A blooming event for an American Chestnut planted about ten years ago in the Solomon Gardens in Monson, Massachusetts.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
This tree has been tended yearly by Sanguine Root staff  Sean Solomon and Isabelle Dijols.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
On this hot and humid July day, pollinating insects are found on the numerous flowers.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
This tree has gone through various stages of flowering, fruiting and blight, being reduced from a small tree to a small shrub and then back again over the years. This trunk appears unscathed by the blighting fungus, however, the bark is disfigured a few feet below this spot, pictured above.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
Young leaves unfurl at the end of the branches.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
Sadly, the tree will most likely die back after it produces fruit, being that it will use most of its resources in this process, leaving it vulnerable to the fungus.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators. www.thesanguineroot.com
By next year we will be cutting off all of these branches so the still-living roots can grow back up, possibly flowering again in a few years.
American Chestnut, Leaf, Flower, stems, bark and Pollinators
The Virginia Bluebell, Mertensia virginica, at Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve, as fresh and blue as can be!
Winters are so much longer than Spring, so we are looking for ways to prolong Spring, to extend it somehow, so we can appreciate all of the changes, each one at a time, flower by flower, and every bright blue day and every rainshower!
The Virginia Bluebells on the hillside, in the Susquehanna afternoon. We found the bluebells growing in massive quantities on the Susquehanna floodplain, along with the white variety and the pink varieties, all naturally occurring. We found Virginia bluebells growing alongside Mayapples and Spring Beauties, Dutchman’s Breeches and of course Trilliums. We found them blooming along the Schuylkill and the Delaware, and blooming in our own back and front yards, where we planted them, and now they are spreading and re-seeding themselves, covering once barren ground, damaged by invasives and disturbances, these cultivated Bluebells are now creating Spring, and extending it across the weary and torn urban soil.
We come to Shenks Ferry and we are reminded of our own yards full of Bluebells, how hard we have worked to repair the degraded gardens and restore them to a state of natural beauty. We gain confirmation of the conditions of natural beauty in a place like Shenks Ferry. These are conditions we want to have more of in our lives, close to us as the garden is, because natural beauty does not have to be something that is visited upon, when it can so easily be lived in, even in cities.
An inviting path through Spring itself- a walk into Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve.
It is perhaps especially in cities that the natural world can not only be preserved, but maintained- preserved by neglect to some degree, where agricultural practices have ceased in favor of development, leaving fragments of land untouched altogether-and maintained by urban dwellers aware of the needs of a natural area and eager to volunteer their efforts at upholding it.
The suburban model of land use is antithetical to natural lands conservation. Vast portions of land are dedicated to lawns. In effect, the suburbs use up much more natural lands than do cities per person. Housing development is consuming more and more land by the day. Â Maintaining these lawns requires fuel resources that require more destruction to the environment. These lawns do not contribute to the natural ecology of the region and if homeowners do not maintain them, often they can be fined!
Driving to Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve we pass miles upon miles of mowed lawns and monolithic agriculture and the unmanaged lands we pass are just dense with invasive vines and weeds.
Arriving at Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve is so pleasant and inviting. It has that Home aspect to it, as if we are at a place we can relax and enjoy the beauty of the flowers, the walk and the views.
It is really neat to see all of the same plants we have in our  Philadelphia gardens, growing in a natural setting.
What has become very clear in our travels throughout the region in the past few years, in combination with our restoration efforts in Morris Park and our gardening adventures (most importantly), is that the beauty of a wildflower preserve can be re-created in our yards in a simple, easy way with no complications. Â In fact, the pictures in the above photographs, for the most part, could have been taken in our Philadelphia rowhouse back yards, because we have have planted and cultivated the same wildflowers. We have been able to bring this enchanting springtime forest of blooming wildflowers home to our yards. We were able to purchase these plants at the local native plant nursery, and the numerous plant sales that happen every spring. Â Like-minded friends with native plant gardens have also been generous with us, Â sharing their plants.
From lawn to garden, the richness and beauty that this transformation culminates into when the birds come with their sweet springtime songs and bright colors as they feed upon and inhabit the garden is completed. This beauty is made from your hand that sculpts the rich garden from the desolate lawn. These exquisite songbirds that grace our soundscape in the early morning are completely dependent on the plants that grow in Shenks Ferry wildflower preserve- a stunning array of plants, trees and shrubs, all of them indigenous to the region, ecologically relevant and biologically connected to an ecosystem of thousands of species of plants and insects, all of them having co-existed here for millennia. Â What a better place for the songbirds to rely upon for their life’s sustenance than the place their species has been going to for millennia. They are also potentially dependent on plants that you may have in your garden!
