SHENKS FERRY WILD FLOWER PRESERVE

THE SANGUINE ROOT VISITS A SITE OF PROFOUND BEAUTY IN PENNSYLVANIA. THE MIDDLE OF THE MONTH OF APRIL IS THE TIME TO SEE A HILLSIDE OF VIRGINIA BLUEBELLS AND TRILLIUM ERECTUM VARIATION ALBUM AND TRILLIUM FLEXIPES ALL BLOOMING AT THE SAME TIME.

Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

We had heard about this place where Bluebells and Dutchman’s breeches cover hillsides.  Trilliums abound in the millions. The ‘Rich ravines of the lower Susquehanna River’.  We heard how it is hard to find and off the beaten path, with bumpy dirt roads and an ancient stone tunnel that you must pass through to reach the other side.  Once you make it through this tunnel, the landscape is transformed, and you are in a primordial world, with ancient trees and wildflowers abundantly growing.

The entry tunnel, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
The entry tunnel, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

This is the stuff of myths.  How can it be possible that a native wildflower wonderland can appear by passing through an an old stone tunnel on a dirt road?  We decided to make a go of it last year, in the spring of 2010, and after a long morning of directions, turns, and crinkled maps, somehow we found a sign along the River Road in some place very remote but only about 2 1/2 hours from Philadelphia, that pointed to Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve. We bumped along, following the well-marked signs, and our 1999 Suburu Legacy outback stationwagon had no problem with the dirt road.  We kept going along and bumping up and down and there was the mythological stone tunnel before us.  We crept through the dark tunnel on the dirt road and finally reached the other side.

The parking area and trailhead, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
The parking area and trailhead, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

It was just what the hype had described.  On the incoming side of the tunnel was a rural and bucolic landscape of well- manicured homes with non-native trees, grasses and flowers and large expanses of mowed lawns.

On the other side was the mythological rich ravines of the Lower Susquehanna River. We could hardly drive to the trailhead without being distracted by the large swaths of blue and white covering the rich hillside.  The blue, being Bluebells, (Mertensia Virgininica) and white, being Trillium Erectum v. album,  Trillium flexipes or most likely a hybrid of both, most specimens indistinguishable in this interbreeded population.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We had reached a place where our piedmont landscape was deeply dissected with a magnificent river, the Susquehanna, and there were small creeks that also deeply dissected the landscape as they made their way to the wide and low Susquehanna.  These ravines are cut so deep into the piedmont that they have steep slopes that provide a protected micro-climate, allowing a huge diversity of plants to grow, especially spring ephemeral wildflowers.   This is Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve.  Owned By Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, whose electric lines cross through the area, it is open to the public and has a trailhead with brochures, and a bulletin board. Park on the side of the road, and when you get out of the car, take care to not step on the wildflowers abundantly growing in the parking area.

Round-lobed Hepatica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Round-lobed Hepatica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Last week, we selected Thursday April 14, 2011 for our trip to Shenks Ferry, and it was a success.  The Trilliums were in bloom and so were the Bluebells. It was not peak bloom, but close enough, especially with the amazing weather we had.  The weekday arrival time allowed us to have the 50 acre preserve to ourselves for the first half hour we were there.  There are benches along the path which we took advantage of for lunch and even a porta-potty is available. The green hillsides are covered in bluebells and Trilliums.  Many other species as well ranging from the round-lobed Hepatica pictured above (Hepatica americana) to Dutchmans breeches, Mayapple, Trout lily, and Claytonia virginica, the Spring beauty.  This is the place to come if you want to get design ideas for a woodland garden, as well as get a feel for the optimal environmental conditions of these plants, as well as what will grow next to each other, and how these combinations can look and behave.

Trillium erectum, var. album, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Trillium flexipes Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

We had come to Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve last September just to see what it looked like without all the spring ephemerals, and we were greeted with an array of asters and goldenrod.  We closely examined the soil and the leaf litter in the trillium -rich areas to see what they like.   We found that the leaf litter was not a heavy matte, rather a broken up and fluffy  stratification, over a soil that was just more decomposed leaf litter, and layered upon a light, organic matter of composted leaves.  The trilliums were growing out of this humusy, loose, and well-drained accumulation of  many years of decayed leaves, in a protected valley.

