Tuesday, May 20, 2014

On the Trail of Two Wetlands: Event #4

On May 10, I toured the Galbraith Farm with farmer Dan Galbraith and four others, a year after he donated an agricultural conservation easement for the 210-acre farm to the Owl Creek Conservancy to keep the land in farming forever.

Howard Gratz, and Owl Creek Conservancy trustee and avid birdwatcher, led the tour, accompanied by Richard Stallard, a geneticist and Conservancy trustee.  Galbraith enjoyed the tour as much as the rest of us, seeing the diverse plants and abundant wildlife, including birds and toads.

The tour focused on two wetlands on the farm.  Stallard said that the main reason the farm was chosen for the easement was the need for these wetlands to filter out soil and possible attached pollutants before reaching nearby Knox Lake.  Two creeks run through these wetlands and drain into the lake.  Gratz added that Ohio had already lost 90 percent of its wetlands, having drained them for farming and other development.  Besides filtering out pollutants, wetlands reduce flooding potential and provide habitat for wildlife and plant diversity.

Gratz identified many plants for us as well as many birds by sound, including three types of warblers and a rose-breasted grosbeak, which he said are particularly plentiful this year.   Many of the plants were indicators of wetlands, such as marsh marigold and skunk cabbage.  We also saw jewelweed, nettles, common milkweed, horsetails, willow, elderberries, angelica, spring beauty, yellow violets, white violets, wild blue phlox, ferns, ramps, Dutchman’s breeches, wild geranium, false Solomon’s seal, and meadow rue.

A wooded area connecting the two wetlands had an airy feeling and consisted of numerous trees, including black cherry, sycamore, ash, and oak.

The tour of the Galbraith Farm was the fourth event in the “13th Annual Explore Knox Nature” series, which began with the Earth Day festival at Kenyon College on April 6.   There will be one or two events every month through December.  The next event will be at 2 p.m. on May 25, at the Mission Oak Gardens in Zanesville, where I’m told we’ll meet another amazing man, who did his own urban renewal project by turning his neighborhood from littered lots to wondrous public gardens.

For more information on the “Explore Knox Nature” series and the Conservancy, go to:  www.owlcreekconservancy.org.

One of three American toads that delighted us on tour.  (Photo by Don Comis)

This toad charmed us.  (Photo by Don Comis)

We were treated to a great display of marsh marigolds in a wetland on the Galbraith Farm.  (Photo by Don Comis)





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