the family dog, into an educational tour highlighting many of the native plant and animal <br />species which reside in and around the golf course. Postings with pictures and <br />descriptions of native plants and animals could be put by the ponds and streams so as to <br />educate the community about the importance of biodiversity and the relationship between <br />the human and natural world. <br />Part III: Implementation Strategy <br />Breakdown by Sections: <br />See the aerial photo of Laurelwood attached in the appendix. <br />• Section 1: <br />Flows 114 yards from east edge of hole #9, in front of the #9 tees, in front of the <br />#I tees to a catchment pool 2 yards in diameter just east of the driving range where the <br />water will be diverted back underground. <br />• Section 2: <br />Flows 340 yards in a low lying area in from the south edge of the #4 fairway, in <br />front of the #4 green, in front of the #2 tees, in front of the #1 green and between #1 and <br />#8 fairways to a larger 5 yard diameter catchment pool that can act as not only a hazard <br />for the golf course but also a pond for migratory birds and other aquatic species to use as <br />habitat or just to pass through. <br />• Section 3: <br />The restoration will involve two streams on hole #6 both flowing to the same 5 <br />yard diameter catchment pond located in between the #6 and #5 fairways. The streams <br />both flow out of the southeast side of the sixth hole, the first is a section 90 yards long <br />which flows in front of the #6 tees. The second flows 112 yards in front of the #6 green. <br />