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The old towpath for the Muncy Canal is now a peaceful trail that meanders along the defunct waterway. Muncy's canal served Sprout-Waldron, founded in 1866 in Picture Rocks before moving to Muncy in the 1870s.

 

 

PCToday

Pennsylvania College of Technology

News & Information

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Students’ Efforts Aid Proposed Muncy Nature Trail

Forestry students in Dennis F. Ringling's timber harvesting and equipment lab at Pennsylvania College of Technology recently completed a project that combined civic service with a respect for local history.

The class helped the Muncy Historical Society remove diseased, unsafe and storm-felled trees from the site of its proposed Heritage Park and Nature Trail along the old West Branch Canal.

"Dr. Ringling and his students cleared all of the identified trees that posed an immediate hazard or would have impeded our ability to proceed with the project itself," said William J. Poulton, society president. "This project will involve a variety of organizations, and we are delighted that Penn College has partnered with us in these early stages."

Development of the historically and environmentally significant property is a multi-year endeavor that ultimately will showcase Port Penn, the commercial and residential center that grew up around the canal. The Historical Society is developing the site off Pepper Street (in conjunction with an archaeological dig around the canal lockmaster's 19th-century well and home) to showcase the diverse wildlife and plants along the old canal and to share with visitors the importance of the waterway to the region's growth.

"I emphasize the fact that students will need to get involved with their communities wherever their career takes them," said Ringling, a professor of forestry in Penn College's School of Natural Resources Management. "It's the price we pay to be on this earth of ours."

He also tells them that their biggest job is the one that involves "communication, education, cooperation and compromise. They need to be proactive and take initiative when the opportunity presents itself; I believe that is what we are doing in this project," he said.

The students were split into work crews, fanning out across the 11-plus-acre site to clear, haul and pile timber for disposal or transport back to the college's sawmill for processing.

"I was impressed by the students' professionalism, tireless energy and desire to apply their classroom knowledge through practical experience," Poulton said. "While we had presented an aggressive forestry-clearing project timeline, the students met the challenge and delivered their portion … on time."

The class also got an abbreviated history lesson from the society's well-versed president, who shared anecdotes of the once-bustling canal's operation and explained the students' vital role in telling that story these 200 years later.

"You're helping us reclaim this site for the community," he told them during one of the working site visits. "Someday, when you bring your families here, you can say, 'I had a part in this.' "

For more on forest technology and other majors in the School of Natural Resources Management, call (570) 320-8038, send e-mail to naturalresources@pct.edu or visit http://www.pct.edu/schools/nrm.

— Photos by Tom Wilson, news bureau writer/editor
 


[Select image for a larger view]

 

Remnants of the canal wall are visible at history-rich area site

Work crew removes a patch of sumac

Student forestry crew gets the lay of the land

Wednesday
Oct. 26,
2005

Bill Poulton, Muncy Historical Society president, explains canal's significance

Muncy
Canal
Project

Clearing the way for a nature trail

Nature's beauty abounds at proposed borough park

Forestry professor Dennis F. Ringling helps a student hook a tow chain for tree removal

'dozer crew removes fallen tree

Jack E. Fisher, lab assistant for forest techology (left), guides a student

 


Dig Personnel
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Robin Van Auken, archaeologist for the project
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