Category Archives: Roberts Field

Volunteer Gardeners Needed At Roberts Field

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Volunteers needed to help weed the gardens at Roberts Field Pollinator Park, Skate Shack and Trailhead gardens,  Mostly hand pulling and trimming. Free mint plants too!! (You dig)

We need a few volunteers Monday and Wednesday, September 17th & 19th at 10:30am.

Volunteers should park behind Engine 3 Fire Station and meet at Skate Shack. Come for an hour or more. We’ll bring some waters and get some bags from the DPW. If you can help, please join us for an hour or two.  Many hands make lighter work.

For more information please contact Sandie Rainey at 978-833-4601 or send an email to info@friendsofrobertsfield.org.

Thank you!

LOCAL BUSINESSES HELP TO BRING INCLUSIVE PLAYGROUND TO CHELMSFORD

A new inclusive designed Friendship Park playground is opening this summer at Roberts Field in Chelmsford, and community businesses and organizations are stepping up to help build it.

A first of its kind in Chelmsford, the new Friendship Park playground will be a safe and fun place where children of all abilities can play together side by side. The Town of Chelmsford is building a new nature themed playground, which will be developmentally appropriate for children with and without disabilities, have a barrier free and open sensory rich environment, and encourage physical and social play for all.

The 501(c)(3) non-profit Friends of Roberts Field is helping with fundraising by reaching out to businesses with a variety of playground sponsorship and volunteer opportunities. Bill Askenburg, Friends of Roberts Field Chair, said, “Our community is joining together to raise funds, volunteer and work together to build the new Friendship Park. The community response has been tremendous and everyone is very appreciative of the effort to bring this new inclusive playground to Town.”

Sponsorship opportunities range from buying a $50 engraved brick, to sponsoring the playground’s new $26k inclusive ZipKrooz zipline. Premier and Equipment Sponsors receive public recognition and their names on playground signage. DrumHill Pediatrics of North Chelmsford recently committed to a Silver Level Premier Sponsorhip and Aces Aquatics, an elite swim team and coaching organization, committed to sponsoring the Belt Bridge in the new playground.

“We at DrumHill Pediatrics are excited for the grand opening of the new Friendship Park,” said Dr. David Newman of DrumHill Pediatrics.  “Playgrounds are a wonderful community-based resource for families to connect with others while enjoying time outdoors. This new inclusive playground will offer all our children the opportunity to get physical exercise and practice their social skills while most of all having fun!”

Askenburg added, “We are so appreciative of these generous donors and their commitment to supporting our community. It’s great to meet other community partners who are equally as excited about bringing inclusive play to Chelmsford. We encourage anyone interested in volunteer or sponsorship opportunities to contact us.”

The playground sponsorship and volunteer programs will continue through the summer, and more information can be found at www.robertsfield.org/donate.

The Friends of Roberts Field is a nonprofit organization committed to maintaining and improving Roberts Field in Chelmsford. The volunteer organization was found in 2013 and is working with the Town of Chelmsford Department of Public Works to provide community input and fundraising opportunities for the new inclusive designed Friendship Park at Roberts Field.

Earth Day

Please join us Saturday, April 21st and help cleanup Roberts Field in Chelmsford.  The Earth Day Cleanup event is from 10am -2pm, and individuals and groups wishing to help cleanup the Park are encouraged to attend.

ROBERTS FIELD
260 Old Westford Road, Chelmsford
Earth Day Cleanup:  Saturday, April 21st, 10am – 2pm

Volunteers can participate in a number of cleanup activities including:
– Park Litter (parking lot, roadside, interior park, trails)
– Trail Maintenance (trimming, lining trails & trail markers)
– Rock Graffiti Cleanup (Jonathan Lane trail head)
– Gardening (Skate Shack & Pollinator Park gardens & Pond side invasive plant pull)

For more information please email info@friendsofrobertsfield.org.

