New England Winter Scenes

So we survived the Blizzard of 2013.  UMass closed at noon on Friday, which I think was a good call, and the Governor banned non-essential travel starting at 4 pm.  After the storm’s fury abated yesterday, I ventured outside to dig out my car.  This afternoon, I went on my usual walk which took me past Brookfield Orchards.  Here are some photos of the apple trees blanketed with snow:

Winter Storm Nemo was one for the record books.   Here in Central Mass, the town of West Boylston received 34.5 inches of now, and Worcester received 28.5 inches, making it the third most snowfall recorded.  I didn’t even know we had one, but UMass has a Climate System Research Center, whose manager Michael Rawlins said, “Last week’s Nor’easter will go down in the record books as a once-in-a-lifetime event for residents across much of central New England, with record snowfall at locations from southern Connecticut to eastern Maine.”

I’m sure the snowstorm was good news for the snow-sports industries in New England.  Most ski areas make their own snow, but still, there has to be something to start with.  Last weekend, I drove to Middlebury, Vermont to visit my niece, and at noon on Saturday, we were standing near the Lodge at the Snow Bowl, waiting for the February 2013 graduates to ski down the hill.

The February Ski Procession is a long-standing tradition at Middlebury.  It’s quite the show, don’t you think?  We saw people walking down the hill, so you don’t have to be a skier to enjoy the event.

It was quite cold that day, so after the ceremony, we warmed ourselves by the fire in the Lodge, then drove back to the town.  The next day, we visited the Greenhouse in Bicentennial Hall.

Supposedly, the roof moves at certain times of the day, but we didn’t experience that.   It was enough to be surrounded by greenery and enveloped in warmth.

Nature and History in Oakham

Through the East Quabbin Land Trust newsletter, I learned that a nature hike sponsored by the Oakham 250th Anniversary Committee and led by Oakham residents Caren Caljouw and Ron Wolanin was scheduled for this afternoon.  So at 1 pm, I parked at the intersection of Spencer and Flint Roads in Oakham, and joined a group of over 30 people who also wanted to tramp through the woods on a fine late summer day.  Caren and Ron were superb leaders, and I feel like I learned a lot during the three-hour walk.  I’ve tried to organize and transcribe my notes accurately into the brief summary below:

Health Warnings

  • Eastern Equine Encephalitis and West Nile Virus are transmitted by mosquito bites
  • West Nile Virus has been verified in this area in crows and robins, species which congregate in large flocks
  • Humans should take appropriate precautions by using insect repellent

The Season

  • Birds and other species like dragonflies are migrating south
  • Now is the peak time to see migrating broadwing hawks; 20,000 per day have been recorded
  • Monarch butterflies are heading toward Mexico

The Forest and the Area

  • This is a transitional hardwood forest, dominated by species like Yellow Birch and Beech
  • Also common are Red Maple and Red and Black Oak; White Oak is also present
  • American Chestnut was the dominant species until a fungus wiped it out
  • This tract of State-owned (DCR) land comprises about 670 acres; it is part of a total protected area of around 3000 acres, some of which is in private hands
  • Blazed with yellow triangles, the Mid-State Trail extends 95 miles from Mount Watatic near the New Hampshire border to the Connecticut-Rhode Island border; the mid-point is in Oakham
  • Other trails in this area include snowmobile trails and trails used by the Boy Scouts

Colonial Settlement

  • Land on both sides of the trail we walked belonged at one point to Levi Lincoln
  • Levi Lincoln Sr owned four houses in Oakham and 100 acres but did not live here; he practiced law in Worcester, served as US Attorney General and acting Secretary of State under President Thomas Jefferson, was elected Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor and later became Acting Governor
  • The Lincoln family of Worcester, distantly related to Abraham Lincoln’s branch, were prominent in local and national politics in the 18th and 19th centuries
  • Levi Lincoln Sr defended Bathsheba Spooner and her co-conspirators, but he lost the case and the four were hanged in Worcester
  • He also defended the rights of the slave Quock Walker; he won this case, which led to the ruling that slavery in Massachusetts was unconstitutional
  • The land which we walked through was farmed for many years, as evidenced by stone foundations of houses and barns

