Good Oak News
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Brush Clearing Before & After at Speckled Hen Inn
So below are a couple of "before and after" photos from our first day of work on the site. Most of the brush we removed were large buckthorns, but we also cleared a handful of honeysuckle, privet, mulberry and boxelder trees. Bob will be harvesting many of the hackberries (skinny tall trees in the photo) for firewood to further open the woodland canopy.
This is the area we cleared in the morning of our first day working there. There were four of us working on site that day. Click on either image to see them in full-size, and see switch between them to see the dramatic difference!
Here is the area we cleared the afternoon of our first day on site:
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Honeysuckle: Really Quite Terrible for Wildlife
People always want to know why these plants are so bad for our local ecosystems. First and foremost they simply displace native plants. Either buckthorn or honeysuckle can effectively take up all of the growing space on the ground layer in a woodland, leaving nothing but bare dirt on the ground below them. They're also bad for our birds, especially migrating birds. I usually explain that both honeysuckle and buckthorn produced berries, but these berries are not nutritious for our birds and other wildlife. Honeysuckle berries for example are the nutritional equivalent of cola. Berries from native plants are more like a glass of milk or orange juice, with protein, fat, vitamins and minerals and more complex carbohydrates.
But some new studies have found that honeysuckle harms wildlife in ways I could never imagine. A study titled Invasive shrub alters native forest amphibian communities recently published in Biological Conservation found that honeysuckle can change the "forest understory microclimate", reducing the habitat quality for native frogs and salamanders. Essentially, I think what is happening is the honeysuckle kills off all the other plants so there are no ground layer plants, and very little leaf litter or duff layer either, meaning the soil and air near the ground dry out faster, which is not good for animals who need to stay a little moist all the time. The abstract of this article concludes "invasive [organisms] may affect native organisms with which it shares no trophic connection, and suggests that changes in microclimate may be one mechanism by which alien plants affect communities where they invade.
It has been known for a while that the red berries of honeysuckle (which, now that fall has come are quite visible on these shrubs in our region) can change the color of bird's plumage. Specifically a study has been done exploring the effects of eating honeysuckle berries on cedar waxwings, with an unknown effect on the mating success of the affected birds.
Now, an new study has found that honeysuckles have created an "evolutionary trap" for cardinals. In essence, consuming honeysuckle berries artificially enhances the plumage of a cardinal, making it look brighter. A bright red cardinal is more likely to attract a mate that a duller one, usually because a brighter bird is stronger and healthier. In this case however, the opposite may be true, since these birds eat more "junk food" honeysuckle berries and have territory in poor quality habitat (infested with honeysuckle)... thus tricking birds into choosing a poor quality mate!
Add to that the fact that not one but two recent studies have found that birds nesting in honeysuckle and buckthorn have less success rearing young than birds nesting in native trees. Suddenly you can what broad ranging effects just a couple species of invasive plants can have on ground layer plants, amphibians and locally nesting and migratory birds.... Basically these plants are causing damage on all levels of the ecosystem and altering natural communities in many profound ways that.
So that is why we work so hard clearing invasive brush from our midwestern woodland and grasslands. Honeysuckle flowers may be pretty in the spring, but we shouldn't trade this fleeting beauty for the long term stability of our ecosystem.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Fall Inventory Reduction Sale: Just Got HUGE-ER!
We've got a lot of plants left over this year that ABSOLUTELY MUST GO in our HUGE fall INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE!!!
UPDATE: As of 9/29 we just got another 250 plants left over from a project. Lots of great new plants, prairie grasses and enough woodland species for a fine, fine planting!
We have a lot of plants that we'd like to see people put in the ground, since we don't have much room to overwinter plants, so we're selling them all off at... HUGE SAVINGS, ALL ITEMS ARE 50% OFF OR MORE!!!
Sorry, couldn't help myself. Seriously though, everything is on sale for half their normal retail price (or better). Below is a regularly updated list of what we have left in our inventory, please email me at frank at goodoakllc dot com, to call "dibs" on some plants.
*Price does not include sales tax. All plants are to be picked up at Good Oak World Headquarters at 205 Walter St, Madison. Delivery and installation are available for additional charges.
Common Name | Scientific Name | Size | Qty | Price |
Perennial Forbs | ||||
Jack-in-the-pulpit | Arisaeama triphyllum | quart | 11 | $3 |
Marsh Milkweed | Asclepias incarnata | 2.5" | 1 | $2 |
butterfly milkweed | Asclepias tuberosa | 2.5" | 1 | $2 |
Sky Blue Aster | Aster azureus | quart | 4 | $3 |
Downy Wood Mint | Blephilia ciliata | 2.5" | 34 | $2 |
Turtlehead | Chelone glabra | 2.5" | 4 | $2 |
False Sunflower | Heliopsis helianthoides | 2.5" | 26 | $2 |
Kalm's St. John's Wort | Hypericum kalmanium | quart | 19 | $2 |
rough blazing star | Liatris aspera | 2.5" | 17 | $2 |
interrupted fern | Osmunda claytoniana | quart | 27 | $3 |
Virginia Creeper | Parthenocissus quinquefolia | quart | 3 | $3 |
Fox Glove Beard Tongue | Penstemon digitalis | 2.5" | 13 | $2 |
Yellow Coneflower | Ratibida pinnata | 2.5" | 41 | $2 |
Old-field goldenrod | Solidago nemoralis | 2.5” | 14 | $3 |
Elm-leaved goldenrod | Solidago ulmifolia | 2.5" | 12 | $2 |
Grasses | ||||
side oats gramma | Bouteloua curtipendula | 2.5" | 23 | $2 |
kalm's brome | Bromus kalmii | 2.5" | 20 | $2 |
Springell's Sedge | Carex springellii | 2.5" | 1 | $2 |
bottle brush grass | Elymus hystrix | quart | 41 | $3 |
Virginia Wild Rye | Elymus virginicus | 2.5" | 42 | $2 |
Dudley's Rush? | Juncus dudleyi | quart | 1 | $3 |
Little Bluestem | Schizachyrium scoparius | 2.5" | 38 | $2 |
Little Bluestem | Schizachyrium scoparius | quart | 7 | $3 |
indian grass | Sorghastrum nutans | 2.5" | 10 | $2 |
prairie dropseed | Sporabolus heterolepis | 2.5" | 13 | $2 |
prairie dropseed | Sporabolus heterolepis | quart | 17 | $3 |
Trees & Shrubs | ||||
Arborvitae | Thuja occidentalis | 6 ft | 1 | $90 |
black oak | Quercus velutina | quart | 12 | $3 |
Pagoda Dogwood | Cornus alterniflolia | quart | 19 | $3 |
dwarf bush honeysuckle | Diervella lonicera | 2-gallon | 2 | $12 |
Friday, September 16, 2011
Prairie Tours at Heritage Farm Fest
I'll be leading prairie tours as part of this family fun event at 2pm and 3pm. FOr more information about the Heritage Farm Fest, check out:
http://www.schumacherfarmpark.org/Default.aspx?pageId=1081685
-- Frank
-- Posted from the trail
Prairie Tours at Heritage Farm Fest, Sunday Sept. 18th
I'll be leading prairie tours as part of this family fun event at 2pm and 3pm. FOr more information about the Heritage Farm Fest, check out:
http://www.schumacherfarmpark.org/Default.aspx?pageId=1081685
-- Frank