Cut the Bittersweet to Save the Trees

The Park needs your help. This fallen oak tree near the walking trail is an otherwise healthy tree killed by the invasive Oriental Bittersweet plant. There’s a lot of Bittersweet at Roberts Field, and it’s a fast growing vine that quickly grows into the tree canopy and either chokes or topples the trees.

To help, contact Katie Messer, Town Conservation Agent (978-250-5248) or me and we will meet you at Roberts Field and point out the affected trees and vines, and show you the right way to cut them. Or bring your loppers to a Work Event at the Park on Saturday, Jan 28th from 10am – noon, and we can work on it together. Snow date Sat, Feb 4th, 10am – noon.

Now is a great time to cut Bittersweet because the vines are easy to see. Just contact us to meet (or comment below), or join us Saturday, January 28th and help save the trees at Roberts Field..

For more information please comment below, contact Bill Askenburg at bill@friendsofrobertsfield.org, or call the Town Conservation Agent’s office at (978)250-5248. 😀 Thank you!

Please share this message and help spread the word!

Chelmsford Selectmen Unanimously Vote No Cell Towers at Roberts Field

no cell towers at Roberts Field in Chelmsford MAConcerned residents in attendance of the January 9, 2017 Chelmsford Board of Selectmen meeting, were cheerfully happy to hear the Board unanimously vote to “not entertain a proposal to construct a cell tower at Roberts Field”.  Choosing to word their meeting motion carefully, the Board wanted to send a clear message about the placement of cell towers at Roberts Field.  “We’re not going there” said Selectman Bob Joyce regarding placing cell towers at the Chelmsford neighborhood Park.

In the days leading up to the Selectmen’s meeting, No Cell Towers at Roberts Field was the talk of the Park and neighborhood, as word spread of the proposal to locate a T Mobile Wireless Communication tower at the Park.  Facebook lit up with posts, comments and reactions about the proposed plan, some originating from the Friends of Roberts Field Facebook page.

The proposal brought forth by T Mobile Wireless Communications, offered a plan to build a 190 foot tall mono pole cellular antennae tower with stadium lighting near the Park’s pond shore.   The proposal was met with stiff opposition from Park users, neighbors and residents, some of who testified at the meeting that the T Mobile Wireless Communications cellular tower would negatively and significantly alter the Park’s character and create safety hazards at the Park and neighborhood.

Roberts Field is a family-friendly, neighborhood recreational park, located at 260 Old Westford Road, adjacent to the Town’s East Fire Station, and currently features baseball and soccer fields, ice skating area, Friendship Park Playground and a managed wildlife habitat including Pollinator Park and nature walking trails.

The video of the full meeting discussion and vote is below.

A Hoot at Roberts Field

After patiently searching the woods at Roberts Field over the past two years, I finally found a Barred Owl.  The natural areas of Roberts Field are maintained as a wildlife habitat, and include two Barred Owl nesting boxes with plans to add more within the year.

Barred Owl at Roberts Field in Chelmsford MA
Author: Bill Askenburg
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Scouts Work to Save Trees At Roberts Field

Early Saturday morning at Roberts Field, Chelmsford Boy Scouts from Troop 81 were busy cutting and pulling vines from trees, as they kicked off their Conservation Project to remove the invasive plants from the natural areas of the Park. This morning Scouts were targeting Oriental bittersweet, a particularly damaging invasive plant to trees that grows and climbs into the tree canopy, crowding and choking out tree growth, and raining down scores of berries and seeds to the forest floor to dramatically spread the plants’ creep.


Before starting work on the Conservation Project, the Scouts met with Wetlands Scientist Cori Rose to learn about the damage invasive plants can cause, how to identify them, and the best methods for their removal. Rose’s presentation included a hands-on lesson about invasive plant identification at the Park, and warnings about onsite plants to avoid like Poison ivy and Wild mustard, whose orange sap can cause skin blisters and irritation. After the presentation, Damien Gould, Senior Patrol Leader of Troop 81, led the Scouts to three hard hit areas of the Park, where invasive plants had been marked by Friends of Roberts Field Volunteers earlier in the week. Gould said that Troop 81 took on the project “because invasive species are destroying the Park’s natural environment, and it’s important to make sure that this environment can last.”

