Three Forest Preserve District of Will County gift shops, including this one at Four Rivers Environmental Education Center in Channahon, are gearing up for Museum Store Sunday on December 1 and the holiday shopping season in general by stocking unique items. –Photo by Forest Preserve staff.

Online store features 20 percent off sale.

Forest Preserve District of Will County gift shops are stocked with unique gifts for the holiday shopping season and Museum Store Sunday on December 1. Museum Store Sunday is a national and global effort designed to highlight unique gifts that support the mission of participating entities.

Forest Preserve gift shops carry items from small businesses as much as possible, and they are looking to add even more local vendors, said Kylee Beckwith, guest services associate at Four Rivers Environmental Education Center.

“It saves on fossil fuels in shipping and is wonderful to be able to support local business owners,” she said. “I’ve also noticed guests tend to gravitate towards the products that are sourced and made locally, so it’s a win-win.

•Four Rivers in Channahon is focused on sustainable gifting this year. Beckwith said, “Previously we carried handmade mugs from Utica, handmade earrings from Sheboygan, Wisconsin, and local honey from Minooka, but this year we were able to add the crochet critters from Joliet and handwoven bracelets from Plainfield. The list is slowly growing, and we’re always looking to add more.”

Examples include: Handwoven, nature-inspired bracelets by Knotted to Perfection; natural dye kits made of recycled materials from the Nature Atelier; hand crocheted critters by The Monday Club, a small business from the area that includes Angela Rafac, a Forest Preserve interpretive naturalist, and her sister Teressa Briones.

•Isle a la Cache: At Isle a la Cache Museum in Romeoville, staff are gearing up to provide a fun and affordable way for families to purchase a souvenir and be able to remember their visit to the site, said Janet Zavoral, the museum’s facility office manager.

Items stocked at the museum include: Unique nature themed earrings by Jabebo made in the USA from recycled cereal boxes; small ceramic turtle trinkets and crocheted turtles and friends created in Ecuador, and the supplier gives back through The Turtleman Foundation, which supports conservation groups that help sea turtles; plus kaleidoscopes, harmonicas, wooden yo-yos, and carved wood animal pens.

“The goal at Isle a la Cache Museum is to provide a fun and affordable way for families to purchase a souvenir and be able to remember their visit here,” Zavoral said.

•Crete Township’s Plum Creek Nature Center gift shop has an expanded line of eco-friendly wrapping options, including three different sizes of recycled wrapping paper that can be recycled again after use and biodegradable Christmas tape.

“We also have stocking stuffers for the outdoorsy person in anyone’s life,” said Marissa Jones, facility office manager at Plum Creek. Items include reusable wheat straw utensils, recycled fire starters, and hand soap sheets

•Outsider Threads 20 percent off sale: If you can’t make it to one of the gift shops in time for the holidays, consider ordering some fun merchandise online at OutsiderThreads.com. The site features shirts with punny nature sayings, hats, a coffee mug, a water bottle, and magnets for the nature-loving people in your life. All merchandise will be 20 percent off starting Thanksgiving Day and running through December 8. Use holiday code HOLIDAY20 at checkout to get the discount.

Best of all, proceeds benefit The Nature Foundation of Will County, which supports the Forest Preserve’s conservation, restoration, and education activities.