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Animals
                    for Adoption, 
Out
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            | Features
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            | Animals
            for Adoption
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            | These animals and
            more are available to good homes from the Logan County Animal
            Control at 1515 N. Kickapoo, phone 735-3232. Fees for animal
            adoption: dogs, $60/male, $65/female; cats, $35/male, $44/female.
            The fees include neutering and spaying.
             Logan County Animal
            Control's hours of operation:
             Sunday 
            –  closed
             
            Monday  – 
            8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
             
            Tuesday  – 
            8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
             
            Wednesday  – 
            8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
             
            Thursday  – 
            8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
             
            Friday  – 
            8 a.m. - 3 p.m.
             
            Saturday  – 
            closed
 Warden: Sheila Farmer
 Assistant:  Polly Farmer
 In-house veterinarian:  Dr. Lester Thomson
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            | 
  
            
            | DOGS Big to
            little, most these dogs will make wonderful lifelong companions when
            you take them home and provide solid, steady training, grooming and
            general care. Get educated about what you choose. If you give them
            the time and care they need, you will be rewarded with much more
            than you gave them. They are entertaining, fun, comforting, and will
            lift you up for days on end.
 Be prepared to take the necessary time when you bring home a
            puppy, kitten, dog, cat or any other pet, and you will be blessed.
             [Logan
            County Animal Control is thankful for pet supplies donated by
            individuals and Wal-Mart.]  
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            | Ten reasons to adopt a
            shelter dog  1. 
            I'll bring out your
            playful side!  2. 
            I'll lend an ear to
            your troubles.  3.  
            I'll keep you
            fit and trim.  4.  
            We'll look out for each other.  5.  
            We'll sniff
            out fun together!  6.  
            I'll keep you
            right on schedule.  7.  
            I'll love you
            with all my heart.  8.  
            We'll have a
            tail-waggin' good time!  9.  
            We'll snuggle
            on a quiet evening. 10.  
            We'll be
            best friends always.
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            | CATS [Logan
            County Animal Control is thankful for pet supplies donated by
            individuals and Wal-Mart.]   |  
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                  | Warden
                    Sheila Farmer and her assistant, Polly Farmer, look forward
                    to assisting you. |  
                  | In
                    the cat section there are a number of wonderful cats to
                    choose from. There are a variety of colors and sizes. Farm
                    cats available for free! |  
                  |  |  
                  |   [These
                  domestic shorthair kittens, 4 months old, would like to live
                  outside at your home.]
 |  [This
                  tortoise-shell house cat, female, is 1 to 2 years old and
                  looking for the right place to call home.]
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            | Part
            2 Spunky
            Bottoms — a wetlandreturning to its natural rhythm
 [OCT.
            13, 2001] 
            "I
            never drive along the river but I remember how it used to be,"
            says Dora Dawson of Meridosia. "I remember when it was wetland  —
             black with ducks. I remember the bottomland
            hardwoods  —
             oak, pecan and walnut trees." |  
            | [Click here for
            Part 1] In the
            last hundred years, people have made great changes in the nation’s
            rivers, pouring human and industrial waste into them, building locks
            and dams, separating the rivers from their flood plains by levees. In the
            early 1990s, the National Research Council identified the Illinois
            as one of only three large flood-plains river ecosystems in the
            United States that have a chance of recovering from man-made damage,
            and the Nature Conservancy began thinking about a campaign to
            restore some of its wetlands.   
 Last
            year, the conservancy made an ambitious purchase, when it bought the
            7,527-acre Wilder Farm near Havana, where the Spoon River joins the
            Illinois. The huge property, now called by its ancient name Emiquon,
            is still being farmed, but plans are already under way for its
            restoration. The Nature Conservancy is meeting with advisory groups,
            both scientists and local citizens, to decide how to manage the
            land, which will be a mix of forest, prairie and marsh. The work
            being done at Spunky Bottoms will be a guideline as well. "This
            is a laboratory setting for what is going to happen at Emiquon,
            which is so much more extensive," Blodgett says. He
            also says the conservancy wants to be a good neighbor. Although
            there are plans to open the levees and reconnect the bottoms to the
            river, care will be taken not to flood adjoining farmland. Local
            people will be given the opportunity to hunt and fish again in the
            restored wetlands, though on a limited basis so as to keep the
            wildlife abundant. On non-hunting days, bird-watchers will be
            allowed into the blinds for waterfowl viewing. "We
            want people to see that having the Nature Conservancy as a neighbor
            is a good thing," Blodgett says.   
 [to top of second column in
this section]
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            The
            Spunky Bottoms tour was on a perfect early fall afternoon, a day not
            too warm or too cool, with an almost cloudless blue sky. An
            occasional grain truck rumbled along a distant road, but otherwise
            civilization seemed remote. More immediate were the waving prairie
            grasses, the northern harrier that flew low across the marshy
            bottom, hunting for mice or frogs, the grasshoppers and the
            occasional butterfly, and the pair of deer that splashed through a
            pond in their effort to get out of sight of the visitors. The
            peaceful atmosphere itself seems reason enough to preserve these
            "Last Great Places," but there are others just as
            convincing.   
 "One
            of the greatest reasons to preserve biodiversity is that it holds
            the answers to many of the questions that we haven’t been smart
            enough to ask yet," Blodgett says. "Medical information,
            for example. We may find cures for diseases in some of the plants we
            save. Some of them might have great commercial value. "But
            also, we can better understand our relationship with the environment
            by understanding the relationships of other organisms to it. If an
            animal goes extinct and we don’t understand why, we may run the
            risk of going extinct for the same reason." And Dora Dawson and others
            who grew up along the Illinois will be able to see wetland black
            with ducks again. [Joan
Crabb]
              
