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Registration Still Open for Our Statewide Conference!

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Mott’s Run Reservoir, the site of several of this year’s conference field trips and just a few miles away from the Fredericksburg Expo and Conference Center.

All enrolled Virginia Master Naturalist volunteers are invited to register now to join us at the Fredericksburg Expo and Conference Center in Fredericksburg, Virginia for our 9th Virginia Master Naturalist Statewide Volunteer Conference and Training. This year’s conference is hosted by the Central Rappahannock chapter.

This event is an opportunity for VMN volunteers to share ideas and learn from each other, to participate in high-quality continuing education sessions, and to learn about a region of Virginia that may be different from their home communities. It’s a time and place to recognize and reward volunteers and chapters for all their efforts.

Our chapter hosts have done a wonderful job of choosing programming they think you will enjoy. We will have many and varied concurrent sessions on Saturday and Sunday. There will also be opportunities for pre-conference field trips on Friday and field trips on both Saturday and Sunday as part of the conference.

As of August 1, 183 people are registered for the conference, but about two-thirds of the sessions, including some field trips, still have space available.  If a session is full, don’t hesitate to sign up for the waiting list.  We are frequently able to accommodate people from the waitlists closer to the conference date.  All but one of the five Sunday field trips are still available, so the Full Conference registration option will give you the most choices for field opportunities. 

Early bird registration ends August 6!  Regular conference registration continues through August 20.

Registration Still Open for Our Statewide Conference! Read Post »

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Virginia Master Naturalist Program Award Nominations Due August 1

PictureBill Blair (left) and Daina Henry (right), two of our 2017 statewide award winners.

​The Virginia Master Naturalist program’s state office is now accepting nominations for six statewide awards: Volunteer of the Year, Project of the Year (with four subcategories), and Advisor of the Year.  These awards will be judged by the VMN statewide office team and one or more VMN Steering Committee member.  We will announce and distribute the awards at our annual conference, Friday evening, September 7. 
 
To submit a nomination, please send the information requested for that particular award to Michelle Prysby, mprysby@vt.edu.  Nominations are due by August 1 at 5 pm.

Get inspired by our 2017 winners!
 
Volunteer of the Year
This award is intended to recognize a volunteer who has made outstanding contributions to natural resource education, citizen science, stewardship, and/or chapter administration.  Criteria we consider include the impacts the volunteer has made on natural resource conservation and education, demonstrated leadership by the volunteer, and impacts the volunteer has made on the local chapter and its volunteers.  There is no minimum requirement for amount of hours or length of service for a volunteer to receive this award.  Our focus is on the last one to two years of service.
 
In your nominations, please include the following:

  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation of nominator
  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation of the nominee
  • Description of why the nominee should receive the award, limited to 400 words.  You may choose to include a description of the individual’s service, specific examples of positive impacts made, aspects that make the individual stand out from other volunteers, and quotes from other volunteers or local partners.  Please place your primary focus on the last 1-2 years of the volunteer’s service.

 
Project of the Year
Subcategories: Education/Outreach, Citizen Science, Stewardship, Administrative
This award is intended to recognize a project that has made significant and noteworthy positive impacts for natural resource education, citizen science, stewardship, and/or chapter administration within the last 1-2 years.  Our focus is on projects for which the VMN chapter played a significant, unique role in creation, implementation, and leadership.  We will give awards in each of four subcategories:

  • Education/Outreach – Volunteer service in which VMN volunteers educate the public, such as interpretive programs at parks
  • Citizen Science – Service projects involving data collection, monitoring, biological inventories, etc.
  • Stewardship – Service projects to improve habitat or improve the ability of the public to access natural resources through trails, etc.
  • Administrative – Projects to improve the functioning of a VMN chapter, such as re-vamping of the basic training course, mentorship programs, efforts to streamline chapter processes, etc.

