Friday I went to the Parker Preserve with Marianne, Gloria and our two dogs, Bella and Buffy. We entered at the North Gate on 532 across from Chatsworth Lake. We parked outside the gate and walked in, there are go arounds. We then crossed the RR tracks with the only Locomotive sign I know of in the area.
We walked the West End Road.
Here are direct links to the map and directions for printing.
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5181/5680480879_25b9ee156f_b.jpg
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5187/5680434023_1f5cb3ec1f_b.jpg
We then came upon an observation tower which is a platform built on top of a pump house, and well built at that. All around are drained bogs.
A bench with not much of a view.
A duck house without water.
Giant chairs.
Many of the bogs were deliberately pock marked, holes dug and the dirt piled up.
Catch basins between bogs.
A curious mosaic.
There was lots of construction material about.
Now this trip wasn't pretty, it smelled and there were turtles walking around muddy bog bottoms with little water. Upon leaving we had a chat with a Land Steward from the New Jersey Conservation Foundation and he explained what they were trying to accomplish. They are trying to create a wetland which is autonomous, unlike a normal bog which has men going around adjusting the gates to control water with the changing seasons. The pocked bogs are an attempt to increase plant diversity by providing varied water depth. The rock and mosaic are to prevent wash outs. He explained the work was paid for with a Federal grant and they had a lot of say about how it was done. The work is expected to be completed this year and the system will be flooded.
It was interesting to see it in its construction stage, and we will go back to follow it's progress. I'm sure it will work in some fashion, but this is a manufactured wetland, not the incidental one created by farming. We are used to the dynamics of the Friendship Bogs where a bog one year is dry and filling with trees, later the beavers move in and flood it, killing the trees, then a dam breaks and the process repeats. I'm not trying to be negative but it gives me thoughts.
If you go the staff are very welcoming and I was told a suspension bridge was just completed at the east end. I'm sure the place will ammuse.
Ed
We walked the West End Road.
Here are direct links to the map and directions for printing.
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5181/5680480879_25b9ee156f_b.jpg
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5187/5680434023_1f5cb3ec1f_b.jpg
We then came upon an observation tower which is a platform built on top of a pump house, and well built at that. All around are drained bogs.
A bench with not much of a view.
A duck house without water.
Giant chairs.
Many of the bogs were deliberately pock marked, holes dug and the dirt piled up.
Catch basins between bogs.
A curious mosaic.
There was lots of construction material about.
Now this trip wasn't pretty, it smelled and there were turtles walking around muddy bog bottoms with little water. Upon leaving we had a chat with a Land Steward from the New Jersey Conservation Foundation and he explained what they were trying to accomplish. They are trying to create a wetland which is autonomous, unlike a normal bog which has men going around adjusting the gates to control water with the changing seasons. The pocked bogs are an attempt to increase plant diversity by providing varied water depth. The rock and mosaic are to prevent wash outs. He explained the work was paid for with a Federal grant and they had a lot of say about how it was done. The work is expected to be completed this year and the system will be flooded.
It was interesting to see it in its construction stage, and we will go back to follow it's progress. I'm sure it will work in some fashion, but this is a manufactured wetland, not the incidental one created by farming. We are used to the dynamics of the Friendship Bogs where a bog one year is dry and filling with trees, later the beavers move in and flood it, killing the trees, then a dam breaks and the process repeats. I'm not trying to be negative but it gives me thoughts.
If you go the staff are very welcoming and I was told a suspension bridge was just completed at the east end. I'm sure the place will ammuse.
Ed