Trillium erectum, var. album, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Trillium flexipes, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

It is fun to try to tell the two different Trilliums apart, when they have so many similar qualities.  The Trillium erectum has a noticeably dark maroon ovary. The Flexipes has petals a bit more robust and cream-colored stamens.  That blue flower behind the Trillium is an easy one, Mertensia virginica, Virginia bluebells.

Trillium erectum v. album with Mertensia virginica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Trillium erectum v. album with Mertensia virginica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

 

Trillium erectum v. album with Mertensia virginica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Trillium erectum v. album with Mertensia virginica, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

This is the quintessential Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve scene in the springtime.  A steep hillside covered with Bluebells, Trillium, and Claytonia virginica, spring beauty. This is what we came here to see.

Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica), Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica), Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

 

Dutchmans Breeches, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Dutchmans Breeches, Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

DICENTRA CUCULLARIA

The Dutchmans breeches is a flower we have been trying to grow in the front yard, and have not yet had a flower.  Every year they grow little green branches about 4 inches high with heavily dissected leaves and seem happy enough, only to eventually go dormant.  No flower though.  In Shenks Ferry, flowering Dutchmans breeches are covering the hillsides. They grow out of a corm, similar to that of Trout lily , and  the invasive exotic, Ranunculus ficaria, the Lesser celandine.   The corms of Dutchmans breeches form dense networks, and  likely play a part in the soil retention of the steep slopes of the ravine habitat.

 Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve: A rich ravine habitat on the lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

This is the woodland foot-path of Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve. It is situated about 25 feet above Grubb Run, the creek that runs into the Susquehanna.  At this elevation, We were afforded a great view of the creek and we were well-placed to see the wildflowers on the hillside. This is what one of the rich ravines of the lower Susquehanna River looks like.

Isabelle and Bluebells, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Isabelle and Bluebells, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Isabelle basks in the sun alongside the Bluebells and Trilliums.

Isabelle and Bluebells, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Bluebells, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Looking up the slope of the ravine to the bluebells above.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Trilliums and Mayapples

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Isabelle photographing a Trout lily along the banks of Grubb Run.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Mayapple, (Podophyllum peltatum)

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

A giant Sycamore (Platanus occidentalis) grows right on the creek bank.

Trout Lily, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Trout Lily, Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Erythronium americanum, the Trout lily, growing alongside the creek.

Sean Solomon photographing a Trout Lily in Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve
Sean Solomon photographing a Trout Lily in Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve

This is what it takes to get that picture. Great measures are taken to not step on any plants or disturb any ecosystems. We stay on paths. This one path led down to the creek so we went for it. There were plenty of rocks to step on.

The new format of digital photography allows for many pictures to be taken at different angles, to get that shot. If the picture is blurry or at the wrong angle, a simple delete click will eliminate it.

 Trout Lily in Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve
Trout Lily in Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve

It was so exciting for us to see so many flowers at once in such a short time. After a few hours, we stopped snapping pictures and just looked at the flowers, and settled in.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

However, that did not last long, as we came across this patch of Trillium flexipes, and Dicentra cucullaria, there was no way we could not take some shots and bring the image home.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

We found a path that led us up a steep hill into a more upland environment.  Here we found Bloodroot blooming next to Early saxifrage (Saxifraga virginiensis).  It is interesting how just a few feet in elevation completely changes the environment. We had not been acquainted with Saxifraga virginiensis before, but we are charmed by its elegant white flowers and modest 4 inch stem, and especially the small rosette at the ground level.  It is such a natural neighbor to the Bloodroot in this ravine.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

We made our way back down to the creek to find this snake also completely enjoying this  mid -April Thursday afternoon in Shenks Ferry.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

A hillside of Trilliums and Bluebells in the springtime.  The Happy Place: Shenks ferry Wildflower Preserve.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Bluebells as far as the eye can see.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

This is the view just a 5 minute walk up a steep path next to the trail head.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

On this small path we encountered a disturbing scene.  An infestation of Euonymous alatus, the exotic invasive burning bush, overtaking the Trilliums along the path.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania`

The Trilliums can barely flower amidst this infestation.  The invasive seedlings of Burning bush were crowding out the native wildflowers.   The close proximity of this dangerous invasive to the all of the habitat we documented in this entire post was a sobering scene. This infestation reminded us that we cannot escape the invasives, and that the problems we face in Morris Park  are everywhere. In a way, we can clearly see that Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve is not a fantasy escape of happy wildflowers growing in a rich ravine, but a place just like many others: A happy place of diverse species and some invasives, at risk of becoming degraded.

