Grant supports recruiting of high quality, diverse park & recreation management graduate students

Challenging curirculum prepares students for exciting careers in park and recreation managementOn November 5, 2009 the NC State University Graduate School announced that the Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Management  Graduate Program received a grant to implement a campaign to recruit outstanding students from under represented populations in the disciplines of park and recreation management.  The department received a grant of $1,400 to assist in developing recruiting materials and to cover travel costs for potential graduate students to meet PRTM faculty and students and tour the campus.  According to the National Recreation and Parks Association, racial and ethnic minorities account for less than 20% of professionals in the recreation and parks field.

All three departments in the NC State University College of Natural Resources are committed to helping make natural resource careers available and welcoming to a diverse population.   Visit the website for the College’s Community for Diversity in Natural Resources to learn what we are doing to increase diversity in all related natural resources disciplines.

Learn more about graduate education in the NC State University Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management.

Roll into Fall with Rolleo 2009

Media Contact: Graham Ford, Vice President NC State University Forestry Club
practice for Rolleo
On Saturday November 21, 2009, the NCSU Forestry Club will host Rolleo at the Schenck Memorial Forest in Raleigh. Rolleo is the Forestry Club's annual forestry and timbersports competition.  It is a long-standing tradition with the club, and this year will prove to be one to remember. The Virginia Tech, Haywood Community College, and Montgomery Community College Forestry Clubs will all be coming to compete.

Rolleo consists of technical and physical events that are designed to pit the competing schools' forestry skills against one another.  Technical events include dendrology, timber volume estimation, pole classification, photogrammetry and others.  Physical events consist of crosscut sawing, underhand log chop, log role, pole felling, and others.
Allison and Liz - log roll at Rolleo
Rolleo is a great time for all the competitors and spectators.  Technical events will begin around 8 am and go until lunch time, and physical events will begin before lunch.  There will be competitions between faculty, grad students, and alumni as well!

All are welcome and encouraged to come and check out the events and support the NCSU Forestry Club!  Supper will be catered by McCall's Seafood and BBQ after the events are finished on Saturday.  Mark your calendar! All are Welcome!

Mike and Korey log chopTechnical Events begin 8:00am
Physical Events begin 10:30am
Attendance is free
Lunch 12:00pm
Dinner 4:30pm
There will be a reasonable fee for meals, or pay only $20 and receive lunch, dinner, AND a Rolleo 2009 T-Shirt!

Related Story: NC State Forestry Club President Selected as 2009 STIHL Timbersports Collegiate Series 

For more information, contact NCSU Forestry Club President Logan Scarborough or Vice President Graham Ford.

Schenck Memorial Forest Location on Google Maps
Carl Alwin Schenck Memorial Forest, Raleigh, North Carolina 27607

NCSU SAF Student Chapter takes unconventional way to National Convention

SAF Wilderness Leadership Trip and National Convention
   – by Cormac O’Doherty (Senior in Forest Management)

Saturday morning was an unusually early start for most of the Society of American Foresters members traveling to White Springs, Florida, for the annual Wilderness Leadership Trip and SAF National Convention. The Society of American Foresters Student Chapter at North Carolina State University goes on a leadership trip every year before the national convention. This year the National Convention was in Orlando, Florida, at the beautiful Disney Coronado Springs Resort.  The obvious location for the wilderness and leadership event was a canoe trip down one of the many rivers of the southeast, which led the group to an adventure on the Suwannee River.
Suwanee River
In White Springs on Saturday evening,  we met with American Canoe Adventures who were generous enough to let us camp on their personal property our first night.  After a hot and muggy night in northern Florida, American Canoe Adventures shuttled us to Fargo, Georgia, just south of the Okeefenokee Swamp to start our 50 mile adventure down the Suwannee River.  As we paddled down the black water of the Suwannee, we had to weave in and out of magnificent pond cypress and swamp tupelo.  Our dendrology knowledge was quickly put to the test as most of us were not very familiar with plants of a black water river system.  Digging through the material we remembered from Summer Camp and the few days we spent in Croatan National Forest, we were able to identify most of the species we saw.

Cormac in canoeAfter exhausting our knowledge of plants, as well as our shoulder muscles, we would stop every few hours to take a break and enjoy one of the many rope swings that were alongside the river.  Once we had cooled down, it was back to the grind, as the river did not have much current and the black water felt heavy to draw a paddle through. Camping alongside the river was a great experience, minus the excessive number of mosquitoes.  Group dinners and fire side chats lead to great camaraderie and gave us a chance to practice our leadership skills. The three days we spent on the river went incredibly fast and the next thing we knew we were headed to Ocala National Park for our last night in the wild.  In Ocala we rested our bodies and enjoyed the warm waters of Fore Lake.

From Ocala it was on to Disney World and the convention.  Staying at a hotel just across the street from Downtown Disney allowed us great access to the complex and the sometimes slow Disney transportation system.  Once we rode the complementary shuttle to Coronado Springs Convention Center, we were able to wander through a plethora of exhibits learning about different institutions, private companies, and public organizations.

NCSU SAF Quiz Bowl Team with Mickey and MinnieAs soon as seven o’clock struck on the first night of the convention, crowds gathered in one of the convention rooms to watch and participate in the SAF Quiz Bowl.  NC State’s Quiz Bowl team consisted of Graham Ford, Brian Kolokowsky, Adam Marlowe, and Cormac O’Doherty, who did well, reaching the semi-finals.  After a disappointingly early exit from the Quiz Bowl, Downtown Disney was calling for a night of fun and socializing.

The rest of the convention consisted of lectures given by industry and academic professionals from all over the country.  The lectures covered a wide range of subjects, from the biological control of hemlock wooly adelgid to the use of prescribed fire in longleaf pine stands.
 
Editor’s Note: Due to the economic downturn and tight budgets, the NC State Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources made the hard decision to save funds by not exhibiting or holding our traditional alumni luncheon during the 2009 National SAF Convention. We are very pleased, however, that we were able to subsidize the NC State SAF Student Chapter's convention attendance and Wilderness Leadership Trip. A big Thank You to Dr. Joe Roise for his organization, guidance, and, I’m sure, comic relief during the trip.

 See more photos from the trip HERE!

Paper Science & Engineering Program Fall Update

What's Happening in the NC State PSE Program? Read the Paper Science & Engineering Fall Program Update to learn about…

  • Pulp & Paper Foundation Meeting/Webinar to be held
    Friday November 6, 2009 – Please Join Us.
  • Recruiting New Students – Your Help is Needed
  • Classroom Renovation Complete!
  • PSE Students Win TAPPI national Scholarships
  • Students Visit Kimberly Clark for a "Tissue 101" Weekend
  • Profs Visit Southern Mills on the "Southern Swing"
  • Freshman Retreat A Success

 

Trees help clean up polluted sites – research featured on News 14: Your Green Earth

trees used in phytoremediation researchRachel Cook, graduate student in the Department of Forestry and
Environmental Resources is interviewed about research she is conducting
with Dr. Elizabeth Nichols that is helping to clean up a contaminated site
using phytoremediation.
See the News 14 Carolina video  •  Read the NCSU News story