MCLA Baseball Splits Double-Header

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AUBURNDALE, Fla. -- Austin Rachiele went 4-for-4 with a pair of doubles Wednesady to lead the MCLA baseball team to a 9-4 win for a double-header split against Maine-Presque Isle.
 
Jayco Pena went 3-for-5 with a double and a pair of RBIs, and Bryan Rosario earned the win with seven strikeouts in five innings.
 
MCLA (6-3) finishes its spring trip on Thursday against Dickinson.
 
Softball
NAPLES, Fla. -- MCLA fell to 1-7 on the season with losses to St. Joseph's of Brooklyn and Westconn.
 
In a 7-6 loss to St. Joseph's, Kristie Zator went 2-for-5 with a home run and five RBIs. In a 14-2 loss to Westconn, she went 2-for-3 with an RBI.
 
The Trailblazers finish their spring trip on Thursday with games against SUNY-Delhi and William Patterson.
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North Adams Residents Seek Answers on Forest Management Plan

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Andre Strongbearheart speaks at Thursday's meeting about conservation and land stewardship. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Officials say the forest management plan for the Notch Reservoir watershed will improve the forest's resiliency.
 
But residents continue to be concerned about erosion, water quality and logging, and the effects on wildlife and the popular Bellows Pipe Trail. 
 
The plan includes selective and salvage harvests because of infestations of the emerald ash borer, patch cuts on the red pine plantations, and enrichment plantings of resilient species. The project aims to reinvest income into the forest and watershed, with a focus on best management practices in collaboration with Mass Audubon and the state and federal forestry services.
 
The initiative is part of Mass Audubon's Forest Climate Resilience Program in conjunction with the Woodlands Partnership of Northwest Massachusetts, of which the city is a member. Two demonstration forests in the partnership are eligible for three-year U.S. Forestry Service grants. 
 
It will focus on 70 acres of the more than 1,000-acre woodland to the west and north of the reservoir off Pattison Road. The management plan has been approved by the state Department of Conservation and Recreation but further permitting will be required from the Conservation Commission, for the cutting operation and for endangered species clearance. 
 
"It's an opportunity to harvest trees, open up the understory and replace them with resilient species, part of the climate change initiative here," said Gary Gouldrup, vice president of New England Forestry Consultants.
 
"So the whole purpose is to go above and beyond the typical forest management practices that have been done in the past."
 
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