I think I have the DVD of The Everglades of the North and I know I’ve watched it somewhere. As a media producer, public broadcasting supporter and natural history buff, I second Mark’s recommendation.
In December I posted about my CBC adventure in Pembroke Township in the sands south of Momence. The documentary does a great job of explaining the natural and geopolitical history of the Kankakee River and sands area. Historically, the Grand Kankakee Marsh straddled the Illinois-Indiana border and was full of wildlife. I believe it is said the outdoorsman-potus Teddy Roosevelt, who founded the National Park System, hunted there.
The originally proposed footprint of the present Kankakee National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area in Kankakee and Iroquois Counties in IL included the Kankakee Marsh area in IN but, ahem, politics led it to be established solely in Illinois. Thank goodness things went more smoothly for the bistate Hackmatack NWR on the IL-WI border.
As I learned while drafting a grassland birds report for the Bird Conservation Network, altering the natural flow of water can have negative consequences on the landscape and its wildlife. In Illinois, the Kankakee River is still a marvelously meandering stream. On the other side of the state line it was channeled to drain the Grand Kankakee Marsh to increase farmland, which causes flooding on both sides of the state line and sand deposition on the Illinois side that alters the river itself and impacts Illinois landowners.
Am blowing kisses to The Nature Conservancy for its work in the sands on both sides of the state line; the DNR and FWS for the areas they protect; and to Illinois Audubon Society, the Community Development Corporation of Pembroke-Hopkins Park (CDC-PHP), the Pembroke Preservation Alliance and Openlands for preserving Okàn Savanna in Pembroke.
Think about ordering the movie from Lakeshore Public Television.
See some of you at the Gull Frolic?!?
Mary Bernat
South Cook County