Lower Merion Conservancy
home

ABOUT US Board of Directors

Contact Us


Staff


Contact Us


Directions


Announcing our new Executive Director! EVENTS


Knee-High Naturalists


Historic Preservation Lecture Series


Native Plant Sale


Explorer's Club


Annual Gala OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION


Landscape Legacies

Conservation Techniques

Success Stories

Conservation Easements

Donating your land HISTORIC PRESERVATION


Hall of Fame


Preservation Watch List


Facade Easements


Lecture Series


Preservation Victories CONSERVATION


Streamwatch


Birdwatch


Restoration


Environmental House Calls EDUCATION


Young Learners


Elementary


Middle School


High School


Children's Earth Day Forest


Registration


Service Learning

Friends Haverford Habitat Club


Drayer Environmental Scholarship NEWS


Preservation News WHAT CAN I DO?


Membership


Volunteer


Internships

Application


Ways to Conserve


Help Local Streams


As a Member


Donate




© 2010Lower Merion Conservancy
All rights reserved.


   powered by PointSpace®


As a Member

10 Terrific Things You Can Do as a Conservancy Member

1. Find a fox.
Hike with us through open spaces in search of nature's neighbors.

2. Walk back in time
From springhouses to abandoned mills, our region is blessed with abundant reminders of our history, and we’ll take you to places like the site of Ben Franklin favorite mill, or the ruins of a dormitory that housed workers for a gun mill.

3. Dive into streams
Measure a creek's temperature at a StreamWatch event.

4. Track Developments
Follow land development issues in our newsletter which gives you vital information unavailable elsewhere.

5. Discover your home’s history
Our historic preservation workshops give you the tools you need to research the genealogy of a very important place, your own home!

6. Count dragonflies
The StreamWatch project trains volunteers to collect, count and identify stream insects. As a member, we’ll show you how to catch young dragonflies, a common stream inhabitant.

7. Grow Butterflies
Help a butterfly garden flourish in Rolling Hill Park.

8. Debate the issues.
Our newsletter provides the detailed coverage you demand to understand and explore local issues, giving you the information you need to engage in the debate. And our events allow you to discuss these issues firsthand with key experts and policy makers.

9. Lower your impact.
From proper disposal of paint cans to how you can preserve your home in perpetuity, our journal and programs offer you the advice you seek to reduce your personal impact on environmental systems.

10. Testify!
We work with our members to encourage active citizenship, involvement in the political processes that preserve natural and historic resources and the character of our community.


Updated: 12/17/2004   © 2010Lower Merion Conservancy. All rights reserved.

with graphics »