Following the day’s work, the Scouts pitched tents and set up a campsite to stay overnight at the Park, providing them an opportunity to earn their camping merit badges. Adult Scout Leaders, including Troop 81 Scoutmaster Kirby Nichols, supported the Scouts by delivering the Troop’s trailer of camping supplies and food. While preparing grilled cheese sandwiches for the Troop’s lunch, Scoutmaster Nichols said that the Conservation Project and overnight stay at the Park was a good opportunity for the Scouts to work as a team and build camaraderie, while being in such a close and familiar location.

Chelmsford Boy Scout Troop 81 was established in 1976, and has a long history of successful service projects in the community including many Eagle Projects. Senior Patrol Leader Gould said that he had been a Scout since first grade and especially enjoyed these types of scouting activities. Gould encouraged those interested in joining Boy Scouts to visit a Troop 81 meeting at Aldersgate Methodist Church, 242 Boston Road in Chelmsford any Wednesday during the spring, fall, and winter between 7:15-8:45 PM, or to visit www.bsatroop81.org for more information.

Troop 81 became aware of the need for the invasive removal project after seeing a Chelmsford Telemedia TV bulletin board message asking for Volunteers to take on the project. The project message was posted by the Friends of Roberts Field, a Volunteer organization committed to improving the neighborhood park. The invasive removal project is part of the group’s Habitat and Trail Maintenance Plan that was enacted with the Town of Chelmsford to improve the natural areas of the Park.

Kronos Service Project at Roberts Field

Kronos Community Service Project Works For Roberts Field

On Friday, June 24, 2016 Kronos held a community service day at Roberts Field to build a trail bridge and plant a pollinator garden.  The Kronos group worked in teams to successfully build the 16′ bridge on the trail around the pond, prep and plant the pond side pollinator garden, and plant grass sod at the trail head behind the Fire Station.

The new bridge was built and placed in a seasonally wet area on the north side of the pond, using pressure-treated materials and anchored into place by steps with metal pins.  The new bridge will provide safer access to people on the trail, while working to protect the park’s habitat.

The new pollinator garden is near the Roberts Field pond and adjacent to the skate shack.  The sod was cut from the garden and used to fill in bare spots near the trail head.  The garden was designed by a wetlands scientist, and features nearly 40 different varieties flowering perennial plants donated from Chelmsford gardens and a local nursery.

Thank you Kronos for your hard work and terrific contributions to Roberts Field!

Enjoying and Protecting Nature is the Plan for Roberts Field

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Known mainly for its little-league baseball fields and Friendship Park playground, Roberts Field is now a Chelmsford park designated to the protection and enjoyment of nature.

The newly adopted Roberts Field Habitat and Trail Maintenance Plan is designed to preserve, restore and enhance the natural areas of the park. These areas include its pond, wetland and forested areas, and most recently, Pollinator Park, a certified-wildlife habitat.
The guiding principle of the Plan is to provide people with safe access to experience the natural areas of the park, while conserving the habitat of the resident wildlife. Roberts Field features a one-mile nature walking trail and is home to a healthy diversity of wildlife including many species of birds, insects, frogs, fish, snakes, turtles, birds, deer, squirrels, chipmunks, rabbits, bats and more.

The Plan sets out to enhance wildlife habitats by creating “snags” (standing dead or dying trees that pose no threat to person or property), building small brush piles, adding species-appropriate nesting boxes, and increasing the variety of native grasses, and flowering and fruiting plants in the park. To improve the park’s ecosystem, the Plan calls for the removal of noxious invasive plants like bittersweet, autumn olive and poison ivy, while increasing the variety of beneficial native plants like goldenrod and milkweed. The Plan also calls for regular upkeep of the walking trails to guard against erosion and to ensure they are safe and enjoyable.

