Spring Means a New Series of Tree Talks!
The Elkins Tree Board and Kump Education Center will launch a new Tree Talks Lecture Series on Wednesday, March 4, at 7 p.m., inviting the community to learn more about the region’s Appalachian woodlands and the challenges they face.
The free, three-part series will be held at the historic Kump House, 401 Randolph Ave., and will bring together experts and community members to explore the forests’ biological diversity and the many ways people of all ages can connect with and care for them.
The first lecture, “Under Pressure: A Tale of Two Salamanders,” will feature Lacy Rucker (pictured above), a biological scientist with the U.S. Forest Service’s Northern Research Station. Rucker will explain why the Appalachian Mountains are considered a biodiversity hotspot and are often called the salamander capital of the world.
Her presentation will also examine how widespread logging and intense wildfires between the 1880s and 1910s in West Virginia reshaped forest habitats and influenced the distribution of species such as the Cheat Mountain salamander. She will discuss how habitat fragmentation, destruction and climate change continue to threaten salamander populations today.
The remaining lectures in the series include “Exploring Woods with Wonder: Multi-Generational Ways to Share the Outdoors,” presented by Valerie Hart and Kate Reed, co-owners of the nonprofit Wonder & Grow and coordinators of the Randolph County Outdoors program, on April 1 at 7 p.m., and “Forest Invaders: How Invasives Wreak Woodland Havoc,” presented by Michelle Fonda, private lands and invasive species biologist with the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, on May 6 at 7 p.m.
All lectures are free and open to the public. Parking is available behind the Kump House and is accessible from Seneca Road.
For more information, visit https://kumpeducationcenter.org.
This article was written by Alyssa Stump, a Davis & Elkins student studying communications and journalism.

City Hall News: Week of April 12, 2026
Elkins, WV — April 11, 2026: Street sweeping resumes this Monday, April 13. Parking enforcement will start on Monday, April 20. The street sweeping schedule is unchanged from last year and can be viewed online here: https://cityofelkinswv.gov/street-sweeper. Sign up for Emergency Alerts […]
Read More
Why Donate Life Month Matters
Earlier this week, Mayor Jerry Marco declared April as Donate Life Month in Elkins, standing alongside the Skinner family and public officials from North Central West Virginia. For the Skinner family, this isn’t only a calendar date. It is their lived reality. Cody Skinner […]
Read More
Proclamation from Mayor Jerry Marco for Gold Star Spouses Day
WHEREAS, on April 5 of each year, our nation observes Gold Star Spouses Day to recognize the enduring sacrifice and resilience of the husbands and wives of United States service members who gave their lives in defense of our freedoms; The term […]
Read More
City Hall News: Week of April 5, 2026
Elkins, WV — April 4, 2026: Calendar this: Street sweeping will resume on Monday, April 13. Parking enforcement will start on Monday, April 20. The street sweeping schedule is unchanged from last year and can be viewed online here: https://cityofelkinswv.gov/street-sweeper. Free Reflective […]
Read More
Spring is Here! The Street Sweeper is Ready to Soon Give Elkins’ Streets Some Love, Starting April 13
Spring has officially begun in Elkins, and with it comes the familiar hum of our city street sweeper as it gets back to work each morning. Starting Monday, April 13, Elkins residents will start seeing our sweeper out and about, tidying up […]
Read More
Elkins Depot Welcome Center Celebrates 20 Years
This morning, Elkins Mayor Jerry Marco officially signed a proclamation declaring Monday, April 6, 2026, as Elkins Depot Welcome Center’s 20th Anniversary Celebration Day. Joining Mayor Marco were employees and affiliates of the Elkins Depot Welcome Center Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) […]
Read More