April 2013 – Still Removing Bittersweet from Trees

At the pond’s W end, we are still removing bittersweet, multiflora rose, and old pieces of dead vines from around trees.

photo of pond W

photo of resprouts
Multiflora and bittersweet resprouts, now easier to remove through the wood chips
photo of tree
Bittersweet, unchecked over the course of many years, created the spiral in the trunk of this quaking aspen tree.

Field Horsetail, April 2013

Here’s something new. Perhaps it wasn’t new, we just couldn’t see it before, because it was covered up by so many invasives. I found it growing in a damp area, where phragmites had been, where I had spread seed heads of cattails, and some had actually grown. This is beneath where the willow was, on the E side of the slope.

I think it’s Equisetum arvense. It’s native; some people consider it a weed. It’s supposedly hard to get rid of. Go Botany says it’s an “important component of the spring and early summer diet of black bears.” I guess I should be proud that our ecosystem appears capable of supporting a black bear…but I think I’ll pull most of this. Anything that comes up in a great number, I’m a bit suspicious of, but I’m hesitant to get rid of all of it, just in case it’s important for something.

photo of field horsetail

March 2013 – The 3rd Big Plant Order

  • 10 Black Willow
 (Salix nigra) – native tree
  • 10 Shamrock Inkberry Holly
 (Ilex glabra) – native shrub
  • 10 Green Mountain Boxwood (Buxus microphylla) – for the front
  • 
20 Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) – to try as groundcover
  • 10 Mountain Blue Bachelor Button
 (Centauria montana) – for the front
  • 10 Arizona Sun Blanket Flower
 (Gaillardia) – native for hot slope
  • 10 Hens & Chicks
 (sempervivum spp.) – for around rocks
  • 10 Dragon’s Blood Stonecrop (Sedum spurium) – for near septic area