Cori Rose, a Wetland Scientist and wildlife garden designer, believes that it is important to provide a variety of nesting places and food sources for pollinators (animals that assist plants in reproduction such as bats, bees, beetles, birds and butterflies) and points out that pollinators are in decline. “With habitat loss from suburban development, exotic invasive plant competition, overuse of pesticides, and the shifting climate, native plants that many of these animals rely upon are being wiped out. Loss of these populations could be catastrophic to agricultural food production and the health of our environment.” However, Rose notes that recent research, including a 2006 report from the National Academy of Sciences provides evidence of the value that suburban greenways, community gardens and park conservation programs can have for wild pollinators. “By shifting our land management practices to take into consideration protection and enhancement of naturalized areas and supplementing suitable sites with an enhanced diversity of pollinator-friendly native plants, pollinator populations may have an opportunity to grow. The management practices in this Plan will help Roberts Field work towards this goal, and make the Park a nice place to enjoy and learn about nature.”

The Habitat and Trail Plan was created in cooperation of Town officials and the Friends of Roberts Field, a volunteer group founded in 2013 to encourage greater appreciation and public use of the Chelmsford neighborhood park located at 260 Old Westford Road. The volunteer organization is comprised of neighbors and residents committed to enhancing and protecting Roberts Field for the enjoyment of everyone.

The group’s founder Bill Askenburg, sees the Habitat and Trail Plan as a way to support the park’s natural areas and wildlife, and to engage other users in volunteer activities. Askenburg said, “Since we started work in 2013, there’s been a lot more interest in Roberts Field and especially in the natural areas of the park. This plan uses best practices for habitat management, maintains safe access for users to enjoy nature, and identifies park improvement projects for volunteers to take on.”

Volunteers have contributed greatly to the park recently, and none more than Chelmsford Scouts. The pond-side skate shack was built as a Silver Award Girl Scout project, and the walking trail boardwalks and bridges were built by Boy Scouts as Eagle Scout projects. Other park supporters have also stepped up to make improvements. Last fall, dozens of volunteers planted hundreds of plants to establish Pollinator Park on the corner of Westford Street and Old Westford Road, turning a neglected open space overwrought with invasive plants into a sunny, welcoming public park with a picnic table, flowering meadow and butterfly gardens. Pollinator Park now has over 50 varieties of native flowering and fruiting plants and shrubs, butterfly gardens, a wildlife and forager garden, a shade garden, a natural flowering meadow, and a grassy area.

The Habitat and Trail Plan outlines available volunteer-improvement projects at the park, such as removing invasive vines, building stairs on a segment of the trail, and adding bird and bee houses. An improvement project planned for later this month will have employees of a local business volunteering to plant two new pollinator gardens near the park’s skate shack and building a new boardwalk in a wet area on the pond trail.

Alice Johannen, park neighbor and frequent visitor, appreciates the work being done and the focus on nature at Roberts Field. “What comes to mind for me is how many young children I’ve seen recently exploring the trails with their parents,” said Johannen. “I can always hear them before I see them, because they’re usually so excited. But while there are definitely more people now getting into the woods and enjoying a little bit of nature, it’s not crowded by any means. My dog and I still find solitude and peace there.”

The Friends of Roberts Field will be responsible for implementing the Habitat and Trail Plan with the cooperation and support of the Town of Chelmsford. “The Friends of Roberts Field have done a fantastic job in improving the natural area and wildlife habitat at Roberts Field,” notes Chelmsford Town Manager Paul Cohen. “This has been a cooperative effort with the Town of Chelmsford Conservation Commission and Department of Public Works. We welcome everyone to enjoy the area and to contribute to its care.”

For more information about the Plan and volunteer efforts at Roberts Field, please email Bill Askenburg or join their Facebook group page.

A copy of the Roberts Field Habitat and Trail Maintenance Plan follows.

Roberts-Field-Habitat-and-Trail-Management-Plan-2016