MOUNTAIN LAUREL BLOOMS IN LEWDEN GREEN PARK, NEW CASTLE DELAWARE

A TALE OF THE TWO DELAWARES: AMIDST  CITIES AND 8 LANE HIGHWAYS, OIL REFINERIES, MEGA-MALLS AND MINI-MALLS, AND SEEMINGLY ENDLESS LOW-DENSITY SPRAWL IS A NATURAL LANDSCAPE FULL OF NATIVE TREES, SHRUBS  AND FLOWERING HERBACEOUS PLANTS, BIRDS AND BUTTERFLIES.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

KALMIA LATIFOLIA

The contrast of natural landscape to urban sprawl is back-to back in New Castle County Delaware. At the intersection of Airport Road and Appleby Road is a mini-mall, a gas station, large swaths of parking, an apartment complex, lots of turn lanes and asphalt.  This is the place that is driven through day in and day out.  A place to merge on to the highway in order to get onto I-95. A place to buy gas.  However, there is an amazing woodland that almost exists in a alternative reality, in almost exactly the same spot.  This is the place where if you ever imagined what it must’ve looked like at this gas station 1000 years ago, at this exact spot, what was it like?  Well, here at Appleby and Airport roads, All one has to do is cross the street, 150 feet and you are there, 1000, years ago.

Lewden Green Park is the pre-strip-mall Delaware.   It is hard to believe that such a place can even exist in such close proximity to such a thoroughly disturbed urban area. Yet Lewden Green Park is so rich in diversity of trees, shrubs and understory herbaceous vegetation, it must be accepted as fact.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

The above-pictured Kalmia latifolia is flowering in abundance in the Lewden Green park.  There are mature shrubs in full flower all over the park.  The woods is a joy to see: from the trails off into the forest is a shrub layer of blooming Mountain Laurel as well as maple leafed Viburnum. Oaks, Hickories, and Sweet-gum are in the canopy, and as we get closer to the Christiana River that flows through the park, there are Red Maples, Sycamores and Dogwood.

The Mayapples, Hay-scented ferns and False Solomons seals are on the forest floor.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

What did this spot look like 1000 years ago?  It could be argued that the overabundance of white-tailed deer can explain the hay-scented fern patch pictured here, being that the deer don’t like the hay-scented fern. Evidence was noted of the deer, in that the Mayapples were in some areas reduced to leaf-less stems, a familiar scene in Morris Park, Philadelphia.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

Just a glance into the forest reveals blooming shrubs under a canopy of mature native trees and a vigorous layer of  ferns and herbaceous plants, all native, which means they most likely have been living in this exact spot for thousands of years.  Imagine that a place in the forest can have stability for such a long time. The blooming Mountain Laurel pictured here is a descendant of  one that bloomed in this very spot 2000 years ago. The original Delaware, The natural lands that co-exist somehow with the developed areas are still holding on.  Imagine that the neighborhoods surrounding Lewden Green park could remain as stable as the park. Imagine living on a block of houses, where the inhabitants have been living there for 5000 years and thought little of it. The blooming Mountain laurel has been doing that for much longer and has no problems with that , just see the next picture:

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

This absolutely magnificent flowering shrub has the answer.  How many millions of years of evolution created this beauty?  So, in this very spot, here in New Castle County Delaware, what was it like two hundred  years ago in 1811?  How about  300 years ago in 1711? 400 years ago in 1611?

Ok then: 2000 years ago in just plain old 11?  Was this bush blooming just like it is here, right in this spot? In Delaware?

 

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

Maple-leaved Viburnum blooms!

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

Whoever is helping maintain this park , you are doing a great job. This park is a treasure.

The invasive exotics Multiflora rose, and the Asiatic bittersweet, as well as the party spots with the beer cans  and garbage, (also, the axe  hackings of that poor mid-sized  oak tree next to the pond ) are  troublesome problems In Lewden Green Park.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle, Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle, Delaware

So do not be fooled by all of the miles of asphalt and industrial facilities in Delaware. There are Mayapples and Mountain Laurel blooming in the hidden forest remnants. In fact, Roger Tory Peterson writes in A Field Guide To Wildflowers:  “The best remaining natural flower gardens I have seen along the East Coast are in Delaware.”

Delaware will enrich any itinerary of wildflower viewing in the Mid-Atlantic region. The birds like it here too.