Even the ride out of Philadelphia was a constant reminder of the increased development and urbanization that is creating habitat loss and depletion of natural areas.

Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania
Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve. Lower Susquehanna River Valley, Pennsylvania

Hopefully we as a species will learn to appreciate and protect the natural habitats that are responsible for our own survival. The big box store, the housing development and the landscaping, as well as the  introduced landscape plants that become invasives destroying the forest remnant behind this creation, will not sustain us in the long term.

The Forest remnants that are still intact can provide us with some glimpse of how we  may want to arrange our own built ecosytems, just as they may provide a hint to how we may want to arrange our native plant gardens. The forest remnants and the remaining plants most likely will have the most to teach us about what it takes to have  a sustainable ecosystem.  Just to note, these ecosystems have  been around for thousands of years.  We did see lots of mini-malls and parking lots and invasives, but we also made it out to Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve, and we saw the beauty of our area of Pennsylvania. It was a great joy to see the plants and the environment of this rich ravine.

A WALK IN THE PARK

THE SANGUINE ROOT ENJOYS THE GARDEN THIS PAST WEEKEND AND TAKES A WALK IN MORRIS PARK AND IN THE WISSAHICKON VALLEY PARK. MANY BEAUTIFUL NATIVE SPRING EPHEMERAL FLOWERS ARE FOUND DESPITE THE THREATENING INVASIVES THAT CROWD AROUND THEM

Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The  Mayapples are finally starting to emerge and express themselves in Morris Park. A neighbor asked the classic question: What are those little umbrella plants? we were so happy to answer that they were Mayapples.  He then asked, what about the blue flowers? Yeah, that would be the invasive Vinca vine (Vinca minor).  Then he asked, what about the yellow flowers? Yeah, that one is also a highly problematic invasive, Lesser celandine (Ranunculus ficaria) . Then he asked, What about the white Flowers?  Ah, Yes, that is a native wildflower, Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis).  We like that one.

So two natives and two invasives.  We Love to answer questions about the native and invasive plants growing in Morris Park, especially the ones next to the path at Morris Park Road.

Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Mayapples making their way into the world in Morris Park, next to the most grand oak tree in the whole park.

The garden of the Sanguine Root  Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
The garden of the Sanguine Root Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Our front yard. ( Sanguinaria canadensis) The Bloodroot continuously blooms for 3 weeks so far in our yard as the bluebells ready themselves for their blooming season.

The garden of the Sanguine Root  Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
The garden of the Sanguine Root Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Arts and Crafts facades of the 1920s rowhomes in this section of Overbrook, boast built in stone planters raised up against the front windows of the homes. The Sanguine Root Staff was able to re-build this planter during a thorough restoration of the stonework on the facade of the building. Now the House of the Sanguine Root has been able to plant our namesake species, Sanguinaria canadensis, Bloodroot, in the special planter. The planting was done last fall,which is the best time to plant perennials, as a bare-root.  The amount of flowers that came up is astounding. However, the robust flowering is testament to the previous location of the plant, not its present one. In this, we mean that the previous location received ever so much sunlight and moisture and this fed the roots that are now sending up flowers this Spring.  Once the flowers finish blooming and produce seed, the plant will then set about the business of doing photyosynthesis which will give the roots the necessary energy to flower and produce seed the following year.

Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Sanguine Root loves to explore.  The Wissahickon Valley Park is a gorge just 15 minutes away in another section of Philadelphia. This most amazing and fantastic part of the Fairmount Park system is not only part of our drinking water source, it is also our neighboring watershed.