 
In your nominations, please include the following:

  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation of the nominator
  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation for the primary VMN volunteer contact for the project
  • The primary award subcategory for which you are nominating the project: Education/Outreach, Citizen Science, Stewardship, or Administrative.  The project may include aspects of multiple subcategories and you may describe these aspects in your nomination statement, but you should indicate the primary subcategory under which you want to nominate the project.
  • Description of why the project should receive the award, limited to 400 words.  Please include a description of the project goals, activities completed, and impacts and outcomes for natural resources in your community and/or for your chapter.  Include the roles and contributions of VMN volunteers to the project.  Identify any significant partners for the project. 

 
Chapter Advisor of the Year
This award is intended to recognize a chapter advisor who has made significant and noteworthy contributions to a VMN chapter within the last 1-2 years. 

​In your nominations, please include the following:

  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation of the nominator
  • Name, email address, and VMN chapter affiliation of the chapter advisor
  • Description of why the chapter advisor should receive the award, limited to 400 words.  Please include specific examples of how the chapter advisor has helped the chapter run effectively, make positive impacts in the community, or otherwise achieve its goals.

​Please help us recognize the outstanding people and work of your chapters!


Virginia Master Naturalist Program Award Nominations Due August 1 Read Post »

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“Eye” Want You To Know

PictureMarie Majarov, sporting her hat for sun protection! Photo by Milan Majarov.

–By Marie Majarov, VMN-Shenandoah Chapter

Editor’s Note: The subject of this article is unusual for The Pollinator, but I wanted to include it because safety is such an important consideration for VMN volunteers. Marie is thoughtful in sharing her personal story so that her fellow VMN volunteers (and others) may learn from her experience. If other VMN volunteers have personal stories to share related to safety during VMN activities (e.g., experiences with tick-borne diseases, heat-related illnesses, etc.), please send them. I hope to make these safety stories a semi-regular feature. –MDP