Garden of the Sanguine Root, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Garden of the Sanguine Root, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

So these two pictures here are not in Lewden Green or even the Mt Cuba Center or Bowman’s Hill Preserve.  They are in fact in our backyard. Thats right, this blooming beauty was purchased at a plant sale at Bowmans Hill Wildflower Preserve.  These shrubs are great garden specimens.  Rather than buy yet another Asian Azalea, perhaps your yard could be graced with this exquisite native shrub.  If you want birds in your yard, the insects that will visit the Mountain laurel will attract the hungry birds and pretty soon you will have a natural ecosystem happening in your own yard.  At your local native plant nursery, be sure to ask for Kalmia Latifolia. The latin name insures that you will get the right plant.

Garden of the Sanguine Root, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Garden of the Sanguine Root, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

THE TULIPS ARE BLOOMING

LIRIODENDRON TULIPIFERA

IF YOU WANT TO SEE THESE TULIP POPLAR FLOWERS, YOU MAY NEED A PAIR OF BINOCULARS, BECAUSE THIS IS THE TALLEST BLOOMING TREE EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI.

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

We have one growing in our backyard, and we get out on the roof with a pair of binoculars and we can get a good look at the flowers.  Often times squirrels will chew on a branch and a flower will fall to the ground in one piece and we are afforded a good look.  After a storm , whole branches containing flowers can be found in Morris Park.  In the forest these trees grow very straight and tall, but if a tree grows out in the open it will send out branches low on the trunk to reach all of the available light.  It will only grow straight and tall if it has to and it can.  So, to view the flowers as they bloom on the tree, find a big field or meadow in an area where Tulip poplars grow.  We were in West Fairmount Park on Chamounix Drive near Ford Road, parked across from the tennis courts where we found ours.  The branches extended out far from the trunk and very low at the tips where the flowers can be found.

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

There is much to be admired about this native tree.  It is a fast grower, and it can be helpful in restoring a degraded forest canopy.  We anticipate that it will be an important ingredient in closing the canopy gaps of degraded woodland in Morris Park.  While visiting The Mt Cuba Center in Delaware last Spring, they showed us a Tulip poplar they planted in their woodland Trillium garden 12 years prior in an effort to maintain a forest canopy.  The tree was well on its way into creating the dappled shade much needed by Mt Cuba Center’s Trilliums and other woodland piedmont plants.  Seeing this has helped us understand the importance of the Tulip Poplar in restoring a blighted urban forest.

The beautiful orange and white flower is to be admired as well, and today we are celebrating its bloom.

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Here we can see the growth pattern of a Tulip Poplar in an open field environment. The v pattern is common for this tree, but this one has the divided trunk unusually low.

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Isabelle dressed for the occasion.

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

We were very disappointed to find out that  the Tulip Poplar was  “one of the least  productive forest species in terms of its ability to support wildlife-insects and vertebrates alike” (Bringing Nature Home, 2007, Douglas W. Tallamy, page 65). We also know that the Tulip poplar has become a dominant tree species in the forest since the American Chestnut has become blighted and reduced to a shrub. In Morris Park, there are numerous shrub specimens of the Chestnut (Castenea dentata), (Some reaching 25 feet in height) and there are large, mature stands of the Tulip Poplar.  The Tulip Poplar has for the time being, benefitted from the demise of the Chestnut tree.   So currently, the Tulip Poplar is able to seed itself abundantly and it has attained a dominant status in the forest: it is a species adapting to a forest out of balance.  The Chestnut Tree has for millions of years been the dominant tree in the forest.  We are just over only 100 years of Chestnut tree eradication from the forest canopy. The Tulip Poplar has taken over dominance in some areas of Morris Park.  The Oak trees that seem to have had a dominant role in the canopy seem to be on the decline.  There are fewer mid-sized oaks in the park than mid-sized Tulip trees and even fewer mature specimens.

However, there is an abundance of sapling oaks in one specific area very near our house.  We have been sure to prioritize this area in invasive removal to give the oaks the utmost advantage in success.

One other concern about the Tulip tree’s increasing dominance is that if there were ever a disease that blighted the species, there could be a catastrophic loss of canopy in many forests.  Morris Park would be severely effected.

 

Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Tulip poplar blooms in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The flowers  of the Tulip Poplar always stop us in our tracks.

Will this native forest tree continue to help  blighted urban and suburban forest remnants remain forested or will it outcompete other native forest trees such as oaks and beeches in an imbalanced charge to dominance?

We are now weeding saplings of this tree from our yard, and we are seeing more Tulip Poplar saplings than Oak saplings grow in the most disturbed areas of  the park. Is this tree on its way to being a prominent example of a native plant gone invasive in a disturbed ecosystem?

We often come across emotionally charged opinions about the issue of native plants, non-native plants, and even native plants that have become invasive. The opinions, even the sophisticated assertions about the status of a species, as well as the most thoughtful observations are still speculation until studied.