 Trout lily, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Trout lily, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Blooming Trout-lilies in the Wissahickon Valley Park.  When you look carefully, you will see them.  These flowers stop us in our tracks. The ones that are actually flowering are old plants that are growing out of corms, a bulb-like root that will pull itself deeper and deeper into the ground as the years pass. When they get deep enough and develop the critical size of a root that comes with age, they will send out a bloom. For the most part, Trout lilies are single leaves with the most striking and exotic look, colors and textures. Whole colonies of this native spring ephemeral will form, covering the hillsides of ravines.  These plants are important to the geology of ravines, in that they are an integral part of soil retention. They form complex networks of corms, growing at  different depths in the soil, with the flowering specimens at the deepest depths. These plants keep the soil intact and limit the erosion that can occur in a ravine during heavy rains.  Other  native species such as Mayapple, Skunk cabbage, Lobelia and Jewelweed, just for starters, depend upon the rich, moist, and most importantly, Intact soils of the ravine.  In Morris Park, Trout lilies grow abundantly, and are an important part of soil retention in this at-risk urban drainage setting. Because of increased paving and development around both Morris Park and the Wissahickon Park, the run-off of water has become a  critical issue in the health of the creeks and the surrounding valleys. To find robust populations of the beautiful Trout Lilies is a reminder that there is a natural check growing in place of the increasingly inbalanced water- runoff in our urban parklands, which are primarily ravines along creeks.

 

 Mayapples, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Mayapples grow abundantly along this tributary of the Wissahickon Creek, near Kitchen’s lane. The invasive English Ivy grows alongside the Mayapples.  Only the sharpest eye will see that Bloodroot is flowering off in the distance.

Spring beauty, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Spring beauty, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Spring beauty has us constantly pausing in the springtime.

Sessile trillium, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Sessile trillium, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

A stunning native wildflower. However, this one is growing out of its native range, and its proximity to a neighborhood indicates it is most likely a garden escape. As far as garden escapes go, this one is not troublesome, at least yet.  We have a doozy to show you in just a minute, but first we must show you the Bloodroot.

Bloodroot, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Bloodroot, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Note the beautiful Kalmia latifolia off in the distance.(Mountain Laurel)

Multiflora Rose with Isabelle for size, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Multiflora Rose with Isabelle for size, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The old saw, Rosa multiflora. Isabelle is smiling for the camera. She is not overjoyed to see this mess of Multiflora rose.  In fact, we selected trails that would have the least invasives, so we could enjoy our Sunday afternoon without thinking about depressing things.

Multiflora Rose with the Japanese angelica tree, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Multiflora Rose with the Japanese angelica tree, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

However we were confronted with reality, the invasive Aralia elata, the Japanese Angelica tree has penetrated the Wissahickon Valley Park in a disturbing manner.  Morris Park is one place where it has not become completely invasive but is teetering on the brink of falling victim to this emerging threat to our forests.  See our post The Japanese Angelica Tree Invades Morris Park for a more comprehensive discussion of this jaw-dropping, ongoing drama of invasive removal on the razor’s edge of success or failure in a highly at-risk natural area.

pachysandra terminalus, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
pachysandra terminalus, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

O.K., This is the garden escape doozy mentioned earlier.  Pachysandra terminalis, Japanese Pachysandra. This one allows nothing else to grow in its midst except the most troublesome spring invasive we have found to date, the Lesser Celandine, Ranunculus ficaria. We are still not ready to go into this one.  We will discuss this invasive when we are ready.

The Pachysandra pictured above is the classic garden escape found in the Fairmount Park system.  When we see this one, we know that houses are not too far away.  We had this one covering our yard, which was ripped out 4 years ago, but which we still struggle to eradicate in the public property bordering our yard, Morris Park. This invasive has been crowding out and eradicating the native Mayapple from Morris Park, among who knows whatever other native plants and associated insects birds and animals dependent on those specific native plants.

So with the full onset of spring we are full of joy at the sight of new green plants, and we are also confronted with the reality of the invasives.  Spring is usually a roller coaster of experiences and emotions, and the beautiful native flowers and the disturbing invasives in our lives reflect this state of fluctuation and uncertainty.

EARLY SPRING IN COBBS CREEK PARK

 Spring beauty blooms.  Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia
Spring beauty blooms. Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West PhiladelphiaÂ

SANGUINE ROOT VISITS BOCCE COURT WOODS SECTION OF COBBS CREEK PARK, NOT ONE MILE SOUTH OF MORRIS PARK. IT’S GOOD TO KNOW YOUR NEIGHBORS.

