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Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve to celebrate opening of new spider web play structure and picnic area

By April 12, 2016November 11th, 2020No Comments

Auburn University’s School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences and the Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve and Nature Center, also known as the Kreher Preserve and Nature Center, will dedicate its newly installed spider web climbing structure and picnic area at a ribbon-cutting ceremony beginning at 3:30 p.m. on April 15 at the preserve’s nature playground.

The nature-based playground, one of the first of its kind in Alabama, offers children rich naturalistic play spaces and creative structures such as a beaver lodge, eagle’s nest, tree house and teepee. The addition of the “spider web” will complement other play area structures and allow children of all ages to develop their climbing skills. As children master the bouncy spider character and its secured rope webbing, they will in turn develop their muscle strength and coordination while building their self-confidence and a positive association with arachnids.

The play structure was one of 18 projects fully funded during Auburn University’s first-ever Tiger Giving Day, a 24-hour university-wide crowdfunding initiative conducted on Dec. 1, 2015, in conjunction with the National Day of Giving. Although the school set out to raise the $6,000 required to fund the play structure, donor support resulted in gifts totaling $9,370, or 155 percent of its goal. The Kreher Preserve and Nature Center applied the additional support to enhancing the playground area with an Arachnid Learning Kiosk and a much-needed picnic area for playground visitors.

The dedication ceremony and ribbon cutting will help recognize the generous community support provided through Tiger Giving Day and highlight the Kreher Preserve and Nature Center’s efforts to expose youth to the wonders of nature, educate them about conservation, and encourage them to be active and fit. The ceremony will feature Dean Janaki Alavalapati of the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences; Kreher Preserve and Nature Center outreach administrator Jennifer Lolley; City of Auburn Mayor Bill Hamm; City Parks’ Director Becky Richardson; and Auburn’s building science students who volunteered to install the play structure.

Originally published April 12th, 2016.

(Written by Jamie Anderson)

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