When these questions arise, we must turn to science for some answers.   The scientists think about these questions all the time, and spend much effort devising ways to study these questions.  All of these ways are carefully described in their published studies.

The Tulip Poplar has become a post-Chestnut forest tree, and we need to know what that means.

The tree remains a constant presence in our lives.  Its super straight and tall stature continues to impress us. We admire the dark green leaves, and the way the young  leaves open up, curled in a protective sheath until they are ready for the world.  The seed cones are impressive in their shape and the simplicity and elegance of its delivery system.

Lewden Green Park, New Castle County ,Delaware
Lewden Green Park, New Castle County, Delaware

The flower is the most elegant and colorful. It is truly a beautiful tree.

Because its wood is soft and it has a tendency to break, this tree is best admired off in the woods and not recommended for planting near homes or as street trees.

Its grand size and soaring height can also give us a hint of what an American Chestnut must have been like before the blight.

GARLIC MUSTARD!

IT IS THE TIME TO REMOVE GARLIC MUSTARD AND TO DEPLETE ITS SEED BANK. ERADICATING THIS NOXIOUS INVASIVE WILL ENABLE YOUNG TREES TO GROW AND RESTORE THE DEGRADED CANOPY.

Isabelle removes Garlic mustard from Morris Park, Philadelphia
Isabelle removes Garlic mustard from Morris Park, Philadelphia

Alliaria petiolata

It will take us years to control this invasive in our modestly sized area of scope in Morris Park. However, it can be controlled with some persistence, and the results are gratifying.  It may seem a daunting task, with thousands of plants that suddenly show up in your nearby forest landscape in the early spring, like the aliens that they are and they want to take over the herbaceous layer of the ecosystem. Even more insidiously, they will actually inhibit the growth of young trees by disturbing the beneficial Mycorrhizal bacteria that these trees need for their growth.

We have actually experienced this phenomenon.  There is one area we had been targeting the Garlic Mustard for eradication for 3 consecutive years now.   Today we found a young oak sapling growing in this  spot where we had been pulling the Garlic mustard.  We had not found any such saplings in prior years.  This area is also right next to a 200+ year old oak tree that has been dropping acorns year after, yet there are very few saplings to be found under it and it happens to be an area infested with Garlic mustard.  Perhaps our work is paying off, and that we are creating an environment that is more conducive to young trees.

Garlic mustard in Flower, Morris Park Philadelphia
Garlic mustard in Flower, Morris Park Philadelphia

We have heard that the Garlic mustard plant can throw out over one hundred seeds per specimen, and that these seeds can live from 5-7 years in the soil before germinating.  So if we pull a plant out of the soil, there will be still be seeds in the soil that can germinate and grow into a new plant, 5-7 years down the road.  However, there will have been no seeds created if we pull every possible plant we find in a given area, so in 8 years, we will not have any of these plants growing in the areas we have pulled them out. However, we have found that we can eradicate a very high percentage of an infestation in just three years, if we are thorough in our eradication strategy. There will still be some plants that will grow, just a few, which explains the 5-7 year seed bank reality.  The few that do grow after 3 years require just a minute to remove, while it takes many hours to remove a one or two year old population.  So from our experience, Garlic mustard is a manageable invasive.  It is after all a biennial, which means that each specimen lives two years and then dies off. The plant relies on the hundred or more seeds produced in this two year life cycle to live on and spread.   So the main objective in the long run is to prevent seed production or maturity, and most importantly, seed dispersal. However this long-term objective requires an attention to detail, a careful  approach (so native plants are not crushed in the process), and a serious follow-through regimen.

A pass of removal in April or May, should be re-inspected in June and July for missed specimens.  There will always be a few plants that were overlooked in any given area, which if not removed will throw out 100s of seeds, prolonging the problem one more year if not up to 5 or 7 years.

Garlic mustard in Flower, Morris Park Philadelphia
Garlic mustard in Flower, Morris Park Philadelphia

The plant can grow tall quickly. Removing it can be in some situations a drama as well. The root hooks to the side  in the ground, making removal that much more difficult.  However a gentle tug is the trick, and if the habit of the plant can be understood, the removal is all that much more easy.  The removal also creates a disturbance in the soil, a very problematic and controversial issue when it comes to invasive control. The gentle tug is a key aspect of soil disturbance management and we make sure that the area of pulled Garlic mustard is left as close as possible to the way it was.  We push the soil back in place, and we put the leaf litter back, so that the area we removed Garlic mustard or any invasive for that matter is left as if the problematic plant was never there in the first place.

The last thing we want to do is irreparably disturb an ecosystem in the process of trying to bring balance to that ecosystem.