 

 

Bloodroot flower blooms under protection of the leaf litter.  Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia
Bloodroot flower blooms under protection of the leaf litter. Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia

 

 

 

The Sanguine Root staff is very interested in what blooms where and when.  This way we can learn more about the plants in Morris Park, and their relationship to the rest of the world. Last summer we saw a large patch of bloodroot growing along the trail in The Bocce woods of Cobbs Creek Park.  This area of  high-quality woods is about one mile south of Morris Park and is a bit lower in elevation.  At this time of year, elevation means alot in terms of blooming spring ephemeral flowers and development of buds on trees.  The subtleties of location become important and it makes where we live and the immediate environs that much more interesting. The Bocce woods area, our immediate neighbor to the south is teaching us more about Morris park than we had imagined. A comparative perspective allows us to begin to understand why certain plants and trees grow in certain locations and bloom at different times.  We read about such plants as the Red maple or the Bloodroot, the Sycamore tree or the Spicebush, but to witness them in wild, in varying locations, in the field, is the best education. In the past month, we have seen quite a dramatic landscape of species in many different locations, and the effect on us is stunning- Mayapples reaching maturity  in Florida and Bloodroot that has already begun seed production in the first week of March is an enlightening experience. Now we are interested in the differences of environments and ecosystems of Fairmount Park here in Philadelphia. Even a mile apart is a world of difference!

  Sycamore, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Sycamore, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

Claytonia virginica

We were pleasantly surprised to find Claytonia virginica (Spring Beauty) blooming at this time. Yet just one mile south of Morris Park, there it was!  We dont expect to find this one for a few weeks yet!  It must be noted that the area that it is blooming is especially sunny, because this is an area of total canopy failure.  The invasive vegetation had completely overtaken any  young trees that were trying to re-forest this location and destroyed them.  In the late 1990s, Fairmount Park created the Master Plan and this area was targeted for restoration and given a high priority status. Since then, the invasives have been eradicated, and forest trees have been replanted.  We found specimens of White Oak, Dogwood and Redbud planted in a vast field that is on its way to being re-forested.  Many native trees were  noted, marked and spared from the eradication process and thrive in the area. We saw plenty of Black Cherry, Sycamore, Red Maple, Spicebush, Silver maple, and Oak that were carefully marked and left alone in this very comprehensive program of Urban Environmental Restoration.  All of thee trees provide a significant amount of contributions to the native ecosystem as a whole. From the Spicebush swallowtail butterfly whose larval stage is completely dependent on this native shrub, to the over 4o0 species of insects and birds that include oak trees in their survival strategy, the efforts of environmental restoration in the Bocce Woods section of Cobbs Creek Park deserve special mention- efforts like this are the blueprint for future of degraded urban forests.  This area was the most challenging. A severely degraded urban forest, that has lost most of its canopy, adjacent to a minimally disturbed forest with a healthy variety of trees that must be protected from further disturbance.

The blooming Spring beauties, a beautiful native spring ephemeral wildflower, tell us this story  just by blooming in the sun of March 26, in Cobbs  Creek Park. In  an area of intense degradation, where a serious effort has been made to reverse this situation and to restore the original forest.  Right in the middle of this, the native wildflower, Claytonia virginica blooms.

 Spring beauty blooms.  Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia
Spring beauty blooms. Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia

The Sanguine Root is very impressed by the amount of care and effort made to restore the area around the pond of the Bocce Woods.  We decided to visit the pond and appreciate its beauty.

 Spring beauty blooms.  Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia
Spring beauty blooms. Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creeek Park, West Philadelphia
Platanus occidentalis, American sycamore, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Platanus occidentalis, American sycamore, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

We were enchanted by the beautiful stand of sycamores in the late march afternoon sun, a colony of trees that is an indicator of a wetland, stream, creek, river , pond and lake.  These trees are very comfortable with water, standing water, flooding conditions, or even in just very most soils, this tree is to be found. The stand of trees rose out of the area in a striking pose, indicating the wetland beneath them.  We were riveted by the arrangement of the trees and began our descent into the wetland area. We knew that there was this seasonal pond there and we had seen its dried up state last summer in 2010, and now, in late March ’11, we could see the whole pond from a distance.

The seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
The seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia PennsylvaniaÂ

It was exciting to see the real pond, actually there. We knew of it from the Fairmount Park Master Plan but had never seen it before.  To reach the water was a challenging adventure through mats of Japanese honeysuckle climbing up spice bush.  We thought to ourselves that if we were ever done with the work in Morris Park we would love to put our restoration efforts in this area, which has such great potential.  Even if we could spend a day here, we could do so much.  The travail through the thickets was worth it.  The pond was mesmerizing.  The reflection of the sycamores in the water was magical.  One sycamore had fallen into the water, and created a beautiful island.

