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So the Duke Forest
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is Duke's oldest and biggest teaching
and research laboratory.
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It currently covers
7,100 acres across three
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counties, heading west out from Duke's
West Campus. Across the forest
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there are over 40 public access gates
and at any of those public access gates,
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folks can come and walk, jog,
walk their dog on a leash,
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even ride their horses along
the gravel roads throughout the forest.
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So there's really a lot of opportunity
to walk,
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hike, bird watch, sit
and just be in nature.
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We have utilized Duke Forest
in so many ways over the years.
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It first started when my kids were little,
it was just an easy place to come
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and let the adventures just unfold
and be in nature.
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And then, you know, as I mentioned, I'm
a runner
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and I appreciate the soft surfaces
that Duke Forest provides.
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And now that my husband
and I have recently become empty nesters,
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we're utilizing the forest
in a way that we've never been able to.
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And that's by taking guided tours
that the forest offers.
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For the Duke community
to plug into Duke Forest,
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I think the first thing to know
is to sign up for our e-log.
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That's a monthly newsletter
that comes out and lets
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you know
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all the things that we're
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up to in the forest,
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but also the events that you might be able
to come participate in.
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So today was an event, collaborated
between Nasher Museum and the Duke Forest,
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kind of looking at basically human impact
on the environment.
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And so we took a look of exhibits
for photos, and talked
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about what they were representing
and how that represents
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the way that we see
or impact the environment around us.
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And then we shuttled out to Duke Forest,
and they showed us
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four different areas in Duke Forest
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and talked about how that paralleled
some of the things from the photos.
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So bringing it all together.
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I think I'd say, you know, it's not just
about going out and experiencing nature.
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There's a lot that I learned.
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It was definitely
an educational experience.
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It wasn't just going out for a hike
or anything of that nature.
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And seeing things like this
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With the collaboration,
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was I feel like a unique experience that
I don't think I could get anywhere else.
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There's a couple of long running volunteer
programs that folks can engage in.
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There is a a period
where you apply to those.
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It's usually in the early spring,
but you can come out and be a community
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scientist with us, or you can come out
and be a forest steward with us.
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Today
we were surveying one of several transects
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we use for research in Duke Forest.
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We have individual, survey sites
where we want to look at
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the number of individual reptiles
and amphibians, including
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salamanders, toads, frogs, snakes, etc.
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and that research gets aggregated
and sent to the primary investigator
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to look at possible relationships
between climate and herpetofauna.
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No one else I work with on my team
works for Duke,
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but we all volunteer for Duke Forest,
so it's a really cool way to meet people
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and work toward a common goal
in improving the health of,
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you know, the natural world around us.
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I think what I always say
about the Duke Forest
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is that it's one of Duke
University's most enduring legacies,
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not just for teaching and research,
but again, because it's
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protecting over 7,100 acres
in a really rapidly growing area.
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And the fact that Duke University
is almost 100 years in its commitment
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to this place as a teaching
and research forest that also supports that
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connection with nature and recreational
access, is just really huge.