Archive for History

#119 Fernbrook Natural Area hosts winter landscapes and much more

Massive hunk of sooty mold

January 15, 2009

Fernbrook Natural Area in northern Albemarle County near Stony Brook is host of images of death, decay, and resurrection in the flora and fauna of the Piedmont woods.

 
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The January cold spell has arrived – always a harsh reminder, especially here in Virginia – of the intractability of winter.  Being from New England, it feels welcome, like a patch of remnant habitat – familiar and necessary for my survival.   The bite of cold when I first leave the house for my walk, the peeling back of layers as heat of my body meets morning chill. The knowledge of light that has come with experiencing over half a decade of Januarys, as the skies are brighter, the days are longer, but still, somehow, muted by the cold.  My need to be outside is greater at this time of year than others –against the inertia that a warm house foster, an urgency tugs at me as the voices of the winter landscape are calling.

I went to feed this winter hunger last weekend at Fernbook Natural Area, the  63-acre preserve owned by The Nature Conservancy in northern Albemarle County near Stony Point.  This time of year, it is a palette of earth tones, rich with every shade of brown, red, yellow, orange, and black.  Green pokes up here and there: running cedar emerging from the layer of leaves, the rhododendron on the northern slopes; and the ever-reliable, Christmas fern, though sagging from the weight of wingter, it is still standing, ready to be counted. The trail slopes down through a tall stand of red oak, hickory and yellow poplar towards a small stream that drains the ridge.  Only the beech trees and few oaks still hold their leaves, browned now, quaking in the slight wind.  The late afternoon light is mediated by clouds, occasional patches of blue lingering before a darkening sky.

This winter in particular, I am attuned to disintegration and death, and a forest like the one at Fernbrook is as good a place as any to find it.  Decay is everywhere:  dense downed logs along the trail are scuffed by travelers’ boots into light tufts.  The bark of Virginia pine still standing, is pocked by holes that spiral round the trunk marking the drill of the downy woodpecker.  A cavity higher up could be home to a pileated.  These are some of the larger agents of change in the forest, foraging for a meal beneath the bark of host trees giving way slowly to insects.

Still on the branches of beech trees, are black clumps of sooty mold.  A hunk the size of my fist has dropped to the ground at the base of a beech, and I pick it up – light as a sponge, this is final stage for the mold that is unique to the beech tree.  Scorias spongiosa, as a species of sooty mold that grows below colonies of beech woolly aphids, whose honeydew – or excrement – provides nourishment through its life stages.  In January, these aphids are long gone, but when I pry the mold apart, I find shiny black ants feasting on the spores.

Cleared in colonial days for timber, Fernbrook was abandoned sometime after the Civil War.  But here and there, the pencil-sharp snags of Virginia cedar point skyward, and from time to time, the slope is anchored by a mound of rocks that marked perhaps the corner of an old field.  The small stream has the characteristic steep banks of our Piedmont streams that have been cut vertically during the years of high erosion when no protective measures stemmed the flow of topsoil from newly logged acres.

Just as surely as I am looking at death and decay, I am also witness to rebirth, in everything from the defiant fist-like buds of the dogwoods in understudy, to the delicate, cigar-shaped twist of the beech bud.  Each soggy, rotten log hosts its own ecosystem of fungi, bacteria, and insects, thriving in dark spaces, drunk on the nutrients they release back to the cycle of life.

Through the bare trees I can see upward to the sky, another gift of winter and my spirit, likewise, has been lifted by this time in the woods.

Contents Copyright 2009 Leslie Middleton

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#105 Walking to Hightop Mountain from Smith Roach Gap

October 2, 2008

The trail in Shenandoah National Park (SNP) in this stretch of Greene County shows signs of previous land use.
 
 
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  This show originally aired on October18, 2007 and with an encore performance on October 2, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net.

It is a golden warm October day – one in which I would be inclined to take to the river, but cannot due to water levels that are impossibly low.  So instead, I head out with my husband for a high point in the watershed as if, perhaps to get closer to the clouds that hold the moisture hostage high above us.

We drive up to Greene County and follow Route 33 – the Spotswood Highway – west following the crest of the divide between the Rapidan and the Rivanna. 

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#101 Mud!

September 4, 2008

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#86 Legacy Sediment

May 1, 2008

This show originally aired on March 7, 2007 and then again on May 1, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net.

 
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It’s the time of the year when rivers run high and brown here in Albemarle County. Some well-placed rain events, brought water levels to seasonal highs. Sediment from surrounding floodplains and other sources colored the water various shades of brown, from slick and bubbling chocolate during the first flush, to a steely brown that mirrored the gray March skies. I find myself wondering, again, where does all that dirt come from?

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#81 See that Yellow Color in the Hills?

March 27, 2008
About the time that forsythia brazenly declares the sure coming of spring, the diminutive but no less reliable yellow flowers of the native spicebush light up the hills.

 
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This show originally aired on March 27, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net.

About the same time that forsythia brazenly claims the color award in yards all over the watershed, there’s a quieter, but no less remarkable, yellow emerging in the hills and woodlands, especially in the damper, cooler swales. You could almost miss it if you were expecting something more dramatic, but it’s worth stopping and taking a closer look at the shy but ubiquitous spicebush, also known as Benjamin Bush.

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