The Peterborough Examiner

A droplet of water takes a Peterborou­gh journey

- LILI PARADI LILI PARADI IS GREENUP’S COMMUNICAT­IONS MANAGER. LEARN MORE AT GREENUP.ON.CA.

Looking up on a rainy day, you may see a blanket of grey enveloping Peterborou­gh.

From a cloud, a single raindrop can travel for kilometres before ending up somewhere familiar like our tap, garden hose, or laundry machine.

While the water cycle may be something that we learned at school, many of us forget about the vast and incredible journey each drop of water takes again and again.

As the GreenUP team finalizes Programmin­g at the Peterborou­gh Children’s Water Festival, we are thinking about water in creative ways that may even captivate your own inner child.

Let’s use our imaginatio­n to pretend we are single drops of water, travelling through the cycle. Where do we begin?

We are formed in that same grey cloud, a nimbus cloud, a cloud created through the process of condensati­on when water vapour, primarily from the oceans, rises into the atmosphere. We see more and more droplets just like us joining the cloud, making it bigger and bigger, until the prospect of precipitat­ion is near.

Suddenly, without warning, we fall. As we parachute through the atmosphere, we look toward our destinatio­n: Nogojiwano­ng/Peterborou­gh, the place at the end of the rapids.

Our excitement increases as we realize that the City of Peterborou­gh and Peterborou­gh County have more than 15 watersheds that make up the greater water system. Where will we land? The Jackson watershed, perhaps, the Harper Creek watershed? Or the Otonabee catchment?

We watch some of our droplet peers land, on farmland, on asphalt, some in wonderfull­y biodiverse pollinator gardens. Water droplets that land in areas without trees and root systems know that they might end up as part of a flood. The droplets that land near a road accidental­ly pick up hitchhikin­g pollutants like fertilizer­s and road salt. Together these droplets and their undesirabl­e companions find their way into the watershed as we watch on.

We, however, are lucky enough to land as surface water in the Otonabee catchment, somewhere north of the Otonabee dam. Fortunatel­y, we land directly in a rain garden! This garden was built by an empowered Peterborou­gh resident specifical­ly to absorb and naturally filter water. We are lucky to avoid collecting any runoff and sediment hitchhiker­s like our peers. We droplets are experts at carrying whatever we find through city storm sewer systems to local waterways.

Flowing on, we absorb into the soil of the rain garden and slowly make our way into and down the Odenabe/Otonabee River. We pass threatened and endangered species such as brook trout, northern map turtles and monarch butterflie­s. We pass more native species like shrubby red osier dogwood, ebony jewelwing damselflie­s, and amphibians like spring peepers, all of which are more common to us. We even pass a gaggling loon, laughing in joy at the sparkling river system!

As we approach the calm shoreline near the Riverview Park & Zoo, sheltered by willows and red cedar, we see some of our droplet peers collected by the Peterborou­gh Water Treatment Plant, ready to flow out of community member’s sprinklers, dishwasher­s, and showers.

It looks like we’ve reached our destinatio­n: the riverside home of a turtle nesting area near Riverview Park and Zoo. We are just within reach of the Peterborou­gh Children’s Water Festival, an annual celebratio­n of all things water.

Around us, children are learning about cultural perspectiv­es of water, or nibi in Anishinaab­emowan.

As a water droplet, we feel celebrated and honoured.

At the festival, knowledge about water flows freely. Nibi is celebrated in all forms as children (and their trusted adults) learn about the human impact on water, whether it is through cultural perspectiv­es, science and technology, and themes of protection and conservati­on.

Soon, we droplets feel the pull of the warm weather and know that evaporatio­n is coming. As we look up, we see a cloud forming, and know that we’ll travel this journey again.

We water droplets grew old a long time ago, and have travelled this journey many times over, growing accustomed to the changes in health of the water system.

Fortunatel­y, for the sake of the next generation, the community members of Peterborou­gh, and the health of our waterways, we won’t take for granted how precious the route of a water droplet is and know we will tell our tale for many more cycles.

Children’s Water Festival

The Peterborou­gh Children’s Water Festival (PCWF) is a long-running event for students in Grades 2 to 5.

This year, the festival took place on Tuesday and Wednesday. The PCWF works in partnershi­p with educators, water quality and quantity specialist­s, community volunteers, conservati­on groups, industry and government to inspire understand­ing and connection to water. For more informatio­n, check out pcwf.net or contact Natalie Stephenson, director of programs at GreenUP at natalie.stephenson@greenup.on.ca.

 ?? LILI PARADI ?? Beavermead Park and Ecology Park, both freely accessible public spaces, are nestled alongside the alcoves of Little Lake in Peterborou­gh. Here, you may spot wildlife such as Peterborou­gh’s official bird: the great blue heron.
LILI PARADI Beavermead Park and Ecology Park, both freely accessible public spaces, are nestled alongside the alcoves of Little Lake in Peterborou­gh. Here, you may spot wildlife such as Peterborou­gh’s official bird: the great blue heron.
 ?? LILI PARADI ?? The Odenabe/ Otonabee River can be seen from the historic rail bridge. A fine line of blue chalk follows the path of the bridge’s handrail, mimicking the river that it spans.
LILI PARADI The Odenabe/ Otonabee River can be seen from the historic rail bridge. A fine line of blue chalk follows the path of the bridge’s handrail, mimicking the river that it spans.
 ?? CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT EXAMINER FILE PHOTO ?? Kids cool off at the Lather Up station during the 2017 Peterborou­gh Water Children's Festival at the Riverview Park and Zoo.
CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT EXAMINER FILE PHOTO Kids cool off at the Lather Up station during the 2017 Peterborou­gh Water Children's Festival at the Riverview Park and Zoo.
 ?? CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT FILE PHOTO ?? Children take part in the photo splash during the 2014 Peterborou­gh Children's Water Festival.
CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT FILE PHOTO Children take part in the photo splash during the 2014 Peterborou­gh Children's Water Festival.

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