Cooper River Watchable Wildlife Walk: Birds - Cherry Hill, NJ
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
N 39° 54.739 W 075° 01.651
18S E 497648 N 4418025
Installed in 2012, this colorful & beautiful bird interpretive is part of a brand new series of seven interpretives called the Cooper River Watchable Wildlife Walk. Each flora & fauna sign explains the wildlife & plant life found at our local river.
Waymark Code: WMGQ0N
Location: New Jersey, United States
Date Posted: 03/30/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Tharandter
Views: 3

This interpretive is part of a series of seven scattered about the eastern side of the Cooper River. The interpretive program, called Cooper River Watchable Wildlife Walk, is part of a 1.8 mile path that stems from Greenwald Park and extends along a small branch of the Cooper River that is wooded and shaded. There has been a lot of activities and initiatives lately with our local parks department. Our main facility was just upgraded. The green-roofed facility adjacent to the parks department's longtime headquarters on North Park Drive in Cherry Hill opened in 2011. I watched them build it and wondered what the heck was a bunch of green weeds doing up on the roof. Now I know it is an environmental thing. Built for $2.4 million, about half of it from a state green-energy grant, the center has begun to host organizations, programs, and events on a regular basis. This interpretive series is one of those programs. The free "Talks and Walks" will focus on the Cooper watershed's flora, fauna, and history, and will continue biweekly through June 16, 2013, paying particular attention to these interpretives. The South Jersey Land and Water Trust recently received a $7,600 Subaru of America grant to fabricate and install these seven handsome "watchable wildlife" informational signs for the park, which is home to small mammals (including muskrats), the occasional marsupial (possums), as well as an aviary's worth of sparrows, cardinals, robins, nuthatches, chickadees, and woodpeckers.

The Cooper River Watchable Wildlife Walk is located at the Maria Barnaby Greenwald Memorial Park. Maria Barnaby Greenwald was a really nice lady and mayor of my home town of Cherry Hill and the first woman to be elected as a Camden County Freeholder. The 47-acre park named in her honor encompasses a variety of different habitats from woodland, scrub and streams to field and pond. With abundant habitat for wildlife in the heart of a heavily developed area, birds and other wildlife are drawn here like magnets. A two or three hour walk around the area can yield at least 40 species of birds in May or September and slightly less at other times of the year. Wetland and woodland marsh habitat is observable from a slightly elevated trail. The 1.8 mile Cooper River Watchable Wildlife Walk begins here (Trailhead at Hopkins Lane), with interpretive signs and brochures available at the Parks Administration Office and 3 locations along the trail.

About the Interpretive

Year-round residences are birds that spend the entire year in the area and do not migrate. The northern cardinal, tufted titmouse, Carolina chickadee and white-breasted nuthatch are common along the river year round.

Look for the cardinal, titmouse and chickadee feeding on seeds and insects in the trees, shrubs and on the ground. Look for the nuthatch scurrying up and down the trunks and branches of trees searching for insects.

This project was made possible with funding from a grant from the Subaru of America Foundation and Camden County. Produced by the South Jersey Land and Water Trust and Camden County Department of Parks.

In the center of the interpretive is a picture of a Northern Cardinal. On the left border, moving from top to bottom are pictures of a Tufted Titmouse, a Carolina Chickadee and a White-Breasted Nuthatch. The logos of the Subaru Cooperation (which is just up the river), Camden County Parks Department and the South Jersey Land & Water Trust can be found in the lower right hand corner.

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