As a naturalist with great respect for the sun and the natural world, an outdoor & nature photographer, a retired clinical psychologist with some medical savvy, and as a septuagenarian I had no idea! And neither have most people I’ve talked to since my recent, eye-opening experience with eyelid cancer.
            I want you to know!  As Virginia Master Naturalists I believe we need to be well informed as we are frequently out working, observing and serving in glorious sunshine. We also have a responsibility to set good examples with our self-care in the sun and to be able to educate those with whom we work.
            I thought I had a sty on my left lower eyelid, no big deal. I used warm compresses, standard treatment, but in a few days when it did not go away — actually it got quite a bit bigger, baby lima bean size and really  irritating to my eye — I went to see my eye doctor.  “A chalazion” he said, a cyst-like nodule in or on the eyelid often developing after a sty or resulting from obstruction of an oil gland within the eyelid. “I’ll lance it, you will feel much better by tonight, and it should heal right up.”  
            Lancing however revealed no obstruction, inflammation, or infection; it was a hard growth, and not likely a standard chalazion. My doctor carefully removed a piece of it and sent it off to the lab and explained that there was a possibility that it could be cancer, skin cancer actually.  “We’ll see what the lab report says, one step at a time…”
            It was cancer, basal cell carcinoma. My doctor told my husband and me that he was not surprised, that he was fairly sure of a cancer diagnosis as soon as he cut into the growth, just not sure what kind. He was fearful it could be squamous cell carcinoma or worse, melanoma.  I was lucky.  
            Four days after the diagnosis I was in the office of an outstanding ophthalmic plastic and reconstruction surgeon in northern Virginia.  A whole new chapter of learning opened up before me. Surgery was scheduled for 10 days hence to remove the growth, and probably about a third of my eyelid with an inch of tissue below the lid aiming for clean margins, and followed by eyelid reconstruction.  
            This was MY EYE!!!! Eyes are so incredibly important to us all, and I am a photographer you know!  Reading and having my surgeon explain and show me pictures of all that was involved in the hour and 45 minute procedure to be carried out so very close to my eyeball, both helped and made me even more anxious!  The reconstruction pictures he showed me were amazing, but getting there made me apprehensive. To be honest, I was really a nervous wreck! 
            The surgery went beautifully and was not as onerous to me as the visions that swirled in my head leading up to it. The surgeon, with a pathologist present to evaluate the removed tissue, was able to get clean margins, the best of news to all cancer patients!  Anesthesia today is amazing; and incredibly I had minimal pain afterwards!  I had 48 hours of wet dressings, ointments on my raft of stitches for 2 weeks, and I had to keep my head upright even while sleeping, then just healing time….not bad at all.  The results looked amazing from the beginning. It was hard to believe the surgeon had removed as much of my eyelid and tissue as he did and then was able to put things back together so smoothly. There will be little visible evidence of the surgery and most importantly my eye will work normally.  Again, I was so very lucky!
            My surgeon says that a “lifetime of sun” is the culprit here. I grew up in a generation where we were encouraged to get as much sunshine as possible. It was “good for us.” There was little known about skin cancer, sun screen products with SPF numbers were not available, and kids were not encouraged to wear sunglasses or hats. On many beach vacations I was quite sunburned and absorbed lots of sun glare from hours of enjoying the ocean and white sandy New Jersey beaches…for fair skinned people such as myself, a recipe for later problems.  As a college student I worked summers as a lifeguard and swim instructor, wearing sunglasses…but I am not sure how good they were at that time. I am sure that it was a perfect situation for glare off the water to bounce up to my eye lids. I didn’t know, no one did, the problems that could lie ahead.
            The Skin Cancer Foundation reports that “the eyelid region is one of the most common sites for nonmelanoma skin cancers. In fact, skin cancers of the eyelid, including basal cell carcinoma (BCC), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), and melanoma, account for five to 10 percent of all skin cancers. Ninety five percent of these tumors are basal cell or squamous cell carcinomas.” Most being lower eyelid cancer. Absolutely staggering statistics, I had no idea!
            Prompt treatment is crucial to good outcomes. While basal cell carcinomas do not spread/travel to other organs and therefore are not usually life threatening, they do spread in their area of origin. This is particularly tricky around the eyelid where the tissues are thin and if left untreated cancer cells can infiltrate to nearby vital ocular structures and even the perilously close brain. 
            One of the most common presenting symptoms for skin cancer on the eyelids is a growth like mine, which was likely growing under the surface for quite some time, years in fact. Other possible signals reported in the literature include: a change in appearance of the eyelid skin, swelling of the eyelid, thickening of the eyelid, chronic infection of the eyelid, or an ulceration (area where skin is broken) on the eyelid that does not heal. 
            Awareness that eyelid cancer and other skin cancer can happen to those of us exposed to much sunshine over our lifetimes is the first thing I want you to know.  Next are the protective measures we can take and encourage others to take.  Sunscreen is an important preventative measure in all skin cancer. So slather up exposed skin areas when you are in the sun…and don’t forget your ears a delicate area where basal cell carcinoma also takes a significant toll.    
            For the eyelid area however, slathering up with sunscreen is awkward to impossible because of the potential for rubbing it into and causing irritation to the delicate eye. Sunglasses must be your sunblock.  Wear sunglass that blo
ck 99-100% of ultraviolet light. This is essential!  Also broad brim hats that have a darker underside to the brim help greatly to decrease glare to your cheeks and eye area. The brim should surround the hat; baseball hats are not as useful because they allow for glare exposure from the side, and as to other skin cancers they leave ears and neck exposed. 
            I have long worn a great UV+45 kaki colored Virginia Wildlifehat (a present from the editor) with a perfect brim, underside forest green. My sunglasses however often get tossed aside or tangled as I struggle with straps around my neck for my camera, a lens viewer, binoculars, glasses etc. while I photograph and observe nature. No longer will this happen; when healed all the way there is a large style pair of prescription transition glasses in my future. In fact I take this so seriously I am even considering wearing black under my eyes like a football player when I garden or am out on the water! 
            Make no mistake, this is very serious. Eyes are precious!  I am indeed very fortunate that my cancer was diagnosed and treated quickly once it became visible. I want you to know, to be aware, and take precautions. ….and please educate others. 