It is now possible to quantify which plants host certain species and which do not, and this creates a system of ranking, where certain plants may be nearly useless to their contribution to a habitat and some may be even harmful, and many being very productive, interacting with and sustaining many species of insects and the songbirds that rely upon those insects, for one example. As it turns out the plants that do the most harm or are nearly useless are from other continents and have evolved in an ecosystem with non-relevant species than the one they were recently introduced to.
What happened to the birds who relied upon the area of a suburban development that bulldozed the ecosystem and built houses with lawns? Â As with all of the plants, possibly birds also experienced something called extirpation. Extirpation is something like extinction in that it means that a specific area of land or a region has experienced a loss of a species. Â For any given area, an extirpation is very close to extinction. For a species to return to that area, the conditions would have to return to a former state, and hopefully that species extirpated would still be around to re-inhabit that area.
This can happen and it has. However, often an area that has experienced an extirpation needs to be restored to a state that can support the extirpated species, which will return as soon as it can. This is where we come in, we humans, gardeners, lovers of nature, wondering what we can do to help out, possibly questioning the lawns, thinking about ecological sustainability, loving songbirds, flowers, springtime, wishing we could be at Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve!
Reversing extirpation
We can do it! Humans have created the conditions that have resulted in extirpations of species, we can also be the agents of change in the restoration. At Shenks Ferry, we can see the great variety of plant species before our eyes.
Extirpation is often granted status at the state level, such as the species that have been extirpated from New Jersey. Considering that states have many sizes and can cover multiple ecological regions, it could be beneficial to the understanding of this process to view it on a smaller scale, especially if an extirpation truly occurs in a county, township, small park or natural area or a specific piece of private property, these need to be measured and given status. Consider Morris Park, Philadelphia, where sections of the park have been infested with invasives for a long enough time to crowd out the native flora, to the point that these plants no longer grow in the area they used to. These plants were locally extirpated from their ecosystem.
By removing the invasives in these areas, we have witnessed the self re-introduction of native species of plants, which now thrive in these formerly uninhabitable areas. Species such as Spicebush, the sole breeding-ground plant for the Spicebush Swallowtail butterfly, which now grows where it did not before.  This is where our garden and perhaps your garden comes in: after we cleared away the invasives in the garden and planted Lonicera sempervirens, the native red-blooming honeysuckle, which does grow in Morris Park, just next door, the Ruby Throated hummingbird began to visit our garden for the first time in our recollection!  We now have planted the native scarlet-red blooming Lobelia cardinalis, the Red Lobelia or Cardinal Flower, and the spring ephemeral, Red Columbine Aquilegia canadensis,  as well as  Bee Balm, Monarda didyma,  and we have encouraged the tubular, red-flowered  Campsis radicans vine to grow on a large brick garden wall that was crowded with the invasive Porcelain berry.
Except for the invasive exotic Porcelain berry vine, These are all plants the hummingbirds need for their survival.
We have witnessed the Hummingbirds visit these plants in our yards numerous times. Where before we had these plants there were no birds and now there are these Hummingbirds, we can only surmise that we have reversed the extirpation of this species in our own backyard. That and the Black Oaks, Tulip Poplars, Bloodroot, spicebush and the spicebush swallowtail butterflies that are now living in the area of the Park that was nothing but the invasives Multi-flora rose and Garlic mustard!
Reversing extirpation can be done, and it is so much fun and very easy, one little bit of place at a time…
The sun has begun to set in the beautiful Lower Susquehanna Valley, and we have chosen Shenks Ferry Wildflower preserve as the location to enjoy the golden light of Spring. Hillsides covered with blooming spring flowers and the canopy of trees green with the promise of a lush summer ahead, it is very quiet except for the sweet sounds of a few songbirds.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The native Azalea blooms in Morris Park. We have been waiting all year for this one to bloom, monitoring its buds, and by watching them get bigger, we were able to determine that there were flowers on the way. The bloom time came earlier than usual and was quick.
