Marsh 
                    Maneuvers Much More Than Summer Camp
                    Posted: 
                    4/13/05 
                    
                  The LSU 
                    AgCenter’s annual series of Marsh Maneuvers camps are 
                    much more than the usual summer camp. They’re a generous 
                    dose of education mixed with a heaping serving of fun for 
                    4-Hers from across the state.
                  Mark Shirley, 
                    an LSU AgCenter aquaculture and coastal resources expert, 
                    said the camp is designed to teach high school students the 
                    value of the coastal marsh areas.
                  During 
                    the four-day camp, the participants learn about coastal ecology 
                    and the biology of the state’s coastal areas. The camps, 
                    which are offered several times each summer, highlight such 
                    issues as coastal erosion and give students a chance to discuss 
                    some of the erosion control options being proposed by the 
                    different state and federal agencies.
                  "Marsh 
                    Maneuvers is a coastal ecology program we do for 4-H high 
                    school students each summer," Shirley said, adding, "We’ve 
                    been doing it for about the past 15 years."
                  This year’s 
                    program was conducted at the Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge near 
                    Grand Chenier, although earlier programs have been conducted 
                    at other locations along the Louisiana coast. 
                  The number 
                    of participants is limited each summer – to provide 
                    youngsters with the most hands-on experiences they can have 
                    – and the individuals who take part are chosen by 4-H 
                    agents in the parishes slated to be involved in the camps 
                    that summer. Many times, youngsters write essays or are interviewed 
                    by agents who try to find those most interested in learning 
                    about coastal ecology.
                  Shirley 
                    said the 4-Hers who come to Marsh Maneuvers aren’t necessarily 
                    interested in becoming marine biologists, but despite their 
                    variety of interests, the experiences are designed to help 
                    them learn the importance of Louisiana’s coastal environment 
                    while also having fun.
                  "We 
                    try to give them an experience here in the marsh that they 
                    won’t forget," Shirley said. "For example, 
                    the airboat ride is something that most people don’t 
                    get to do every day. 
                  "We 
                    also take a smaller boat down the canal and pull a shrimp 
                    troll and look at some of the shrimp and different kinds of 
                    fish that are just teaming in these waters," he said, 
                    adding, "They get to throw cast nets and they catch brown 
                    shrimp and white shrimp, crabs and several different kinds 
                    of fish."
                  Participants 
                    also are taught such facts as each acre of marshland on the 
                    Louisiana coast is several thousand times more productive 
                    than the best acre of corn land in Iowa. "So just on 
                    a productivity basis, the amount of protein and carbohydrates 
                    is just tremendous," Shirley said.
                  Another 
                    highlight of the camp, according to Shirley, is a night hike 
                    on one of the roads through the marsh – where participants 
                    get to "shine" some alligators and listen to the 
                    marsh birds.
                  About 
                    16 different parishes are represented by approximately four 
                    students each during the four-week camping period every summer. 
                    Because of the limited number who can participate, parishes 
                    eligible to participate rotate on an annual basis.
                  "We 
                    try to rotate so each parish will send four students every 
                    four years," Shirley said, explaining that means earning 
                    a spot in the camp can be quite competitive and is an honor 
                    for many students.
                  As for 
                    what they learn, Shirley said the students get a well-rounded 
                    knowledge of both the biology of the coastal ecosystem and 
                    some of the social implications of these resources. 
                  "This 
                    is where half of Louisiana lives – south of I-10," 
                    the LSU AgCenter agent said, adding, "All of these people 
                    in some way are touched by the resources here on the coast. 
                    Thousands of people work offshore in the oil and gas industry, 
                    and other people work onshore in support of that industry."
                  The coast 
                    also serves a vast array of other functions from protecting 
                    inland areas against storms to the coastal marshes’ 
                    role in food production.
                  As part 
                    of the camp, Shirley stresses that coastal erosion is not 
                    just a Louisiana problem, but also is a national problem. 
                    
                  "Over 
                    40 percent of the natural gas that’s used in the United 
                    States comes through Louisiana via a pipeline somewhere across 
                    the Louisiana coast," he said. "So coastal erosion 
                    affects everybody in the nation."
                  That’s 
                    just one of the reasons Louisiana’s congressional delegation 
                    in Washington is trying to drum up support for saving Louisiana’s 
                    coast, according to Shirley, who said there is a debate on 
                    whether we can save what’s left of the coastal environment 
                    or whether we can try not to lose as much of it quite as fast.
                  "Educating 
                    these students about the coastal situation makes them ambassadors 
                    for the coast," Shirley said. "When they get back 
                    home, they give presentations to their 4-H clubs and they 
                    use this information for speeches in classes. Some even go 
                    back to their police juries or the Rotary clubs in their community 
                    and give presentations there."
                  While 
                    there are only about 64 4-Hers at camp each summer, the effect 
                    multiplies once these students get back home and share their 
                    experience with their family and friends, people at school 
                    and people in their communities.
                  "Again, 
                    it stresses the fact that even though you live in North Louisiana, 
                    you’re still affected by coastal issues," Shirley 
                    said. "Whether it’s seafood, oil and gas, or the 
                    storm threat, we’re all affected."
                  Shirley 
                    said that while the knowledge they gain covers a broad range, 
                    the students are probably more excited about getting a closeup 
                    look at alligators than any other activity. He said this is 
                    good, because the alligator is so important to the coast.
                  "The 
                    alligator resource here in Louisiana is maintained much like 
                    a tree farmer in North Louisiana manages trees," he explained. 
                    "The tree farmer harvests timber one year and then he 
                    replants on a cycle. With alligators, we harvest a certain 
                    number of alligators each year."
                  Shirley 
                    said the hide is where most of the value lies, but the meat 
                    is also quite valuable. "It has the consistency of pork 
                    chop, but has the mild flavor like chicken, so it’s 
                    the other, other white meat," he said.
                  Frederickia 
                    Jackson, an 11th grader from West Ouachita High School said 
                    this is a great camp, and she would recommend it to anyone 
                    over 8th grade. 
                  "We’ve 
                    been fishing and crabbing and learning about different animals 
                    on the coast," she said of her experience, adding that 
                    notes she and other participants were taking after their daily 
                    activities will be useful when they return home. 
                  "When 
                    we finish a project we write in our journals what we did and 
                    what we learned," she said. "We’ve learned 
                    a lot about coastal erosion. For example, we saw where they 
                    put down sticks last year, and where they were stationed is 
                    now taken over by water."
                  For further 
                    information about Marsh Maneuvers or other LSU AgCenter 4-H 
                    youth development programs, contact your parish LSU AgCenter 
                    office or visit http://www.lsuagcenter.com. 
                     
                   
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