Harper Homestead Foundation

Flint Barn Foundation

  • Prominent Oakham citizens included William Harper and John Flint
  • Native Americans used this area as a summer camping ground
  • Relations between the colonists and Native Americans remained amicable, as one story relates that a settler helped a wounded Native American survive through the winter until his companions returned for him the following year
  • Oakham used to be part of Rutland; the early settlers owned square lots of 250 acres

Botany

  • Witch Hazel can be distilled into a lotion; the name has nothing to do with witches but rather is derived from the same word which gave us wicker, the Old English wice, meaning “pliant” or “bendable”
  • Filbert nuts (Corylus americana) are highly prized by squirrels
  • Yellow-Bellied Sapsuckers are so-called because they drill into trees like this one to eat sap

Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker drill pattern

  • Massachusetts has around 13 species of oak trees
  • Red Oak and Black Oak are closely related; their wood was used for barrel staves for containers for storing dry products; the leaves have pointed lobes; the acorns sprout in the spring; acorns mature on a two year cycle
  • White Oak wood was used for barrel staves for containers for storing wet products such as rum and water; the leaves have rounded lobes; the acorns sprout in the fall; acorns mature on a one year cycle
  • The acorns of the Red, Black, and White Oak are different enough to be identifiable
  • Mast years for oak acorns are NOT triggered by weather events
  • Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora), a plant with no chlorophyll, has a symbiotic relationship with both the fungus and the trees living nearby, with the mushroom providing trace elements and the trees sugars
  • Lichens were used to make dyes; they are inedible because our bodies can’t digest them
  • Yellow Birch (Betula alleghaniensis) trees are found in old growth forests on Mount Wachusett; the tree produces an organic ester called methyl salicylate which causes it to smell like wintergreen
  • Indian Cucumber is edible; it exhibits foliar flagging; the fuzz on the stems discourages ants
  • Trailing Arbutus (Epigaea repens), or Mayflower, is the Massachusetts state flower
  • Solomon’s Seal is a member of the lily family; it has blue berries in the fall
  • Sheep Laurel (Kalmia angustifolia), a rhododendron, has lovely spring flowers but is toxic to grazing animals
  • Baneberry (Actaea rubra), as its name implies, is not good to eat and is in fact quite poisonous
  • Jack-in-the-Pulpit is either male or female, but individuals often change gender
  • False Solomon’s Seal has a plume of flowers on top and red berries; it is used to make tea
  • Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) is a pioneer species; the bark is easily identified because it looks like burnt potato chips

Black Cherry bark

  • Eastern White Pine has needles in groups of five; it grows tall and straight; a double pine is caused by insect damage
  • Lycopodium clavatum, or Princess Pine, is in the same plant family that produced all the coal in North America; the spores were used as flash powder in early photography
  • Partridge Berry is also known as Squaw Berry, as it was used by Native American women to help with childbirth; the flowers are doubles, so the fruits show double navels

Partridge Berry

  • Lady’s Slipper is pollinated by bees, but only about 10% of plants actually seed; seeds are dispersed by the wind, but they need a soil fungus (Rhizoctonia) to supply nutrients; they grow in acidic soil
  • Invasives, such as Japanese Barberry and Oriental Bittersweet, are often found in disturbed areas, which is to say areas that had human habitation

Geology

  • The Indian Cave formation is so-called because it is believed to be where the wounded Native American spent the winter; it is clearly of glacial origin

Indian Cave

Indian Cave

  • Sampson’s (or Samson’s) Pebble is a glacial erratic, which means that the rock composition doesn’t match its substrate; it is one of many in the area

Glacial Erratic

  • Retreating glaciers around 17,000 years ago deposited these boulders
  • Glacial lakes in this area are often oriented north-south