References and Resources:
https://www.cancer.net/cancer-types/eyelid-cancer/overview        
https://eyecancer.com/eye-cancer/conditions/eyelid-tumors/basal-cell-carcinoma-eyelid-cancer/
https://www.skincancer.org/prevention/sun-protection/for-your-eyes/the-eyelids-highly-susceptible-to-skin-cancer

Marie Majarov (mariemilanmajarov@gmail.com) is a Shenandoah Chapter Virginia Master Naturalist and photojournalist whose work is frequently featured in Virginia Wildlife Magazine. 


“Eye” Want You To Know Read Post »

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New Milestone Achievements by VMN Volunteers

PictureVMN volunteers receive pins to recognize milestone achievements.

The VMN program recognizes volunteers who complete 250, 500, 1000, 2500, 5000, 7,500, and 10,000 hours of service.  These are cumulative volunteer hours starting when a volunteer joins the program.  To offer some perspective, a volunteer who does the 40 hours of service annually to maintain status as a Certified Virginia Master Naturalist would take 6-7 years to achieve the 250 hour milestone and 125 years to achieve the 5000 hour milestone!  

Below, we have listed the volunteers who have achieved these milestones between August 2017 and January 2018 (based on reports received by our chapters as January 31.)  Some of these volunteers have demonstrated long-term dedication through many years with the program.  Others have joined the program more recently, but they have done extraordinary levels of service in a short time frame.  We are honored to have all of them sharing their time and talents as Virginia Master Naturalist volunteers, and we are pleased to recognize their efforts in this newsletter and with special milestone pins.  Their names are listed alphabetically within each chapter.

In addition, although we cannot list them all here, we are thrilled to recognize the 1,500? Virginia Master Naturalist volunteers who certified or re-certified this year, meaning they completed 40 hours of volunteer service and 8 hours of continuing education. Congratulations, everyone!


5,000 Hour Milestone
Jim Scibek  (Central Rappahannock Chapter)
Cheryl Jacobson (Historic Rivers Chapter)
John Ford (New River Valley Chapter)

2,500 Hour Milestone
Jim Hurley (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Linnie Dudley (Central Virginia Chapter)
Bob Dinse (Fairfax Chapter)
Judy Jones (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Benjamin Hedges (Pocahontas Chapter)

Marilyn Smith (Rivanna Chapter)
Kathy Fell (Southwestern Piedmont Chapter)

1,000 Hour Milestone
Chris Wilson (Beagle Ridge Chapter)
Nora Cox (Central Virginia Chapter)
Ruth Meyers (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Birge Reichard (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Frank Renshaw (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Janis Stone (Fairfax Chapter)
Geoffrey Giles (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Susan Mutell (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Darrin Handy (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Dianna Bridges (New River Valley Chapter)
Katharina Bergdoll (Northern Neck Chapter)
Temple Moore (Northern Neck Chapter)
Ken Cranston (Old Rag Chapter)
Alfred Goossens (Old Rag Chapter)

Peggy Kenney (Old Rag Chapter)
Marilyn Adair (Peninsula Chapter)

Pam Courtney (Peninsula Chapter)
Chris Gwaltney (Peninsula Chapter)
Lori Dzierzek (Pocahontas Chapter)
Jim McCord (Pocahontas Chapter)
Cris Pond (Pocahontas Chapter)
Ann Dunn (Rivanna Chapter)
Terri Keffert (Rivanna Chapter)
Katherine Snavely (Riverine Chapter)
Bill Fabian (Roanoke Valley Chapter)

Keith Mauer (Tidewater Chapter)

500 Hour Milestone
Stacey Evers (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Joan Gottlieb (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Jennifer Gradle (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Noreen    Hannigan (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Kasha Helget (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Toby Smith (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Barbara    Erlandson (Banshee Reeks Chapter)
Beverly Hovencamp  (Central Blue Ridge Chapter)
Deb Markham  (Central Blue Ridge Chapter)
Patricia M. Elton (Central Piedmont Chapter)
Alys Miller (Central Virginia Chapter)
John Powers (Central Virginia Chapter)