We have been tasked to collect seed  from this specimen, which has been ascertained to most likely have native provenance to this site. It is difficult to know for sure. We have found lists of plants planted in previous decades, this one not on what we found.
The seed will be passed on to the Philadelphia  Department of Parks and Recreation which has developed a program to propagate native plants from a seed source that is local to the area.  If the seeds can be propagated into plants, and these plants are introduced into suitable locations in the city parks that have suffered degradation and species loss from over disturbance, the local provenance of these plantings have a greater chance of adaptation and survival.
If effect, we look to the least disturbed sites in the Fairmount Park system for the ingredients for a solution.
There lies a recipe, a genetic blueprint for environmental recovery, within the surviving plants. Some of these plants are only a few specimens on a site, as is the case with the Rhododendron pericyclymenoides, our Pinxterbloom Azalea, which has just finished blooming in Morris Park.
The least disturbed sites are the ones that need the most attention for environmental restoration. That way, when the most disturbed sites are addressed, there can be a seed source available that can provide plantings that will have the greatest chance of sustainability in the long term. Â There is no better plant that the one with the genetic makeup of the same plants that have existed on or near the same site for thousands or millions of years.
It is of utmost importance to save and propagate the original and surviving plants of  Philadelphia, the same plants that existed in our forests before the arrival of the Europeans.
After an intensive study of geology and the chronological demarcations involved, especially in the field of paleontology, and a botanical assessment  involving the species identified in many sites within the Fairmount Park System, it has become overtly apparent of  drastic loss of  native flora in many areas in an extremely short period of time.
Too much habitat has been lost to the disturbance of the existing condition of the habitat and to the resulting proliferation of invasive species in the past 250 years. Â Not all of this habitat is destroyed, and if we can save the existing fragments and use these fragments to save and restore other natural areas which will sustain many other species of birds and associated wildlife in the City of Philadelphia, than we are on the right track, and all of these efforts need to be supported.
Really, what is at stake is the genetics of our fair city- we want to save the true genetic map of the lifeforms that have lived here for millenia- and we want to use this genetic resource to save and restore our parks and natural areas. Â It is the most common sense approach- we have the plants of our area, ideally we would want to use them instead of planting ones that have a genetic history of an area far removed from Philadelphia, which at this time we have little choice. Often nursery propagated plants are from seed sources much different than our specific region, and many of these plants are planted in our parks in efforts of environmental restoration. These native plants are our best choice given the alternatives we have at this time, and planting them is the best practice. Â But in the long term, will these plants survive?
We hope that the program to assess the plants of a truly local provenance and then propagating and re-establishing them in Fairmount Park will flourish and succeed.
Protecting the few specimens of this native shrub has been a priority for us, and there are invasive species that threaten the  native azalea shrubs within a few feet away that we monitor and control to the best of our ability.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
This shrub the Rhododendron periclymenoides, may very well be a direct descendant of the pre-European  Philadelphia, growing here in Morris Park.  There are many other trees and herbaceous plants growing around it, which also may be the true hereditary species of original provenance.  White oak, Solomon’s Seal, Joe Pye weed, low-bush blueberry, Starry campion, American Chestnut, American Beech, all of which fit together in the setting.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The sense of place in a natural setting is a precious thing to behold, and we have it here in Morris Park.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The very concept of a genetic blueprint for a very specific geographic region like the City of Philadelphia has been for us a eye-opening experience.  We think about the plant specimens collected  in the early 1800s and preserved at the Academy of Natural Sciences.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Now there is an inclination to save the forests, meadows and wetlands of the City Of Philadelphia, save the natural areas, save the context, the place. If we want the animals, birds and insects to survive, we must save the plants. Â Saving the plants is a great starting point to preserving an ecosystem.
Its actually the easiest solution, the plants are the key to the city.
The plants can help us in our efforts to restore degraded areas and they can create natural areas over time. Often, environmental restoration requires the reintroduction of plants. Â If we know of these plants to be of a local seed source, than we are really on the right track.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia plants will restore Philadelphia’s natural lands, with a lot of help from the citizens, the volunteers, the concerned communities. Â The Philadelphia Department of Parks and Recreation has created a program to save the genetics of our city, and to use this amazing resource to restore our natural areas. Hopefully this program will survive and flourish, as we wish our local natural areas and our identity.
Pinxterbloom azalea, Morris Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.