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Sierra Club |
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September, 2002 |
| Date | Title / Location | Rating | Leader /
Contact |
Bring | $$ |
September 12, 9:00 - 12:00 a.m. |
Sun
Lake Stewardship Lake Villa |
(2,2,3) | John Massman
847-838-9440 beritz@earthlink.net |
Water, eye protection. Dress ruggedly. Additional loppers, saws, and other pruning tools useful. | Free! |
| Enjoy this pristine Forest Preserve while liberating it from the invasion of exotic species. | N on Deep Lake Rd from Rt. 132,
west on Painted Lakes/Gelden Rd. for 200 ft, left on Spring Farm Rd. right on Longwood Dr. park in cul-de-sac. Limited parking: Carpool. |
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BeforeFacing SW, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. We continued clearing around the base of these two big trees. An oak
and a shag bark hickory look like one tree from this angle.
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After
The hole we cleared appears as a dark central area, still shaded by the remainig buckthorn. |
BeforeFacing S, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. Part of the group began working S toward Sun Lake where rare plants
are growing.
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AfterFacing S, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. We cleared buckthorn near the lone tree in th ecenter of the photo and
hauled it to the edge of the farm field to the W.
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BeforeFacing SSE, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. A pair of students joined us from Stevenson High School.
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AfterFacing SSE, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. We continued boring into the dense buckthorn to expand the area for
the rare plants.
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BeforeFacing S, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. We left native Hawthorn in the foreground, and worked S.
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AfterFacing S, on the S edge of farm fields NE of Sun Lake. Large clearings appear as small gaps in the dense canopy from this angle.
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Facing W, on the N side of Oak Grove Hill in the center of the FP. Wildflowers grow in this unfarmed area betwen the Grove and the drainage
ditch.
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Facing W, on the N side of Oak Grove Hill in the center of the FP. We'd like to see more of this FP covered with this type of growth.
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Facing S, on the N side of Oak Grove Hill in the center of the FP. A profusion of Goldenrod, Woodland Sunflower, and New England Aster.
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Facing S, on the N side of Oak Grove Hill in the center of the FP. Wouldn't it be great to have these all over the area! |
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Facing S, on Oak Grove Hill in the center of the FP. This area has been twice dug up with heavy equipment to build motocross
jumps. The holes damage the roots of the magnificent trees. Here, the FPD
has once again had to spend scarce resources to refill the holes to try
to rescue the trees.
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Incompatible uses. Two of these kids were caught with vandalized equipment belonging to one of the stewardship volunteers. They said that the one of the handful of kids on motorcycles was the vandal. They were told that their motorized vehicles are not allowed in the FP. Use of motorized vehicles tends to disrupt the sensitive wildlife at
the FPD.
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Facing W, at the NW edge of Sun Lake, just E of Sequoit Creek. Wow! This area was just cleared last winter, and already is bursting with wilflowers. Compare these pictures with the Bonfire pictures. |
Facing W, at the NW edge of Sun Lake, just E of Sequoit Creek. Goldenrod, Woodland Sunflower, Thistle and other native species have
already blanketed the area. The soils that appeared bare under the buckthorn
were far from barren, and only waiting for our help to let light back in.
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At the NW edge of Sun Lake, just E of Sequoit Creek. Even the bonfire site, subjected to extreme
surface temperature had some growth - a testament to the stamina of the
seed bank, and the insulative quality of Houghton Muck.
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Facing E, on the E edge of farm fields N of Sun Lake. This area was plowed and disked this year, but many quick recovering
species emerged again by the end of the summer.
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Facing E, on the E edge of farm fields N of Sun Lake. Mystery grass casts a purple hue over the meadow.
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