Nancy Pryor (Central Virginia Chapter)
Nat Reasor (Central Virginia Chapter)
Ben Shrader (Central Virginia Chapter)
Susan Vreeland (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Roger Wheeler (Eastern Shore Chapter)

Mike Bishop (Fairfax Chapter)
Bob Butterworth (Fairfax Chapter)
​Anna Finch (Fairfax Chapter)
Sean Forbes (Fairfax Chapter)
Alison Keck (Fairfax Chapter)
Terri Lamb (Fairfax Chapter)
Rebecca Strode (Fairfax Chapter)

Tom Washburn (Fairfax Chapter)
Karen Young (Fairfax Chapter)
Doug Britt (Fairfax Chapter)
Gerald Hopkins (Headwaters Chapter)

Ann Murray (Headwaters Chapter)
Andy Sale (Headwaters Chapter)
Portia Belden (Historic Rivers Chapter)

Randi Heise (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Barbara Neis (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Doris Gallup (Historic Southside Chapter)
Diane Girgente (James River Chapter)
Janet Hormes (James River Chapter)
Joyce Andrew (Merrimac Farm Chapter)
Judy Gallagher (Merrimac Farm Chapter)
Kelly Krechmer (Merrimac Farm Chapter)
Linda Gette (New River Valley Chapter)

Judith McCord (New River Valley Chapter)
Ann Raridon (New River Valley Chapter)
Nancy Garvey (Northern Neck Chapter)
Alison Sowar (Northern Neck Chapter)
Bonnie Wilson (Northern Neck Chapter)
Jeffrey Wright (Northern Neck Chapter)
Joyce Harman (Old Rag Chapter)
Bryan Mitchell (Old Rag Chapter)

William Boeh (Peninsula Chapter)
Troy Bonavita (Peninsula Chapter)
Denis Boudreau (Peninsula Chapter)
Kenneth Carroll (Peninsula Chapter)
Sandy Graham (Peninsula Chapter)
Loye Spencer (Peninsula Chapter)
Willard Waples (Peninsula Chapter)
Lesha Berkel (Pocahontas Chapter)

Tom Jenkins (Pocahontas Chapter)
Linda Birch (Rivanna Chapter)
Gus Colom (Rivanna Chapter)

John Holden (Rivanna Chapter)
Elizabeth Sidamon-Eristoff (Rivanna Chapter)
Elizabeth Waters (Rivanna Chapter)
Bruce Blanton (Riverine Chapter)

Sharon Logan (Riverine Chapter)
Karen Fall (Shenandoah Chapter)
Denise Nassetta (Shenandoah Chapter)
Jessica Driver (Southwestern Piedmont Chapter)
Dottie Haley (Southwestern Piedmont Chapter)
Laura Mae (Tidewater Chapter)
Ruth Martin (Tidew
ater Chapter)
Karen McCurdy (Tidewater Chapter)
Steve McCurdy (Tidewater Chapter)
Jane Norris (Tidewater Chapter)

250 Hour Milestone
Renee Grebe (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Yu-Hsin Hsu (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Anna Kim (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Mary McCutcheon (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Glenn Tobin (Arlington Regional Chapter)
Debbie Crew (Banshee Reeks Chapter)
Susan McMunn (Banshee Reeks Chapter)
Susan Robinson (Banshee Reeks Chapter)
Mary Hanna (Central Blue Ridge Chapter)
Peter Agelasto  (Central Blue Ridge Chapter)
Betsy Agelasto  (Central Blue Ridge Chapter)
Vera Kopach (Central Rappahannock Chapter)

Elizabeth Montanye  (Central Rappahannock Chapter)
Thomas Specht  (Central Rappahannock Chapter)
Mack Callaham (Central Virginia Chapter)

Margeurite Cassidy (Central Virginia Chapter)
Shelly Evans (Central Virginia Chapter)

