Information

Our Supporters
BRAT is completely a volunteer organization. It is only through the support of people like you that we continue our efforts. Along with our volunteers, these businesses and organizations keep BRAT going.

Volunteer Profiles
Coming soon…

Recycle Printer Cartridges
Recycling helps both keep the environment clean and helps BRAT through the Funding Factory. See our running total in the sidebar.

Invasive Species
“Invasive” refers to plants that are visitors from another part of the world that are very enthusiastically reproducing in our area, causing problems in many ways. They do what plants do, they just do it extremely well and have few, if any, predators or natural controls. The links below will open a new browser window and take you to sites devoted to each of the invasive species listed.
Rock Snot a.k.a. Didymo
Eurasian milfoil
Purple loosestrife
Mexican Bamboo a.k.a. Japanese knotweed
Also check our BRAT Knotweed Eradication Blog to see what’s being done in Springfield, VT about this particular invasive plant.

Black River Watershed & Assessment
A watershed is all the land, streams, lakes, ponds and wetlands that drain into a river, giving it life, in our case the 35+ mile long Black River. The Black River watershed is 202 square miles of land draining into the main stem and north branch. The headwaters of the main stem begin in Black Pond, located in Plymouth VT (hence the river’s name). The main stem winds through Tyson and Ludlow (whose various lakes include Amherst, Rescue and Echo). There it proceeds along its path picking up some tributary streams before going through Proctorsville, Cavendish Gorge, Perkinsville, Downers, Weathersfield, North Springfield and then at last Springfield, where it meets the mighty Connecticut River at Hoyt’s Landing.
Black River Watershed Flyer
Black River Assessment Cover
Black River Assessment Text
Black River Assessment Maps
Black River Chemical Analysis