Sycamores - The seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Sycamores - The seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

 

Red Maple blossom - near the seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Red Maple blossom - near the seasonal pond of the Bocce Court Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

 

Acer rubrum

Late March here in Philly, the Red maple is in full bloom. The beautiful red haze can be seen in the woods, usually in moist areas, lowland spots near the rivers or along the tributaries.  The rich red color is not to be underestimated. A view of the whole tree in bloom is a scene of grandeur.

 

Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

 

Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

This older specimen of Red maple in bloom gives a suggestion of its growth habit in the wild. the two trees in the foreground are Ailanthus altissima, an invasive exotic tree. They appear to have been part of the invasive control program, and show signs of having been treated with a basal bark herbicide.

 

 Isabelle Dijols with Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Isabelle Dijols with Red Maple, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West PhiladelphiaÂ

We could find last years leaves underneath the tree.

  Canopy failure, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Canopy failure, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Canopy failure, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Canopy failure, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

 

Here is a total mess of Multi-flora rose, Japanese honeysuckle, Asiatic bittersweet, running rampant over a forest trying to regenerate from previous sequences of disturbance.  Only a serious human intervention will restore the forest at this point, which is what is happening just to the north of this site.

 Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

Back to focusing on the beauty of Cobbs Creek park, we are very pleased with the blooming Spicebush (Lindera benzoin).

 Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
 Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Spicebush in bloom, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

Lindera Benzoin

Far below the haze of red blooming Acer rubrum, is the yellow haze of the understory shrub Lindera benzoin, our most common native shrub in Cobbs Creek Park, Morris Park and in West Fairmount Park.  The Spicebush blooms are a spectacular sight, and they create a beautiful yellow in the understory of the woods in late March and early April. The bright yellow flowers contrast nicely with the dark bark of this stately shrub. Finding these yellow flowers in the late winter and early Spring woodland is an experience not to be missed. This is the time of the red and yellow haze in the early spring forest.

Bloodroot, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Bloodroot grows in this high quality woods, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Bloodroot grows in this high quality woods, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

This section of the Bocce Woods is the best part. It is a woodland area on a hillside that has not been highly disturbed, and has the diversity of trees that can maintain a forest canopy, and host a healthy shrub layer, as well as an understory tree layer.  We found Redbud (Cercis canadensis) in this forest.  While not absolutely sure, we think these specimens we found are original to the woodland.  We did not see them any where else in the area except in this mature wooded site.   This is an area that is unique in its undisturbed condition, and all of the efforts being made to protect it are worthwhile and necessary.

Along Cobbs Creek, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia
Along Cobbs Creek, Bocce Woods, Cobbs Creek Park, West Philadelphia

We made our way towards Cobbs Creek after admiring the magnificent stand of Bloodroot.  Cobbs Creek is a beautiful feature of drainage under siege of the urban landscape.  The dams that the authors of the Fairmount Park Master Plan recommended be removed are still in place, and the invasive vegetation has not yet been controlled or eradicated.  Most striking is the invasive Ranunculus ficaria,  Lesser celandine, which has completely covered the area around the creek, crowding out the native plants.  Also, we saw the old canes and the young shoots of  Japanese Knotweed, also a problematic invasive, recommended by the Master Plan for control. Visiting this area of Cobbs Creek Park surely is a roller coaster of sights and problems.  One minute we are wowed by the beauty of the undisturbed woods, horrified by the conditions surrounding this forest, and again, wowed by the efforts to reverse the degradation of this important forest.

The Bocce woods of the Cobbs Creek Park must be preserved and saved. For the good of all citizens of Philadelphia, as well as the integrity of the natural landscape of the area, this special forest tract contributes to the ecosystem and watershed of the Delaware river, the Darby Creek watershed, Cobbs Creek Park and West Philadelphia.

This site must be protected. All of our efforts to restore a small section of Morris Park, just one mile north and upstream of the Bocce woods are meant to be complementary.  Seeds from invasive plants we eradicate will not be washed downstream. Our removal of invasive species in Morris Park will allow native plants to grow and thrive, which will allow native species of insects and birds that can only survive with native plants, to live and thrive.  The seeds of these native plants will be carried  by water, wind and bird, eventually from Morris Park, one mile south to the Bocce Woods of Cobbs Creek Park, we hope and imagine.