FACT Clearing Out Invasive Species

FACT Clearing Out Invasive Species

Volunteers clear honeysuckle and other invasive species adjacent to the bike path along Alum Creek near Otterbein Lake during Friends of Alum Creek and Tributaries's clearing of debris and overgrown vegetation along the creek watershed. My Final Photo for Aug. 18, 2018.

Volunteers clear honeysuckle and other invasive species adjacent to the bike path along Alum Creek near Otterbein Lake during Friends of Alum Creek and Tributaries’s clearing of debris and overgrown vegetation along the creek watershed. My Final Photo for Aug. 18, 2018.

Clearing the forest of what's not wanted

Clearing the forest of what's not wanted

<div style="margin-top: 18px; text-align: center; font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; color: #ffffff;">MAD Scientist's Mark Dilley, right, works with volunteers clearing invasive species plants, trees, and shrubs from Boyer Nature Preserve in Westerville. My Final Photo for Oct. 29, 2017.<br><br></div>
It's not easy being green

It's not easy being green

A volunteer bleeds from his cheek after being whacked by an errant branch while clearing honeysuckle from Boyer nature Preserve. My Final Photo for Oct. 26, 2013.

A volunteer bleeds from his cheek after being whacked by an errant branch while clearing honeysuckle from Boyer Nature Preserve. My Final Photo for Oct. 26, 2013.

It's not easy being green

It's not easy being green

A volunteer bleeds from his cheek after being whacked by an errant branch while clearing honeysuckle from Boyer nature Preserve. My Final Photo for Oct. 26, 2013.

A volunteer bleeds from his cheek after being whacked by an errant branch while clearing honeysuckle from Boyer Nature Preserve. My Final Photo for Oct. 26, 2013.