those loans. My paychecks barely covered my minimum credit card payments. How was I going to make loan payments on top of that?

    So I sat down and did something that I’d never done before. I wrote up a budget. It was horrifying when I realized that even if I’d had no other bills, my monthly wages from Borders wouldn’t even cover half of my monthly student loan payments. The jig was up.

    All told, I came out of college with about $45,000 in student loan debt and almost $15,000 in credit card debt. I hadn’t even lived on campus; I commuted from home; my parents paid for some of my tuition; and I only went to a mediocre school. How the hell was this possible?

    All of a sudden Sallie Mae and the credit card companies didn’t seem so lovely anymore. There was one thought that kept repeating over & over in my head: Why didn’t anyone warn me? I felt cheated, betrayed, angry, afraid, and helpless. I wondered what the people in the financial aid office had been doing all that time. I wondered why my high school guidance counselor didn’t press me harder about applying for scholarships or grants. I wondered a lot of things, but mostly I wondered how the hell I was going to get out of the mess.

    I started sending out resumes for jobs with starting salaries that would at least cover my monthly student loan payments. I sent out resume after resume but before long, I realized another harsh reality. That Bachelor’s Degree in English with a Creative Writing Focus wasn’t so great either. Nobody was calling me back. I couldn’t even get an interview.

    The clock was ticking. I was halfway through my grace period. Then one day, one of my best friends mentioned an opening in her office. I looked over the job description and realized that it had nothing to do with what I’d gone to school for. I didn’t even know what it actually was, but the starting salary was more than what I needed. The rest was history.

    I’ve been at my current company for almost three years now. And yesterday I paid off my last remaining credit card balance! Additionally over these few years, I’ve cut my student loan debt almost in half and by next Winter, I will have it down to a quarter of what I started with.

    Stay tuned for tomorrow’s post, where I will share how I am doing it and how you can do it, too.

2 Comments

  1. Very nice post and some great pics. Volunteering is a great way to make a difference and feel good about yourself while helping others. Enjoy yourself while monitoring the deer fence and be careful of the 2 footed crazy animals.

    1. @ Lou – Thanks so much. Glad you enjoyed the post! Yes, volunteering is so good for the soul. 🙂

      You’re right. It’s definitely the two-legged animals that I need to watch out for.

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