A non-profit educational foundation created for the purpose of preserving Native American artifacts, art, and culture.
A non-profit educational foundation created for the purpose of preserving Native American artifacts, art, and culture.

Loblolly Pine Seedlings for the Journey Home 2014

Tree Project
Left to right: Rob Shackelford, Dare County Forest Ranger; Carl Bornfriend, Museum Executive Director; Donnie Carmen, Museum Maintenance Supervisor

Dare County Forest Ranger, Rob Shackelford, delivered 100 Loblolly pine seedlings to the Frisco Native American Museum & Nature History Center. Museum staff will plant half of the trees immediately and plant the other fifty as part of 2014 Journey Home: Back to the Future scheduled for April 27 & 28, 2014.

“We received a grant from the North Carolina Forestry Service several years ago for work on the nature trail. The seedlings are a follow-up to that project and will give us a much-needed boost to refurbish our forest,”said Carl Bornfriend, executive director for the museum.

The museum nature trail is open daily. In addition to providing exhibits and walking trails for residents and visitors, it is also the site for several special activities during the year.

For more information, contact Joyce Bornfriend at the Frisco Native American Museum 252-995-4440

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