Dana Guthrie (Central Virginia Chapter)
Stephen Lichiello (Central Virginia Chapter)
Kelly Love (Central Virginia Chapter)
Patricia Schuler (Central Virginia Chapter)
Gwen Solyom (Central Virginia Chapter)
Lee Spradlin (Central Virginia Chapter)
Terry Ewell (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Sue Lillard (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Barbara O’Hare (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Peter Pulman (Eastern Shore Chapter)
Valerie Bertha (Fairfax Chapter)
Ann Difiore (Fairfax Chapter)
Lisa Hylton (Fairfax Chapter)
​Marilyn Parks (Fairfax Chapter)
Kimberly Schauer (Fairfax Chapter)
​​Fred Siskin (Fairfax Chapter)
​Chris Straub (Fairfax Chapter)
Carl Droms (Headwaters Chapter)
Louis Amato (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Rich Decker (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Karen Grass (Historic Rivers Chapter)
William Harper (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Jeffrey Honig (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Judy Kinshaw-Ellis (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Keith Navia (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Lisa Nickel (Historic Rivers Chapter)
Connie Reitz (Historic Rivers Chapter)

Jean Carmean (Historic Southside Chapter)
Della Carrico (Historic Southside Chapter)
Penny Owings (Historic Southside Chapter)
Barbara Nall (Historic Southside Chapter)
Tina Altizer (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Bobby Caudell (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Katie Cordle (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Carrie Holt (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Randy Smith (Holston Rivers Chapter)
Lisa Matthews (Merrimac Farm Chapter)
Charlie Price (Merrimac Farm Chapter)
Sharon Crane (New River Valley Chapter)

Jean Elliott (New River Valley Chapter)
Shelley Gelbert (New River Valley Chapter)
Don Marsille (New River Valley Chapter)
Marshal McCord (New River Valley Chapter)
Marge Modlin
 (New River Valley Chapter)
Marcia Murphy (New River Valley Chapter)
Mark Pierson (New River Valley Chapter)
Chris Sokol (New River Valley Chapter)
Leslie Fellows (Northern Neck Chapter)
Patricia McMurray (Northern Neck Chapter)
Darleen Nelson (Northern Neck Chapter)
Petra Walian (Northern Neck Chapter)
John Powell (Northern Neck Chapter)
Charlene Talcott (Northern Neck Chapter)
Victoria Fortuna (Old Rag Chapter)
Bonnie Bafur (Peninsula Chapter)
David Boehnlein (Peninsula Chapter)

Shirley Chirch (Peninsula Chapter)
James Cole (Peninsula Chapter)
Ana Colon (Peninsula Chapter)
Rhonda Graves (Peninsula Chapter)
Yukari Hughes (Peninsula Chapter)
Claire Neubert (Peninsula Chapter)
Diane Peters  (Peninsula Chapter)
Michelle Slosser (Peninsula Chapter)
Grady Wesson (Peninsula Chapter)
Raymond Yoh (Peninsula Chapter)
Jeanette Yoh (Peninsula Chapter)
Jennifer Ambs (Pocahontas Chapter)

Eileen Atkinson (Pocahontas Chapter)
Patricia DeZern (Pocahontas Chapter)
Kathleen Short (Pocahontas Chapter)
Krista Weatherford (Pocahontas Chapter)
Bevin Cetta (Rivanna Chapter)

JoAnn Dalley (Rivanna Chapter)
Sandra Finley (Rivanna Chapter)
Leah Jung (Rivanna Chapter)
Deborah Luzynski-Weber (Rivanna Chapter)

Karen Mulder (Rivanna Chapter)
Leigh Surdukowski (Rivanna Chapter)
Timothy Weber (Rivanna Chapter)
Nancy Walters (Rivanna Chapter)
Jerry Andrews (Riverine Chapter)
Marianne McKee (Riverine Chapter)
Caroline Meehan (Riverine Chapter)
Jean Stephens (Riverine Chapter)
Sam Adams (Shenandoah Chapter)

Irene Upshur (Shenandoah Chapter)
Susan Elder (Tidewater Chapter)
Thomas Flatley (Tidewater Chapter)
Nina Howard (Tidewater Chapter)
Barbara Johnson (Tidewater Chapter)
Stuart McCausland (Tidewater Chapter)

New Milestone Achievements by VMN Volunteers Read Post »

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