The Zaagkii Wings and Seeds Project

The Zaagkii Wings and Seeds Project

As honeybee colonies collapse across the world at an alarming rate, northern Michigan youth are protecting pollinators in an effort to offset the loss of billions of bees by providing habitat to butterflies. The four-year Zaagkii Wings... [more]

As honeybee colonies collapse across the world at an alarming rate, northern Michigan youth are protecting pollinators in an effort to offset the loss of billions of bees by providing habitat to butterflies.
The four-year Zaagkii Wings and Seeds Project was founded in the summer of 2008 by Rev. Jon Magnuson of Marquette, Michigan.
Marquette area teens and youth from the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community are building dozens of butterfly houses that offer protection and breeding opportunities.
The youth have also planted over 26,000 native plants that are vital for all pollinators to thrive.
The U.S. Forest Service has called the project a "success story."

Feb. 23, 2008 free benefit concert for Cedar Tree Institute

February 23, 2008: Free "Songs of the Earth" candlelight benefit concert in Marquette, MI for nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute and its environment projects

(Marquette, Michigan) - National harmonica champion "Hurricane" David McChesney and folk singer Michael Waite will perform at a free candlelight benefit concert on February 23 for the non-profit Cedar Tree Institute.

Everyone is invited to attend the 7 p.m. "Songs of the Earth" concert this Monday at the Messiah Lutheran Church in Marquette.

Twice named one of the 15 hardest working non-profits in America by World Magazine, the Cedar Tree Institute (CTI) was founded in 2004.

"To show respect and honor the environment 100 votive candles will be glowing during the concert," said Rev. Jon Magnuson, the co-founder of the Earth Keeper Initiative and CTI director.

Best-known for its interfaith and youth-related environmental projects, the CTI founded the Great Lakes Earth Healing Initiative, the Zaagkii Wings and Seeds Project involving teens and Native American youth protecting pollinators and the Manoomin Project that is restoring wild rice across the central U.P. Other CTI efforts include the Janus Project for hospice workers.

A songwriter from Joshua Tree, California, McChesney has played the harmonica for nearly four decades and performs under the name "Hurricane" David.  An avid wildlife photographer, McChesney recently published the book "Muir Roots: At One with the Wild," a collection of 176 color images and various tales about his adventures in the wilderness including the Galapagos Islands.

The son of a gourmet cook and an English professor from Milwaukee, Waite has always lived in the U.P. Waite, who plays guitar, and two friends recorded the 2007 album "Let it Go."
Waite said he will play some ballads and original songs about a "stark winter" that were inspired by his home in the forest near Halfway Location between Marquette and Big Bay.

Both performers said they are helping to raise funds for the CTI because of its dedication to protecting the environment.

"Taking care of the earth and what's around us is part of living on the Earth," Waite said. "What ever you do you should include that as part of your work."

McChesney, who lives near the Joshua Tree National Park, said "everything I have done has been nature and wildlife oriented."

"I have been an environmentalist for years and years," McChesney said. "My home is a wildlife sanctuary with 95 species of birds, bobcats on the roof, coyotes in the yard and roadrunners looking through the window."

There is no charge to attend however donations are welcome.

For more information call 906-228-5494

Related websites:

CTI:
http://www.cedartreeinstitute.org

"Hurricane" David Jesse McChesney
http://www.outmywindows.com

Michael Waite
http://www.michaelwaitemusic.com

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