All field trips will take place on Monday March 10 and require add-on registration priced at a subsidized transportation cost. Unless driving conditions are impacted, field trips will run rain, snow or shine so dress accordingly. Some field trips may be canceled if minimum attendee sign-up is not met. All field trips have maximum limits. You will be placed on a waiting list if a field trip is fully registered.
The Geology and Hydrology of Eastern Wisconsin
Register Today!Monday, March 10th // 12:30-5:00 pm // $40
Pre-registration required. Register by February 28, 2025
Join John Lucza from UW-Green Bay and Dave Hart from the Wisconsin Geologic and Natural History Survey for a tour of rocks, locks, waterfalls, rivers, and streams of eastern Wisconsin and how they are inter-related. The tour will stop at the De Pere Lock and Dam, Fonferek’s Glen, Maribel Caves, and Wequiock Falls with examples of scarps, fractured rock, caves, and the water that flows over and through them.
Reducing Nutrients to Green Bay Through Innovative Partnerships
Register Today!Monday, March 10th // 1:00-3:30 pm // $20
Pre-registration required. Register by February 28, 2025
Distance – all sites will be within 10 miles from the KI Convention Center
Tour NEW Water, the brand of the Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District, located at the mouth of the Fox River. NEW Water is unique as a wastewater treatment plant, having established an aquatic monitoring program in 1986 to monitor the water quality of the lower Fox River and lower Green Bay and also having committed to Adaptive Management to achieve regulatory compliance and achieve greater environmental gain for the community it serves. Following a tour at NEW Water, a stop will be made at the water’s edge of the Bay of Green Bay, Lake Michigan.
UW-Green Bay – Natural History Research and Local Fish, Wildlife, and Water Quality Monitoring
Register Today!Monday, March 10th // 2:00-5:00 pm // $20
Pre-registration required. Register by February 28, 2025
Tour participants will depart from the KI Convention Center and take a short ride to the University of Wisconsin Green Bay (UWGB) campus to learn about natural history research and local fish, wildlife and water quality monitoring efforts. Tour stops will include the Richter Museum to explore how natural history collections can provide new insights and comparisons to contemporary data, the Cofrin Center of Biodiversity to learn about local efforts to monitor legacy contaminant impacts on fish-eating birds, and the Aquatic Ecology and Fisheries Laboratory and Boat Shed to learn about fisheries, benthic invertebrate, and water quality monitoring in Green Bay and its tributaries. Most of this tour will be indoors.