As in past years, we grassroots at CIEDM are taking part in the celebrations of a couple of national & global campaigns for night environment conservation in observance around the last week of April. For the purpose of resource conservation, we are holding a single local event at Arcadia Ecohome to support these awareness campaigns with following actions: 1. We’ve completed DarkSky’s Home Outdoor Lighting Assessment, taken the DarkSky Pledge to protect the night by following the Five Principles of Responsible Outdoor Lighting, checked and adjusted the Ecohome’s outdoor lighting, and signed up to join the DarkSky Advocate Network through this Earth Month. 2. We’ve engaged a cleanup of the Arcadia Ecohome’s yards and surrounding public streets including pruning overgrown vegetations over walk paths and public sidewalks by the Ecohome during April 25-27 for site preparation of a safe night walk. This action is also supporting the Keep America Beautiful’ (KAB) Month in April by signing up as an activity of the KAB’s Greatest American Cleanup. 3. In the evening of Sunday April 27, today, we citizen scientists, moth-ers & stargazers are holding a small-group quiet night walk in the woods at & around the Ecohome, a Certified Pollinator Habitat and a listed citizen science lab, to record what we observe and share what we do on social media to raise public awareness of IDSW along SciStarter’s Citizen Science Month in April and it three projects: “International Moth Night” observed with National Moth Week on Monday April 28, “Globe at Night” with DarkSky International, and “Sound Around Town”. With Ecohome’s yards being a homestead pocket forest designed as “Quiet Refugee” for experiencing and appreciating the quietness in the woods, the quiet night walk is also an activity for us to take part in the International Quiet Awareness Day (INAD) 2025 to be observed on April 30. In short, with controlled outdoor lighting, we’ll enjoy the walk with star and moth-watching, the quietness to hear our own heart sing and the natural sounds from winds and night insects, and smell the scents of night-blooming flowers of 4 plant species purposely planted to form a nightly habitat for moth & other night species. 4. As our popular & participatory science based education efforts, we've posted several SME comments on news articles published on Facebook so as to share & spread the messages of those above listed awareness campaigns and what we've done and to raise public awareness of what everyone can do for protecting night environment. In addition, we've shared our observational photos on iNaturalist, and the White-lined Sphinx moth identified at the Ecohome, as shown in picture, by community taxon is recognized as a data of researchable grade.