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Summer Ranger Class of 2016
Group Photo Summer Rangers at Hillsdale Lake - 2016
Hillsdale Lake Russell Crites Beach July 4th 2016
These young boys know how to stay safe at the lake - Wear your Life Jacket!!
Lake Gaurd Game App
Lake Guard Mobile Game App Available On Apple App Store and Google Play App Store
Lake Guard is a highly competitive game designed to test the player’s speed, reflexes and boating safety knowledge. You are tasked with guarding a lake that has been overrun with unprepared boaters. Take control of your trusty Safety Cannon to launch the necessary safety gear to them. However, you have to keep an eye out for cans of Grog (beer). Launching a can of Grog to a visitor could prove dangerous so be sure to shoot the cans of Grog onto the dock to be recycled instead! Keep guard of your lake for as long as you can while increasingly hazardous conditions and visitors try to overrun your waters. Share your high score with friends, earn achievements and become the greatest Lake Guard in the world!
LoCash loves this life 'jacket'
Preston Brust (second from right) and Chris Lucas (Right) of the country music duo LoCash pose with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Park Rangers Jacob Albers (Left) and Brent Sewell at Old Hickory Lake in Hendersonville, Tenn, Oct. 19, 2015. The group filmed a water safety PSA that features LoCash’s hit song "I Love This Life," which is currently moving up the country music charts. It is being used to support the USACE National Water Safety Campaign “Life Jackets Worn, Nobody Mourns.”
Young Sailors
Young Sailors doing it right: everyone is wearing a personal flotation device. It's the law, and it's water-wise.
Life jackets save lives
When visiting a Corps lake always wear a life jacket and swim in designated swim areas.
Wilson Lake record low levels
Shallow water and boating hazards are expected at the west end of Wilson Lake. Drought conditions have created a record low of 8.5 feet below conservation pool. (Photo courtesy of Virgil Lawson)
Burn It Where You Buy It
Jeff Austin, Park Ranger with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Kansas City District at Tuttle Creek Lake places a 'Burn It Where You Buy It - Don't Move Firewood' sign at the entrance to Tuttle Creek Cove Campground in preparation for the upcoming Memorial Day weekend. Natural Resource Managers are asking visitors to leave firewood at home and obtain a supply at or near the area where they intend to burn it. Help us fight invasive species - BUY IT WHERE YOU BURN IT - DON'T MOVE FIREWOOD!
Monarch Butterfly
USACE lakes strive to support pollinators at lakes
Bobber the Water Safety Dog
Spring is here! It is time again to remember water safety.
Anglers at Stilling Basin
Anglers at Stilling Basin at Tuttle Creek Lake
Berry Bend Equestrian Trails
Riders enjoying Berry Bend Equestrian trails at Truman Lake
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