VIRGINIA TECH magazine
  • Fall 2014

    Volume 37, Number 1

    Virginia Tech Magazine, fall 2014

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  • With its serene waters, roaming waterfowl, and thick, shady trees, the Duck Pond feels like one of the most natural sections of the Virginia Tech campus.
    In reality, that natural feel is backed up by a lot of engineering, landscaping, and maintenance. The end result, however, speaks for itself: The Duck Pond is one of the most popular sites at Virginia Tech.
  • The Turtle Pond?

    Don't go thinking those eponymous ducks rule the roost. The Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation regularly captures snapping turtles at the Duck Pond for research projects.

  • FEATURES

    Fall 2014

    Sowing the Future: How Virginia Tech will provide food and fresh water for a growing population

    Campus Canines: Exploring the human-animal bond at Virginia Tech

    Sparks: Creative space offers entrepreneurs "time, space, and permission"

    The Voyager: Alumna never turns down adventure

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  • HOW TECH TICKS

    Waterways

    Inside the Duck Pond

    by Mason Adams

    Duck Pond at Virginia Tech

    CLICK IMAGE TO OPEN MAP OF AREA WITH NUMBERED LOCATIONS.

    1)

    Artificially created in the mid-'30s, the Duck Pond is home to a variety of wildlife species. Waterfowl include Canada geese, mallard ducks, and Muscovy ducks.

    The pond is inhabited by common carp, redbreast sunfish, mosquito fish, white suckers, black bullheads, and other fish released into it. Each spring, the College of Natural Resources and Environment stages an informal fishing tournament.

    2)

    The gazebo is the focal point of the pedestrian trail that runs along the Duck Pond's southern edge. Built to attract recreationalists and occasionally house an event, the structure adds an exclamation point to the landscaped southern shore.

    3)

    The dam along Duck Pond Drive forms the pond's western edge, with an outlet that leads to Stroubles Creek and eventually the New River.

    Professor Stephen Schoenholtz and students at Duck Pond

    4)

    Stephen Schoenholtz (second from left), director of the Virginia Water Resources Research Center and professor of forest hydrology and soils, works with students to gather samples from the Webb Branch of Stroubles Creek. Elsewhere, facilities staff check for sediment plumes at the pond's inlets to gauge the severity of erosion and floods in places upstream. The longer the plume, the worse the erosion.

    Stroubles Creek at Virginia Tech

    5)

    Stroubles Creek, which flows through the Duck Pond, originates from springs in northern Blacksburg. In the mid-'30s, when the Drillfield was enlarged, the springs were piped underground, and they now emerge by West Campus Drive. The creek's upper reaches are inhabited by the Blacknose dace, a native minnow.

    Virginia Tech Duck Pond in winter

    6)

    The Ice Pond, built in the winter of 1880-81, to provide ice to the college serves as the Duck Pond's little sibling. 1898-99, the college began using a refrigerating plant.

    7)

    A man-made wetland containing native vegetation, the stormwater basin south of the Holtzman Alumni Center is used to regulate runoff and improve water quality. During floods, it fills to slow the flow of rainwater.

    8)

    Solitude, the house by the Duck Pond, is the oldest structure on campus. Believed to date back more than 200 years, Solitude served as the residence on a 250-acre farm that eventually became part of Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College in 1872.

    Willow tree at the Virginia Tech Duck Pond

    9)

    The large black willow tree that grows by the Main Branch of Stroubles Creek near the point where the branch enters the Duck Pond has become a favorite of students, alumni, and arborists statewide. The tree is included in the 2008 book "Remarkable Trees of Virginia" by Nancy Ross Hugo, Professor Emeritus Jeff Kirwan, and Robert Llewellyn.

    10)

    A sewer line along Stroubles Creek carries wastewater to a treatment plant that discharges into the New River.


    Mud Bass Tournament

    In 2011, the Virginia Tech Chapter of the American Fisheries Society, along with the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation in the College of Natural Resources and Environment, hosted its 28th Annual Mud Bass Tournament at the Duck Pond.


    Ice pond photo courtesy of Special Collections, University Libraries, Virginia Tech. Stroubles Creek photo courtesy of University Design and Construction Archives; digital copy courtesy of Digital Imaging and Archiving and W. Cully Hession.

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