Crow Hill and Land Management

The 26th Annual Meeting of the Greater Worcester Land Trust was held this afternoon under a tent set up across from the Ecotarium, on Harrington Way in Worcester.  The science museum abuts Crow Hill, a property which has been protected by the Land Trust for many years.  A recent sale and purchase increased the acreage conserved around Crow Hill to around 50 acres, this in the heart of a major urban area.

Shortly after we gathered at 4 pm, GWLT Executive Director Colin Novick led us on a hike to the summit of Crow Hill, stopping every so often to talk about aspects of the property, such as the following:

Geology.  Crow Hill, rising to a height of about 650 feet in elevation, is a drumlin, a glacier-created landform common in southern New England.  The soil is mostly clay.

Fauna.  Across Harrington Way, the state-listed Orange Sallow Moth (Pyrrhia aurantiago) has been reported; its host plant is false foxglove.  Sightings at Crow Hill include osprey, turkey vultures, warblers, deer, and coyote.  Consider that US Poet Laureate Stanley Kunitz, a Worcester native, adopted a bobcat kitten he found in the woods near Vernon Hill, about two miles from here, in the early years of the last century.  Gazing at the densely populated neighborhoods surrounding the area, one wonders how this diversity of animals is possible, but an aerial view, such as one provided by Google Maps, hints at the answer: railroad tracks almost encircle the area, thus providing a pathway clear of houses, cars, and people, for these creatures to use as their migration corridor.

Flora.  Oak is dominant, with aspen as an early successional species.  Blueberry bushes are abundant in the understory, as well as goldenrod and asters.

History.  The soil here, though not optimal for that purpose, was once used to make bricks; remnants of the brickworks are still visible.  The laborers in these types of industries were often French-Canadian immigrants; they are one of the many ethnic groups that populated Worcester and transformed it first into a manufacturing center and then into a distribution hub.

Ecology.  This is a fire-adapted landscape, which during colonial times was much more prevalent in the Commonwealth than it is now.  For example, the Heath Hen (Tympanuchus cupido cupido), which went extinct on Martha’s Vineyard in 1932 and whose habitat was “scrubby heathland barrens,” was frequently observed on the Boston Common.  In fact, the Nipmuc tribe, which occupied great swaths of central Massachusetts, had words in their language for “prairie hen” (the Heath Hen is considered a distinctive subspecies of the Greater Prairie Chicken).  Native Americans, we’ve come to realize, were enthusiastic fire-starters.

After we enjoyed a potluck supper and cook-out, GWLT President Allen Fletcher conducted a short business meeting.  Following a presentation by Colin on projects completed during the past twelve months, US Forest Service botanist and ecologist Tom Rawinski took the floor as featured speaker.  I’ll summarize the gist of his remarks below.

Land Stewardship Lessons.  We may be falling short in this area, particularly with respect to what he termed “eco-environmental gentrification,” by which he meant the human tendency to abdicate responsibility for managing the landscape.  The prime example of this disastrous short-sightedness is the problem of overabundance of white-tailed deer, which are wreaking havoc on our Northeastern ecosystems.  Human beings, he said, are part of nature, and we can’t remove ourselves from nature and believe we’re helping out, because there will surely be unintended consequences.  Just as we should be willing to shoot deer, we should also be willing to set fires in landscapes like Crow Hill.  If we agree to “re-wild” ourselves, we will also be re-wilding Nature.

History in the Berkshires

My sister is vacationing in the Berkshires this week and invited me to join her for a day of sightseeing near Lee, the town where she is staying.  We started out this morning around 9:30, with our first stop in the neighboring town of Lenox.

Ventfort Hall bills itself the Museum of the Gilded Age, and it does have a fascinating history.  Built in 1893, it was the home of Sarah Morgan, sister of financier J P Morgan, and one of about seventy-five “cottages” that became summer homes for wealthy Gilded Age families.  The two docents who gave our group a guided tour were very knowledgeable about all aspects of the house, the families who lived here, and the restoration project that is ongoing; the website includes a lot of good information about the property, and I recommend it.

After our two-hour tour, we were both hungry, so we stopped for lunch at a small cafe at the intersection of Church and Housatonic Streets, then proceeded on our way to Pittsfield.  We  made our way along Holmes Street to Arrowhead, the home of Herman Melville, which is now a house museum.  Tours are given hourly, so at 2 pm, we began a walk through the house with a volunteer docent, who was also very good on Melville and his years here in the Berkshires.  We could look out his study window and see the same view he did when he worked on Moby Dick, and I must say, the mountain ridge did look like the silhouette of a whale!

The next town over from Pittsfield, going east on Route 9, is Dalton, which most people have never heard of, but it is where Crane and Company manufactures paper for all US currency as well as for other products.  On the premises is a small museum, the Crane Museum of Papermaking, which was our destination.  We watched a short video on papermaking, and a staff person was available to answer any questions.  I happen to be a fan of paper, but like everyone else, I was fascinated by the money angle, particularly as it relates to counterfeiting.  As is the case with electronic records, the currency manufacturers are constantly trying to outwit the paper hackers with even more ingenious security features, such as plastic strips embedded in the paper, color-shifting ink, micro-printing, watermarks, and fluorescence.  But the easiest way to detect a counterfeit bill is by feel.  Because the paper used is a mixture of mostly cotton fibers and flax, it has a distinctive texture.

Our last stop of the day was the Cherry Cottage in Stockbridge.  My sister had arranged with the property’s caretaker for us to have a private tour, which I really appreciated.  I had never heard of this place, but I think it only made the news within the past few years, when a documentary about the house began showing at film festivals.  The house’s current owner, Hans Morris, restored the house and commissioned producer and director Dave Simonds to tell the story of the house as it relates to the history of the region and the country.  I haven’t seen the film but am hoping it becomes available to rent or that it continues to be screened locally or on a PBS station.

It was 6:30 pm when we returned to the resort, after a long but satisfying day of immersion in the centuries-long history of this area.