Tornadoes after the Hurricane

Last Saturday afternoon shortly before 1 pm, as I settled into my seat at Fitton Field at Holy Cross, I watched the groundskeepers roll a tarp over the infield.  Not a good sign, I thought to myself, and sure enough, after I sat in the drizzle for an hour, the game between Worcester and Quebec was called, without one pitch being thrown.

We were told we could exchange our tickets for any of the remaining home games, so at 7 pm this evening, I again took my seat in the grandstand to watch the last home game of the regular season between the Worcester Tornadoes and Rockland Boulders.  Folks, our team plays in the Canadian-American League; we’re not a farm club for Major League Baseball.  But this is still professional baseball, and we watched a pretty good game.  The Tornadoes treated their fans to an exciting finish, winning 4-3 in the eighth.

I'm looking across the infield at traffic on 290

Fans are wearing their orange Tornadoes caps

Team captains and umpires confer at home plate

The home team is at bat

The visitors are at bat

So what about that Hurricane Irene?  Most of my town did not lose power, but we were drenched with rain, and strong winds did take down trees.  Here’s a tree down on my street:

I'm driving toward Ward Street

I'm looking behind me at the tree

More worrisome was the damage to the Town Hall bell tower.  Pieces of trim fell off, and the intersection was cordoned off.  For public safety reasons, the Town Selectmen decided to remove the tower from the top of the building and transport it for storage.

The bell tower was removed from the Town House

Fisher Museum at Harvard Forest

Inspired by our Book Club selection for this month, I decided to visit the Fisher Museum in Petersham this afternoon.  The Museum and Forest are barely a half-hour’s drive away, but I had never been, so the threat of showers notwithstanding, it seemed as good a time as any.  Everyone wants to see the 23 dioramas, and they really are worth the visit.  I was fascinated by the models which portray the changes in the landscape of central New England.  The dioramas were designed and built in the 1920s and 1930s, but what they teach us about human impacts on the environment is a timeless lesson and perhaps even more relevant today.  These are the seven scenes depicted:

  • Pre-European settlement is characterized by mature forests – 1700
  • Settlers cut down trees to create small homesteads – 1740
  • Forests have been cleared for intensive agriculture  – 1830
  • Farms are abandoned as settlers move west – 1850
  • White pine forests now dominate old farmland  – 1910
  • Hardwoods succeed white pines – 1915
  • Hardwood forests are now mature – 1930

These 3000 acres of forest, owned by Harvard University (yes, yes, that Harvard) since 1907, are open to the public, and apparently there are miles of trails which can be hiked.  I limited myself to the two trails which begin at the Museum, the Natural History Trail Through John Sanderson’s Farm, and the Black Gum Trail.

The Sanderson Farm Trail is a self-guided interpretive trail, and they’ve done a really good job.  I had no trouble following the map, and each of the 27 points of interest are so well-marked that I didn’t miss a single one.  You can even take a virtual tour online.  I learned about such matters as evidence for past land use, tree growth, stumps and sprouts, clear-cutting, measuring wood, the meaning of double stone walls, snags, the best trees for lumber, and tree roots.

My map showed the Black Gum Trail as a longer trail heading uphill toward Little Prospect Hill and then passing through a swampy area before doubling back to the Museum entrance.  By this time it was raining, but I had my umbrella with me, and in a little over an hour, I had completed the loop.   The Hemlock Forest and the Boardwalk were my favorite parts of this trail.  Here are some of the photos I took:

11- White pines love open areas

15 - Forest follows agriculture

16 - Stumps and sprouts

22 - Measuring wood

27 - Tree roots

Instruments measure the physiology of hemlock trees

The boardwalk extends for hundreds of feet