Tama SWCD makes donations to Meskwaki and South Tama Elementaries
- CONTRIBUTED PHOTO – On behalf of its students, Meskwaki Technology Teacher Michelle Phinney and South Tama Library Paraprofessional Deb Llewellyn have each received four conservation-themed books presented by Tama SWCD Commissioner Jan Wobeter.
- CONTRIBUTED PHOTO – On behalf of its students, Meskwaki Technology Teacher Michelle Phinney and South Tama Library Paraprofessional Deb Llewellyn have each received four conservation-themed books presented by Tama SWCD Commissioner Jan Wobeter.
![](https://ogden_images.s3.amazonaws.com/www.tamatoledonews.com/images/2024/06/13075553/Tama-Soil-Book-DonationMesk.jpg)
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO - On behalf of its students, Meskwaki Technology Teacher Michelle Phinney and South Tama Library Paraprofessional Deb Llewellyn have each received four conservation-themed books presented by Tama SWCD Commissioner Jan Wobeter.
Tama Soil & Water Conservation District celebrated Soil & Water Stewardship Week by donating conservation books to local elementary school libraries throughout Tama County.
On behalf of its students, Meskwaki Technology Teacher Michelle Phinney and South Tama Library Paraprofessional Deb Llewellyn have each received four conservation-themed books presented by Tama SWCD Commissioner Jan Wobeter. These large-format books include narrative in both English and Spanish and are written for lower elementary students.
“Where Does Your Water Shed?” explores what a watershed is and how each of us impacts the watersheds people live, work and play in. Within each watershed, all water runs to the lowest point such as a stream, river or lake. On its way, water travels over the surface and across farms, fields, forest lands, suburban lawns and city streets or it seeps into the soil and travels as groundwater. People influence what happens in watersheds, good or bad, by how the natural resources – the soil, water, air, plants and animals – are treated and can affect the quantity and quality of water flowing from a watershed.
Where our food comes from is explored in “Soil to Spoon.” What is food’s connection to the soil people walk on? What happens as food moves from where it’s grown or produced until it appears on a plate?
Soil is an amazing substance filled with marvelous things. This complex mix of minerals, air and water also teems with countless microorganisms and the decaying remains of once-living things. How soil is made of life and soil makes life is discovered in “Dig Deeper-Mysteries in the Soil.”
![](https://ogden_images.s3.amazonaws.com/www.tamatoledonews.com/images/2024/06/13075737/Tama-Soil-Book-DonationSTC.jpg)
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO - On behalf of its students, Meskwaki Technology Teacher Michelle Phinney and South Tama Library Paraprofessional Deb Llewellyn have each received four conservation-themed books presented by Tama SWCD Commissioner Jan Wobeter.
“Local Heroes–Your Hardworking Pollinators.” When people think about what they ate yesterday for breakfast, lunch and dinner, they start to understand the importance of pollinators in diets. They can thank pollinators for one in three mouthfuls of food and drink. The main group of pollinators are insects, although there are other animals that help. Pollinators face many threats, including the loss of habitat (nesting and foraging habitat), the effects of pesticides, pests and diseases, the effects of climate change and pressure from invasive plants. Without pollinators, many plant species in natural habitats would become extinct.