Diario del proyecto Old Fall Creek School

07 de marzo de 2021

Done seeding this year

A couple of weeks ago, I sowed 8 oz of Lynda's Zena Forest mix (https://www.inaturalist.org/lists/4295630-Zena-Forest-small-seeded-grasses-and-forbs) along the north fenceline, and another 8 oz along the chain-link fence in the lower meadow. Since then, I planted another 4 oz. on the sprayed-out portion of the upper lawn.

Yesterday, on the upper-lawn patch, I scattered the few seeds I've collected from resident populations of natives in the last 2 years:
Achillea millefolia
Bromus carinatus
Chamaenerion angustifolium (Jasper-Lowell Rd at Pengra Rd)
Elymus glaucus
Erythronium grandiflorum
Iris tenax
Madia elegans
Madia gracilis(?)
Melica subulata
Potentilla gracilis
Rumex salicifolia
Wyethia angustifolia

Now it's time for patience.

Publicado el marzo 7, 2021 02:50 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

08 de febrero de 2021

planted Lynda's Zena Forest mix on bank

I bought two mixes from Lynda last fall: a "Stinger-ready" upland prairie mix, and a mix of matrix prairie species containing small-seeded grasses, annual and perennial forbs. See project lists. Yesterday I spread 20 oz. on 0.4 acres of the bank.

Publicado el febrero 8, 2021 01:52 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

First resident wildflowers of 2021

Saturday I photographed the first wildflowers of the 2021 season on my place: two snow queen plants and a toothwort, see observations.

Publicado el febrero 8, 2021 01:48 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

04 de febrero de 2021

First native seeds to sprout

See the observation photo. @tanyaharvey thinks the "bowling-pin-shaped" leaves are Clarkia amoena. Are they sprouting earlier than in previous years?

Publicado el febrero 4, 2021 03:35 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

30 de enero de 2021

Spring is coming!

I think the first few native annuals have emerged in the lower garden. About time to sow the small-seeded-grass native mix, on at least portions of three additional acres. Still not sure whether to be more aggressive with the remaining introduced species, or just seed natives over them and hope for the best. I can spot-spray if I have to, but I want to be done with broadcast herbicide applications. I'll have the option to add more native seed in later years, and indeed I plan to introduce non-matrix natives that way.

Publicado el enero 30, 2021 06:51 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

2nd launch of Old Fall Creek School project

With @brucen's generous help, I was able to start a traditional iNat project. Good thing I saved the first project journal entry.

January 18, 2021 Gotta start somewhere 8^}!
Nov. 2108: Took possession of 6.7 acres on site of old Fall Creek School, with vestiges evident around the homesite. A dozen or so mature Garry oaks (Quercus garryana) are on the place, including the iconic one at entrance: 6 ft. DBH, canopy as broad as high, probably pre-settlement age. Outside mowed area around house, ground covered in invasive alien shrub species, particularly Crataegus monogyna and Rubus bifrons; and at least 47 (by current count) other introduced graminoids, forbs and woody species. I was astonished to find that despite all the weeds, at least 108 (by current count) native plant species are extant, in some cases as single individuals. Fragaria virginiana ssp. platypetala is dominant throughout. Camassia quamash ssp. maxima and C. leichtlinii ssp. suksdorfii are both abundant, as are Brodiaea elegans ssp. hooveri, Potentilla gracilis var. gracilis, Prunella vulgaris ssp. lanceolata and Sidalcea malviflora ssp. virgata. There is a diverse Carex component. And so forth: See project lists.

Not long after I moved in, my dear near neighbor @TanyaHarvey suggested I contact the Restoration Projects Manager for the Middle Fork Willamette Watershed Council, one Audrey Squires. Audrey secured a $11,300 OWEB grant to restoring a "legacy oak" site. Starting in July 2019, Audrey's contractor Rosario Franco of Aumsville used a brush masticator on a bobcat, to grind the woody invasives down flat, while his crew sprayed the larger stumps with triclopyr choline, as Vastlan. That left a lot of woody debris in all size classes on the ground, albeit mostly flat and easily traversed. He and his crew returned four more times to broadcast-apply generic clopyralid and clethodim. I paid for one more broadcast application of fluazifop-p-butyl, as Fusilade DX, by Glass Tree Care and Spray Service of Eugene after the grant money ran out. The result of all that treatment is that I don't have an immediate problem with most weeds in the Asteraceae, Fabaceae or Poaceae, and some of the natives in those families appear to have survived. There are still areas dense with weeds not sensitive to clopyralid, however. The herbicides that kill those, kill natives too.

In October 2020, I spot-sprayed in the 'oak patch' with either glyphosate or triclopyr, trying to preserve native sedges especially, while not risking the oaks. Six weeks later, I used a belly-grinder to seed about an acre under the oaks; and also the spring-seep in the northern rocky 'bank' between the upper and lower meadows (a spot already rich in showy natives), with a mix of grasses and perennial and annual forbs I bought from Lynda Boyer, "The Prairie Godmother of the Willamette Valley". The mix contains Danthonia californica, which requires 12 weeks of winter stratification to germinate.

Since then, I've spot-sprayed the southern bank with glyphosate or triclopyr, prior to seeding with a mix containing only small-seeded grasses. FWIW, that brings this brief summary up to Jan. 18, 2021. I can't promise frequent updates!

Publicado el enero 30, 2021 05:50 TARDE por karl65 karl65 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

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