To a novice hiker, Babcock Ridge in North Stonington may
seem daunting: steep hills, rocky ridges, walls and wetlands. To
others, including wildlife and birds, it is a beautiful corridor of
habitat, woodlands, hiding places, nesting sites and food sources.
Those rocky ledges are denning sites for many types of creatures,
from foxes, coyotes, and bats to possibly bears and likely some great
snakes! Areas around rock ridges provide microhabitats for special
birds like Worm-eating Warblers. Large unbroken areas of forest
canopy are home to Scarlet Tanagers, Orioles, Thrushes, Warblers and
Vireos. The mature large trunked trees and old snags can support
woodpeckers, including the Pileated Woodpecker, our largest, and
other cavity nesting birds.
What might call this ledge home? |
Perhaps the work of a pileated woodpecker? |
The wetlands include vernal pools,
springs and seeps, all of which are fragile and imperiled habitats.
In addition to unique plant-life to be found here, the wetlands
support all number of amphibians, including Spotted Salamanders and
Wood Frogs which lay eggs in the vernal pools. The adjoining forest
habitat gives them perfect areas for dispersal.
Spotted salamander egg masses. |
Upland woods are home to Great
Horned Owls and Red Tailed Hawks, while the lowland areas have
nesting Red Shouldered Hawks and Barred Owls. They prey on the
abundance of small mammals present here, including squirrels,
chipmunks, mice and other rodents.
A walk in the spring and summer will
find the area lush with the green of a dense overhead canopy. Mosses
and lichens cover the rocky ledges and cliff-sides. Look for special
plants, ferns and others that make their homes in the cracks and
crevices and seeps off the hillsides. As fall turns towards winter,
the “bones” of the property are revealed: stone walls, abandoned
foundations and more stark rocks and ledges. It makes for great
exploring.
Avalonia Land Conservancy already
owns one quarter of the 74 acre woodland, by virtue of a bequest from
the late Ruth Goldsmith. It seeks to purchase the remaining portion
to complete a large, 220 acre, unbroken greenway of protected
Avalonia land. To the north is the recently acquired Erisman
Woodlands on Reutemann Rd. To the south, across Babcock road, is the
lovely Henne Memorial Tract of Avalonia’s Shunock River Preserve.
The whole area is part of the protected watershed of the Pawcatuck
River and hosts multiple varied habitats and unique wildlife,
including native Trout in the Shunock river. If you were to look on
a map of the area, the state-owned Assekonk Swamp, Pachaug Forest and
the town-owned Hewitt Farm Preserve are all connected….as a crow
might fly!
Donations from individuals and
organizations, and funding from grants and State Programs are being
sought. If you would like to walk on the Babcock Ridge trails to see
how special it is, please join Avalonia for one one of the scheduled
guided hikes listed in this post. Come take a look.
Please support the fundraising
effort. You will help preserve something your grandchildren will be
able to appreciate!
Written and photographed by members
of Avalonia Land Conservancy.
No comments:
New comments are not allowed.