From our experience so far, the minor disturbances to the soil from removing Garlic mustard have actually had beneficial results.  The seed banks of native species have been altered in the disturbance, and in areas of heavy Garlic mustard infestations, the eradication efforts have resulted in surprise appearances of Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) and False Solomon’s seal (Smilacina racemosa).

With a highly invasive population in the process of eradication, the resulting soil disturbance is not necessarily a bad thing, a long as there is a serious follow through on the eradication process, done on a monthly basis.  The native plant seed bank is also active, and is also responsive to minor soil disturbance.

Garlic mustard infestation, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Garlic mustard infestation, Morris Park, Philadelphia

In the above picture, photographed below an oak tree, we worked hard removed a dense infestation of Garlic mustard.  We were rewarded with a most satisfactory find, one that is the most most compelling reason to continue our efforts of Garlic mustard control throughout the acres and the years:

 An Oak seedling struggles to grow amidst a Garlic mustard infestation, Morris Park, Philadelphia
An Oak seedling struggles to grow amidst a Garlic mustard infestation, Morris Park, Philadelphia

This little guy was completely surrounded with Garlic mustard and we found it as if it were an archeological discovery. The battle to save the oak sapling from the Garlic mustard  has just begun, because next years crop is ready to take over, all around this sapling.

European cabbage white butterfly visits Garlic Mustard, Morris Park, Philadelphia
European cabbage white butterfly visits Garlic Mustard, Morris Park, Philadelphia

This European introduction, the Cabbage white (Artogeia rapae) has been very active around the Garlic mustard flowers. They are a European insect interacting with a European flower.  We thought that it might be the native West Virginia white butterfly mistaking it for a cut-leaved Toothwort , Cardamine concatenata (formerly Dentaria laciniata). This has become a problem for the West Virginia white , which lays its eggs on the Toothwort flower.  Mistaking it for a Garlic mustard is deadly to the larvae, and so the Garlic mustard threatens this native butterfly, one more reason to control it.

 Cut-leaved Toothwort, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
Cut-leaved Toothwort, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania

Any serious effort at environmental restoration will require a level of observation, action and follow through, almost on a daily basis, until the conditions are understood and can be managed based on a reasonable level of predictability.

Pulling Garlic mustard is a long-term activity.  If there is a fully established population, with thousands of specimens, and it has been decided upon to try to eradicate this invasive, there better be a long-term plan in place for effectiveness. The same site must be visited at least 3 times a season, because there are always specimens missed during the first and second passes.

The plants that are pulled the first time around will not show a result for two years.  The next year there will be just as many plants, which must be pulled as thoroughly as possible.  The year after that there will be significantly less plants. However, the next year, year # 4, there may be a huge jump in plants, and this will be very discouraging to volunteers and land owners.  This is the crucial year where it is easy to give up.  The 4th year is actually the most important- one last round of pulling and the rest is an easy ride.  By year five, the amount of plants will have been reduced significantly.

The Sanguine Root has no experience after this and is unable to speak about what year 6 may be like.  However we still have a lot to say about Garlic mustard.   If you are struggling with Garlic mustard and are hanging on to every word of this post, please stay with us as we navigate through this complicated subject.

What we have to say is more about seed production and cyclical germination than just plain eradication.

In our view, the only way to rid an area of this species is by pulling. On our site there are so many native plants trying to grow amidst the garlic mustard, that pulling is a necessity. The pulling of this plant is as close as it gets to weeding in the gardening sense, and to the newly introduced volunteer in environmental restoration, Garlic mustard is a good ‘gateway’ invasive. As this plant is pulled out from a  native population of Spring beauties, Mayapples , Wild geranium, Black cohosh, Rattlesnake root and Bloodroot, it is easy to see how a forest floor can be transformed from an at-risk blighted state, to a pristine  understory woodland ecosystem.

And the next year, its more Garlic Mustard all over again.  Just remember, each plant pulled is a 100 less seed producing plants in two or even 3, 4, 5, 6 years from now.  Keep pulling!  Here is where the passing of the years becomes an asset. As there is less and less Garlic mustard in your area, we become younger  and more optimistic at heart, knowing we can do something to help native plants, and native birds, insects and animals survive in an increasingly difficult environment.

Driving along roads, there is little consolation that this invasive will ever be controlled. But we can only worry about what we can have some control over.  It is worth it to pull in your area.  Just remember, there are hundreds and thousands of native plants that will benefit.

