In early August the
active cutting portion of the New England Cottontail Project was
completed on Avalonia’s Peck and Callahan Properties in Stonington.
Even as we were finishing, phase two was already in progress:
regeneration. Shortly after a tree is cut, it responds by immediately
sending energy into re-sprouting. It sends up multiple stems from the
cut stump and begins leafing out. This is precisely the type of
regeneration that will ultimately create the new, “young forest”
that will attract and sustain the New England Cottontail and numerous
other species. With sunlight now reaching the ground, seedlings that
have been stunted and struggling can now begin energetic growth.
Seeds that lay dormant in the soil for years will get the moisture
and sun warmth they need to germinate. There was very little
diversity in the understory of the Peck woodlands. Deep shade and
deer browsing left little near the ground. Exposing the former
forest floor to light has already begun to increase the variety and
number of species present. We have noticed seedlings of sun loving
plants such as Sumac and Greenbrier already visible, starting growth
even this late in the season.
Arrow
wood Viburnum planted for wildlife
|
Winged
Sumac will make dense clumps and feed bluebirds
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Volunteers in action |
For every one tree that
was cut, dozens of new stems have begun to colonize the area directly
around the stump. Oaks and Maples do this. In some cases, such as
with Beech trees, sprouts rise from the roots that have spread far
from the main trunk. Where Beech trees have been cut, entire new
dense thickets of only Beech saplings will grow. The density of the
thicket is indeed desirable for cover and protection. But diversity
is necessary to support the species we are trying to encourage.
Maple:
rapid re-sprouting from cut base
|
Clearing slash |
As
part of the Funding agreement we had with National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation, we needed to replant the area with species that will
provide diversity, grow in a way that creates cover and also provide
food for many species. On Sept 21 a small but dedicated group of
volunteers took on the first phase of the challenge. The entire
project covers 28 acres of hilly and rocky terrain. The ground is
strewn with “slash”, branches and woody debris left on site to
provide cover and nutrients for the soil over time. Not easy
walking!! We were joined by our DEEP Forester with his chainsaw,
and a USFWS biologist with plants and supplies. We lugged in a large
garden cart with shovels, rakes, bags of grass seed, plants, netting,
flagging tape and miscellaneous small items as well as water in large
jugs. We had to clear the skid trail as we went along, moving
branches and large debris and ultimately made it a half mile in to
the far east of the property where a steep slope needed attention.
There we raked the earth to plant a special conservation seed mix of
grasses to germinate rapidly and stabilize the soil on the slope. We
dug holes…no easy task in the rocky earth, and planted dozens of
small seedlings, plants known to be beneficial for the wildlife we
hope to attract. However, all these new seedlings and sprouts are
like candy for the deer. Each plant needed to be staked and netted
and surrounded by slash to deter the deer from nibbling.
Winterberry
Holly, a favorite shrub planted for thickets and food source
|
Impossible
to walk through, for deer and people!
|
Dense
thicket formed by Beech sprouts.
|
Nearly 5 hours later we
walked out. Our load was lighter but muscles were sore! It rained
the next night. Now we hope the grass will sprout, the plants will
root and flourish and the deer will not discover them! Thank you to
all who made the large effort!
Written
and photographed by Beth Sullivan.
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