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	<title>Bancroft this Week</title>
	<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com</link>
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	<pubDate>Sat May 16 0:51:46 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Bancroft native honoured as Conservation Hero</title>
			<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com/?p=12661</link>
			<pubDate>Sat May 16 0:51:46 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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<p>Ontario Nature, a leading environmental charity, announced the recipients of their annual<br />Conservation Awards on June 11, 2022.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The awards recognized the exceptional contributions<br />made by individuals and organizations to protect wild species and wild spaces in<br />Ontario.&nbsp;&nbsp;Among this year's 10 winners were Tweed residents, Elizabeth Churcher and George<br />Thomson. This husband and wife team was awarded the Ontario Nature Education Award for a<br />lifetime devoted to educating and inspiring people of all ages to understand and appreciate the<br />natural world so they too might become enthusiastic supporters of conservation and<br />environmental protection.<br />George and Elizabeth are longtime residents and tireless volunteers in the region. You must<br />know them from somewhere.<br />You might have worked at a school with them or remember one of them as your teacher. Both<br />George and Elizabeth taught science for many years at public schools in the Hastings County<br />area.<br />Perhaps you have visited Churcher Woods in Bancroft. After inheriting a portion of her family's<br />farm, Elizabeth and George donated 60 woodland acres to the Hastings Prince Edward Land<br />Trust as a nature reserve to be used for educational purposes.<br />If you read the Tweed News, you would have come across their weekly natural history column,<br />“Naturally”.<br />Before Covid, you could have met them at one of the monthly Quinte Field Naturalist meetings<br />in downtown Belleville. Both are excellent naturalists. As President, George would have been<br />chairing the meeting with charm and humour and Elizabeth would have been reporting on the<br />recent nature advocacy letters she had written as Corresponding Secretary.<br />Several years ago, you could have been on a Tweed Horticultural Garden Tour to “Hepatica<br />Hill”, their 100 acre farmstead come nature reserve, where they reduce their carbon footprint<br />by growing the vast bulk of their own food while maintaining rich and varied habitat for wildlife.<br />If you have driven through Tweed in summer, you passed by St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church<br />where they have been instrumental in turning the property into a beautiful vegetable garden to<br />supply the food bank and a pollinator garden to feed butterflies, bees and birds.<br />You may belong to one of the innumerable groups all over Hastings County and beyond, where<br />George and Elizabeth have given their nature presentations over the years.</p>
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<p>These are just a few highlights of a lifetime of passionate dedication to Nature that garnered<br />Elizabeth Churcher and George Thomson the Ontario Nature Education Award. Humble about<br />the recognition, their greatest wish is that they might inspire you to do everything you can to<br />create a greener, more livable future for the generations to come.</p>
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<p class="has-text-align-right"><strong><em>Submitted by Ontario Nature</em></strong></p>
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			<wp-post_id>12661</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2022-06-21 17:01:50</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2022-06-21 21:01:50</wp-post_date_gmt>
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