Since we have successfully eradicated Garlic mustard in a just a few areas, there has been a dramatic increase in native plants. There are alot of reasons for this, and some are pure speculation and not based on any science.  Just by removing the pure mass of these plants, has given the chance for the late spring sun to hit the leaf litter, warming it just that much more than it had been getting for the past who-knows-how-many years that the Garlic mustard has dominated the mid to late spring forest floor, allowing for the germination of native plants seeds that have been dormant, as well as more Garlic mustard seeds. ( This leads up to why year 4 of pulling is so crucial).

As briefly touched upon before, the very minor soil disturbance created by pulling a mature Garlic mustard plant in the first year of eradication attempts, may actually be beneficial to the ecosystem. Heres our line of reasoning:  The mature Garlic mustard plant is almost three feet tall and its roots consume about six square inches of soil about two to three inches down.  When pulled by the Sanguine Root environmental restoration team, there is a gentle tug, and the plant is teased out of the soil.  Upon removal, the plant is then shaken vigorously, to release all the soil attached to the root.  This is done on the immediate site of removal, to prevent the spread of Garlic mustard seed, which is most likely in the soil.  These seeds will germinate and produce plants which will be pulled in the following years.

More importantly, there will be seeds of native woodland plants that will be shaken out and deposited on the slightly disturbed soil, that could possibly germinate and  grow, immediately replacing the Garlic mustard and commencing the business of a forest floor ecosystem.  The butterflies and birds of ten years from now, 2021, will very much appreciate the liberation of these native seeds now.

All of this is pure speculation, the thoughts expressed from spending many many hours in the woods, year after year after year, pulling Garlic mustard.

However, for us out in the field, on site on a daily basis, the rewards of Garlic mustard removal are  showing their mark. We are finding native plants just growing on those sites, where we have not noticed them before. Either we were not fully aware of them before, or they started growing.

The best time to pull Garlic mustard is when they are in flower.  The bright white flowers help it stand out on the forest floor. Sad isnt it?  Here is a plant that in its native Europe, is a beneficial plant to almost 70 species, and is fully active in its ecosystem. Yet here, it is detrimental and it has become noxious, destroying rather than contributing to ecosystems. When we consider the concept of a species, we must consider its ecosystem, its range.  If any given species is removed from its range, it becomes a roll of the dice for many.  Some will immediately wither and die.  Some may grow and exhibit good behavior, and excel in cultivation. Some may immediately become noxious invasives. Some may exhibit good behavior for many years, and establish themselves as a reliable garden or landscape plant, only to suddenly “jump the fence”and become a virulent invasive.  Of all of the introduced plants there are in our area, there is no way of knowing which ones will “jump the fence”.

When pulling Garlic mustard , no matter what, there will be some that are overlooked and can grow and go to seed.  That is why a second and third pass in any eradication effort is necessary for a thorough eradication for any given year.

For us the ritual of pulling Garlic Mustard is an excuse to go off of the trails into the wildlands of Morris Park. While pulling Garlic mustard, we , at the same time, are able to take an inventory of other plants growing in these off the beaten path areas.  When pulling, we get a square foot by square foot view of any given area we target for Garlic mustard removal. Garlic mustard removal time is really a time of meditation as to what is growing and living in a given area.

We generally  reserve off-trail activity for official park business, which involves invasive removal and environmental restoration-oriented activities such as invasive plant and native plant inventories and just plain site assessment.  The main reason for this is to have a minimum impact on the environment in these sensitive and stressed natural areas. Aside from disturbing native plants, we also do not want to disturb ground-nesting birds that may need the forest for their habitat.

Final notes for the volunteer groups and the stewards of land about Garlic mustard:   Once the plant goes into seed production mode, it must be trashed, otherwise the seeds will mature even after the plant has been pulled. We have seen plants go to flower and into seed mode even after being pulled. This from our observations of forgotten Garlic mustard piles left during volunteer pulling events.  The plant, unfortunately, must be trashed. This is another reason it must be brought into control, that its eradication will effect the bio-mass of any given area.

In our area of scope the only viable control is hand-pulling.  There are too many native plants around that would be destroyed from any other conventional control methods.  The hand-pulling can be an asset to those who care that much, because it allows a moment of pure observation on every part of the land of concern.

Final thoughts

The plant is edible, so go ahead and make yourself a salad from the leaves, or make a pesto. Of course the deer do not like it and they eat many of the native plants around it.  It would be great if  foodies got into it and Garlic mustard became a trendy new dish of wild salad or something.  Maybe lovers of wild food could diversify their palette and move on from the current wild Leek craze that is threatening that native forest plant.

Garlic mustard’s inviting aroma will draw you into the delicious world of this exquisite spring salad.  Freshly selected from the wild, you will experience the crisp, nutritious greenery of early Spring. Mixes well with Arugula, and other spring lettuces.