Virginia News

Workshop on Educational Resources January 19

Please plan to attend a special Virginia Chapter workshop from 1:30 to 3 pm on Sunday, January 19th, 2014 at the Walker Nature Center, 11450 Glade Drive, Reston, Virginia 20191. We will be demonstrating many of the rich educational resources now available to educators and Chapter volunteers for telling the story of the American chestnut tree and efforts to return this giant of our Eastern forest to its status as a keystone of Appalachia.

The lead presenter is Betty Gatewood, an experienced Virginia educator who will share her experience working with teachers and students to use American chestnut history and science to address learning objectives and state standards.

Participants will experience a variety of hands on materials and activities from the American Chestnut Learning Box, as well as video, graphic and web resources, and an introduction to the Virginia chapter breeding program and plans for 2014

This event is open to the public at no charge.

Betty Gatewood’s topic: Just as The American Chestnut Foundation is striving in its research to produce the next generation of chestnut trees, many teachers up and down the Appalachians and beyond are striving to educate the next generation of chestnut tree researchers and stewards of this remarkable resource.  Stories of the American chestnut, its past, present and future, provide incredible educational opportunities for teachers in addressing learning objectives and state standards. Through TACF’s American Chestnut Learning Box activities, the on-line Charlie Chestnut curriculum, outreach programs for teachers, and in-the-field transects, students are learning the history, lore, culture and science of the American Chestnut.

For the past two summers, students from Valley Ridge Governor School in Rockingham/Augusta Counties have delved deeply into the history and the science of the American chestnut through readings and electrophoresis in a genetics lab.  Using the inquiry teaching method and the standard protocol for the Appalachian Trail MEGA-Transect Chestnut Project in the field, students collected data, then analyzed and shared their conclusions with each other and the public.  These educational techniques have stimulated these students to think about the future of the American chestnut and theorize ways to participate in stewardship of this iconic tree of American forests.

Betty Gatewood currently works as an interpretive and education park guide at Shenandoah National Park where she is developing educational curriculum on climate change and how it is affecting an endangered species in the park. She also conducts interpretative programs (walks and talks) for park visitors.  For the last two summers in the park, she has taught Valley Ridge Governor School students how to do a chestnut transect. Until recently, she was Teacher-in-Residence at Mary Baldwin College’s Graduate Teacher Education, Environment-based Learning Program. She has 18 years of classroom experience as a middle school and high school life science/biology teacher, 8 years of experience as an environmental educator/naturalist and 11 years of experience educating in a museum context. Betty has been a key player in the Trail to Every Classroom program, helping Appalachian Trail educators learn to use the trail as an outdoor classroom. She and her husband Mark maintain a section of the A.T. as members of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, and they trained with the initial class of A.T. MEGA-Transect Chestnut Project volunteers in 2008, and have done chestnut counts on “their” portion of the A.T. every year since then.

For more information contact:

Kathy Marmet, VP Education

540-364-6292
moc.liamg@temramyhtak

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Selecting the best and roguing the rest 🌱🌳These trees were planted 8 years ago, and by carefully choosing which trees to keep and which to remove, we’re creating space for stronger growth and healthier stands. Selected trees will be genotyped for our Recurrent Genomic Selection (RGS) program and could play a key role in future breeding efforts.
#AmericanChestnut #RestorationInProgress #ChestnutResearch #ForestRestoration #MeadowviewResearchFarms #Castanetum #ScienceInTheField
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Selecting the best and roguing the rest 🌱🌳These trees were planted 8 years ago, and by carefully choosing which trees to keep and which to remove, we’re creating space for stronger growth and healthier stands. Selected trees will be genotyped for our Recurrent Genomic Selection (RGS) program and could play a key role in future breeding efforts. #AmericanChestnut #RestorationInProgress #ChestnutResearch #ForestRestoration #MeadowviewResearchFarms #Castanetum #ScienceInTheField

5 CommentsComment on Facebook

Of the 25 first gen Chinese chestnut tress I planted, two survive to produce here in western Pennsylvania. That was ~35-years ago.

A seedling seed orchard: Over time, this combines selecting trees for blight resistance and thinning out (rouging) the susceptible genotypes. This works to produce an orchard seed source. Some reliable resistance, at a spacing favorable for seed production.

Pershendetje po qe se shikoni te arsyshme mund te bashkpunoim ne fushën e pyltaris. Kam gjitha mundesit dhe kam fjith dokometacionin e nevojshem

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🌰 "The evolving story of New Jersey’s chestnuts" by Alison Mitchell
Check out this article that features insights from our North Central Regional Science Coordinator, Lake Graboski, and also highlights New Jersey Nut Farms’ separate hybridization efforts—showing the range of work underway to bring back the American chestnut.