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            | Part
            1 Spunky
            Bottoms — a wetlandreturning to its natural rhythm
 [OCT.
            12, 2001] 
            "I
            never drive along the river but I remember how it used to be,"
            says Dora Dawson of Meridosia. "I remember when it was wetland  —
             black with ducks. I remember the bottomland
            hardwoods  —
             oak, pecan and walnut trees." |  
            | The
            river Dora remembers with such nostalgia is the Illinois. The
            wetlands she remembers along that river are mostly farmland today,
            producing the ubiquitous corn and soybeans. The river landscape she
            remembers from when she was a girl growing up in the small river
            town about halfway between Springfield, Ill., and Hannibal, Mo.,
            disappeared many years ago. Beginning
            in the 1920s, all along the Illinois, and along most other
            Midwestern rivers as well, the rich bottomland was drained by
            building earth levees and installing pumps so row crops could be
            planted. "The
            sad part of it was, often they didn’t get a good crop off it.
            Still, they went ahead and farmed it," Dora remembers. But
            Dora and others can now see time turning backward in a few places
            along the Illinois. Spunky Bottoms, 1,157 acres not far from
            Meridosia, is already beginning to find its old rhythm as a wetland,
            thanks to the Nature Conservancy. This organization is dedicated to
            restoring natural communities by protecting the lands and waters
            they need to survive. Funded almost entirely by private
            contributions, its motto is "Saving the Last Great
            Places."   
 The
            conservancy bought the 1,157 acres of farmland on the west bank of
            the river back in 1997, spent several years researching what the
            land was like a century ago and then began restoring it. They called
            it Spunky Bottoms because it was just below a place historically
            known as Spunky Ridge. "Spunky" in this context means an
            area that has a lot of springs and other natural water. Volunteers
            from neighboring high schools and colleges, 350 strong, helped the
            conservancy plant about 6,000 trees, including burr oak, linden,
            black walnut, sycamore, pecan, chinquapin, river birch and Kentucky
            coffee trees, all species that had once grown in the wetlands along
            the river. The
            volunteers also helped plant hundreds of pounds of prairie seeds,
            all gathered within 150 miles of Spunky Bottoms so the plants would
            be the local species that once grew here.   
 But
            many of the plants that are returning are doing so without the help
            of humans. The seeds of natural vegetation that were lying dormant
            in these soils for as long as 75 years, like big bluestem, Indian
            grass and wild ryes, are coming back on their own.     [to top of second column in
this section]
             | 
            On a
            recent tour of Spunky Bottoms, sponsored by the Illinois Chapter of
            the Nature Conservancy, about 50 members and visitors saw some of
            the changes already underway. The
            essential element to bring it all back is water. Because the water
            table is so high, the conservancy didn’t need to take down the
            levees to begin wetlands restoration, explains Douglas Blodgett,
            Great Rivers Area director. Just turning off the pumps was enough to
            produce shallow lakes and waterways, which this year provided a
            stopping place for an estimated 16,000 migrating ducks. Water lilies
            are growing where corn used to be.   
 An
            upland prairie, where Indian grass and rudbeckia (black-eyed Susans)
            grow instead of soybeans, attracted at least six rare Henslow’s
            sparrows, which require this very specific environment to survive.
            Bald eagles, white pelicans, and the shy and secretive black rail
            have returned to the area. Not
            only birds, but fish and amphibians are also returning. John Tucker
            of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources showed visitors a
            collection of turtles that can live in the area  —
             painted turtles, red-eared sliders, common and the
            false map turtles, both smooth and spiny soft-shells (the spiny one
            always bites, he notes), the stinkpot and the endangered Blandings
            turtle, which the conservancy hopes to re-establish at Spunky
            Bottoms. Black
            bass, white crappies, green sunfish, brown bullheads, carp and
            bigmouth buffalo are among the fish that will make their homes at
            Spunky Bottoms. At some point, the levees will be opened in places
            so fish can come into the bottoms to spawn. "The
            Illinois River has been historically very productive," Blodgett
            told the visitors. "It has a large flood plain, as much as 7
            miles wide some places, because at one time what is now the
            Mississippi flowed through here." The
            last glaciers pushed the Mississippi over into its present location,
            and a smaller river, which became known as the Illinois, began
            draining the old Mississippi river bed. "For 500 generations
            Native Americans lived along the Illinois river and its large
            backwaters," Blodgett said. "It was a very productive
            habitat, a good place for people to live." (To be continued) [Joan
Crabb]
             [Click
            here for Part 2]
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