By Beth Sullivan
Stewardship for our Avalonia
properties can take many forms. If you go to the website and look at
the stewardship activity form, there is a long list of activities in
a check list, including trail maintenance, invasive control, brush
clearing, stone wall clearance and building, bridge making, erecting
signs ... the list goes on. Sadly, the most discouraging task
deals with litter: road side trash is becoming my pet peeve. What
on earth are people thinking that they just choose to toss any manner
of materials, papers, plastic, glass metal, out the window. I guess
they are NOT thinking, and that is the problem.
North Main Street, gateway to Stonington, CT |
The Gateway to Stonington
Avalonia owns several properties
along North Main Street. The road is dubbed “The Gateway to
Stonington” as most traffic coming off the highway and coming into
town travels this lovely road. Historic photos depict beautiful
stone walls lining the roadway with ancient Maples arching gracefully
overhead. This time of year it becomes a leaf peeper's photo-op.
A couple of weeks ago my husband and I embarked on a mission. We
decided to tackle clearing the walls along the Fennerswood Preserve,
beginning at Pequot Trail, and running nearly ¾ of a mile along both
sides. Shrubs and brush had grown up on both sides of the wall and
vines covered the rocks and ground.
One area we have worked on. |
As we began our clearing a few
things became painfully obvious: there was a massive amount of litter
all along the road, hidden within and under the greenery, most of
which was poison ivy. And, the walls underneath were disappearing!
Over time rocks have gone missing; the stature and integrity of the
historic boundaries had been compromised. So our task took on another
dimension.
Only two of the five bags we collected along a short stretch of road. |
In many places stones have gone missing. |
No good deed deserves police questioning!
In one day I gathered three full black
garbage bags of litter. It was an education in waste…and cigarette
brands, and beer labels, and fast food varieties. I should have
made a list but it was pretty disgusting and some was dangerous.
At the end of the day we left the bags by the road side in a
pre-arranged agreement with the Town that they would come and pick
up. We gathered another two bags a couple of days later. When we
got home from several hours of work, I noticed a police car cruising
our street. Thinking a neighbor was in trouble, we went out and
offered to assist. They were looking for ME! My car had been
spotted along North Main Street and some good Samaritan had reported
me for leaving garbage along the road!! How ironic. The Police
officer had to laugh and voluntarily was going to report back to the
concerned citizen, an older gentleman who was aghast that we should
be so bold and rude! So the story had an interesting twist. I
appreciated the concern.
Peek over the wall to get a glimpse of a lovely meadow. |
Then there was
the issue of the walls themselves. While working we also uncovered
many stones that had tumbled off the walls to the base and were
covered by vines. We began to think about replacing and restoring
those rocks to rebuild those walls to a little of their former glory.
Sadly, many have disappeared. Good field stones are valuable. It is
not a job we can tackle ourselves. We are hiring someone with skill
and machines and a stronger back to come help us do the work in
phases. Sometimes stewardship efforts need professionals, or skills
that we as volunteers do not have. It doesn’t come cheap either.
The walls are at their best in Autumn. |
A campaign we can all support
We will embark on a campaign to
raise funds for many stewardship efforts. One of the first to be
addressed will be the restoration of the walls along North Main
Street. Please stop and take a look. Notice changes. Let someone
in Avalonia know that you approve and support our efforts to preserve
and protect not only the green, open spaces, but the historic walls
that surround them.
Wildlife, large and small, make use of the fields behind the stone walls. Photo by Rick Newton. |
Photographs by Beth Sullivan unless otherwise indicated.
Bravo on taking charge and restoring the natural beauty. Tis sad that too many people think the entire earth is a garbage dump. As to your efforts ... there's a phrase I once heard that is so appropriate to your situation: "If not now, when? If not me, who?" Hopefully you will have sparked others to help re-beautify areas where they live as well.
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