Chesapeake Bay

Clean Water and Sanitation icon

International Rain Barrel Giveaway

image1-2Rain barrels are designed to collect water, but one distinctive rain barrel designed by students at Daysland School in central Alberta is garnering just as much attention as it is water.

Butterflies, toads, dragonflies and other flora and fauna help depict a healthy watershed on a rain barrel designed by 20 students from grades five to 12 at Daysland School. It also helped the classroom win $1,000 through an international rain barrel giveaway and art contest sponsored by Nutrien’s Caring for our Watersheds (“CFW”) program.

Continue reading

Clean Water and Sanitation iconLife on Land icon

Centreville Rain Gardens

2013 Centreville, Virginia, USA
group of students working
In the spring of 2013, a team of 15 sixth‐grade students at Centreville Elementary School took a close look at the playground area at the back of the school. Observing during a rainstorm, they noted soil, trash, and mulch washing into the storm drains that lead to Little Rocky Run. Working through the Caring for Our Watersheds Student Workbook, and relying on information from the Northern Virginia Soil and Water Conservation District, they came up with a plan to build three strategically placed rain    gardens and to keep the school community students and rain gardeninformed about why rain gardens matter.

Third place finishers in the 2013 Caring for Our Watersheds competition, the Centreville students built their rain gardens, edging them with handmade “bio‐logs” seeded with two grass and two wildflower species. They communicated their project on the school news, a presentation, and signage at the rain garden areas.

To cover costs of the project, they were able to leverage a $1,200 Fairfax County Public Schools    Schoolyard Stewardship Mini‐Grant and received $630 in implementation funding from Nutrien

Quality Education iconClean Water and Sanitation icon

Rain Barrel Workshop

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

When sixth graders from Kenmore Middle School visited Four Mile Run at Bluemont Park in Arlington, they were surprised to find that the water was low in dissolved oxygen. To help address some of the causes, such as elevated temperatures in runoff and stormwater-borne pollutants, nutrients and organic materials, they decided to promote the use of rain barrels as a citizen-based approach to stormwater management.

To accomplish this goal, students held a rain barrel workshop for the community, educating residents about the use of rain barrels to help improve water quality. Their presentation discussed how stormwater affects dissolved oxygen in Four Mile Run, then covered techniques for decorating the rain barrels. Workshop participants could purchase rain barrels at reduced cost, decorating them them for use at home. 25 individuals from nine households attended, and twelve rain barrels went home with the workshop participants.

Clean Water and Sanitation iconLife Below Water icon

Stream Cleanup and Art Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

After visiting Four Mile Run, Swanson Middle School sixth graders decided they wanted to address the problem of trash evident in and around the stream. Beyond just picking it up for proper disposal, the students wanted to reach the community and educate others on how trash, particularly plastic, negatively impacts aquatic life.

After conducting a litter clean-up at Bluemont Park and nearby streets, the students used the material they collected to make “trashworks” artwork to raise awareness, arranging with the school to display these works at the main office entrance. Their project was a finalist in the Caring for Our Watershed contest, and required no funding to implement.

Life on Land icon

Erosion Control Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

Swanson Middle School sixth graders examined the condition for Four Mile Run in Bluemont Park and discovered that the erosion and sedimentation that are evident there also have serious consequences for the Chesapeake Bay. They decided to take action on the school grounds, where they focused their efforts on an eroding slope in front of the school at a location that is highly visible to the public.

With help and guidance from Arlington Regional Master Naturalist volunteers, they identified suitable native plants for the location and obtained school permission to replant the area. They also formed an art committee to design and created signage to draw the attention of passers-by to the erosion, habitat, and pollinator benefits of native plantings.

Clean Water and Sanitation icon

One Plus Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

After learning about some of the problems that affect the Chesapeake Bay, sixth graders at Swanson Middle School realized the with 17 million residents in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, “if all those people did one little action to help clean the Bay, that would be 17 million little actions.” In forming their project, they decided to focus their action on convincing others to take that one little action.

The project involved creating a large mural-style drawing depicting a flowing stream. The mural was overlaid with removable transparent bookmarks, each of which described a simple action one could take to improve watershed health. The bookmarks themselves depicted images of something negative (such as litter), and the viewer’s removal of a bookmark would represent the viewer’s commitment to the positive action described. Their completed project they posted at school.

Clean Water and Sanitation icon

Water Can Save Winkler

2012 Alexandria, Virginia, USA

Seventh graders at George Washington Middle School tested water in tributaries of Holmes Run at the Winkler Botanical Preserve in Alexandria, and were concerned bout the extensive land development and an increase in impervious surfaces in the headwater areas of the small watersheds that supply them. From repeated testing of the water quality in the park, they could see that the streams are currently impacted by nutrient loads, particularly from nitrate deposition from automotive sources on nearby Interstate 395, and they wanted to ensure that planners were considering the impact of further development.

Working with the staff at the Preserve, the students initiated a water monitoring program to back their findings with data. They presented their findings before the Alexandria City Council at a public hearing on the neighborhood development plan and presented 416 signatures supporting a long term monitoring program and no increase in stormwater inflows to the Preserve. They also worked to draw public atention to the isue, writing a newspaper article for the Alexandria Gazeette-Packet, asking for community support and funding through Action Alexandria, and submitting questions for the Democratic City Council candidates’ forum in an election year.

Responsible Consumption icon

Vermicomposting Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

Sixth graders at Swanson Middle School felt it was important to address the problem of organic waste leaching from landfills as a source of Chesapeak Bay nutrient loads. noting that 14% of U.S. trash is from food scraps, they decided to promote composting using worm bins. They built a worm bin at school, and used it to demonstrate a simple vermicomposting method, crating artwork to promote it in the school community and offering free starter worms from their bin for anyone interested to try it.

Life on Land icon

Native Plants Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA


Swanson Middle School sixth graders wanted to address the problem of invasive species in Virginia because they inadequately support local food webs and they threaten native plant species. They chose to remove invasive plants and plant native species on the school grounds. As an outreach component of their project, they created a “garden of photographs,” that identified native and invasive plants commonly found in Arlington.

Clean Water and Sanitation iconResponsible Consumption iconLife Below Water icon

Pet Waste Disposal Project

2012 Arlington, Virginia, USA

Sixth graders at Kenmore Middle School aimed to address bacterial contamination in Four Mile Run by repurposing used plastic bags for pet waste disposal at local dog parks. Collecting bags from the school community and neighbors, they were able to donate roughly 10,000 gabs to Arlington Dogs for this purpose.