Click the following link to view the full story: www.newsbreak.com/south-jersey-media-302714994/4444458578919-the-evolving-story-of-new-jersey-s-c...

#americanchestnuts #nature #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #quote #article #explorepage
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🌰 The evolving story of New Jersey’s chestnuts by Alison MitchellCheck out this article that features insights from our North Central Regional Science Coordinator, Lake Graboski, and also highlights New Jersey Nut Farms’ separate hybridization efforts—showing the range of work underway to bring back the American chestnut. Click the following link to view the full story: https://www.newsbreak.com/south-jersey-media-302714994/4444458578919-the-evolving-story-of-new-jersey-s-chestnuts #americanchestnuts #nature #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #quote #article #explorepage

15 CommentsComment on Facebook

I have one of the original American chestnuts growing on my land.. it grows to about 12 feet tall and it dies. it comes back from the root and does the cycle again. it's done this for the last 63 years.

I've got a half dozen proven American chestnut trees in the country park across the street. 60 + feet and bear nuts every year by the ton. the nuts seem to be sterile. no saplings ever. .

How far our we from a chestnut that grows past 20 years

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Learn more about this remarkable standing American chestnut in the article “We The People: How Iowa Is Part of the Effort to Save the Rare American Chestnut Tree.” Courtesy of Grace Vance and KCRG.

Visit: www.ktiv.com/2026/01/12/we-people-how-iowa-is-part-effort-save-rare-american-chestnut-tree/

#americanchestnut #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #explorepage
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70 CommentsComment on Facebook

Georgia has a stand of chestnut trees in a secret location. Can they borrow some pollen from this tree to add to their breeding collection? They need a varied gene pool for the future.

A guy named Bill Deeter has just recently observed that trees that have crown gall seem to be warding off the blight. Im really hoping that this will bring back the longevity of the American Chestnut

My Neighbors have a vet old chestnut tree - they have contacted several conservation groups about getting a sapling of a second . So it would produce chestnuts once again-

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A month ago, our President and CEO, Michael Goergen, got to visit the New York Botanical Garden and see the original documentation of chestnut blight taken from a tree in the Bronx Zoo. Feeling a sense of inspiration from the experience, Michael wrote, "Holding that bark brings both grief and resolve. Grief for what was lost. Resolve for the work ahead.

Because for the first time since 1905, we are no longer documenting decline.
We are documenting return.

The American chestnut is not a memory. It is a restoration mission and The American Chestnut Foundation is building the tools and partnerships to finish what Merkel, Murrill, and others could not.

Seeing the original blight records didn’t make the work feel more challenging. It made it feel inevitable.

Restoration is the next chapter. We get to write it."

#explorepage #americanchestnut #history #chestnuts #learn #nature #forestry #trees #blight #restoration #conservation
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A month ago, our President and CEO, Michael Goergen, got to visit the New York Botanical Garden and see the original documentation of chestnut blight taken from a tree in the Bronx Zoo. Feeling a sense of inspiration from the experience, Michael wrote, Holding that bark brings both grief and resolve. Grief for what was lost. Resolve for the work ahead.Because for the first time since 1905, we are no longer documenting decline.We are documenting return.The American chestnut is not a memory. It is a restoration mission and The American Chestnut Foundation is building the tools and partnerships to finish what Merkel, Murrill, and others could not.Seeing the original blight records didn’t make the work feel more challenging. It made it feel inevitable.Restoration is the next chapter. We get to write it.#explorepage #americanchestnut #history #chestnuts #learn #nature #forestry #trees #blight #restoration #conservationImage attachmentImage attachment+1Image attachment

2 CommentsComment on Facebook

Whoo hoo! Sorry, you were not the first to know this. The Chestnut Lady.

Our New England Regional Science Coordinator, Deni Ranguelova, made an appearance on the podcast "Across the Fence" to discuss the American chestnut tree and why we are working to restore them.

Check out the podcast on Youtube at youtu.be/c9EeOc5WIaE?si=80CQtoY4-qeQhjtI

#americanchestnut #chestnuts #podcast #history #restoration #conservation #nature #forestry #explorepage
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3 CommentsComment on Facebook

So like Covid?

This was all because someone in upstate Delaware thought it would be a good idea to grow a Chinese chestnut in their yard so they could show it off to their friends.

😂

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