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Last Saturday afternoon I dropped in on an Ann Arbor Parks & Recreation Department Workday at Bandemer Park. Bandemer Park is along the west shore of Argo Pond, almost under the M-14 Bridge. It's a park just under development. It's not exactly a pristine piece of land. It was originally a stockyard, and then was owned by the Transportation Department who used it as a dumping ground for various construction rubble. The worst of the rubble has now been buried onsight, and development as a park is under way: roads, parking, picnic tables, trails, foot bridges. I'm on a mailing list for these things that I got on through the Sierra Club, but it turned out that every other volunteer there was from a group called "PVC" or "Professional Volunteer Corp" (no, none of them were able to explain the name). It's a group for single adults that does volunteer work of various sorts around town. Seemed a very nice set of people. There were also several Parks & Recreation people there to oversee and direct the effort. The focus of this workday was trail-cutting and invasive species removal. Several short loop trails had been marked out with flags, and someone had been through with a chain saw to cut the larger trees in the way. Our job was to go through cutting the smaller stuff with long-handled loppers, drag all the cut stuff out to the roadside, and stack it. The more hazardous parts of the job (cutting with chain saws, running the cut stuff through chippers, painting herbacide on the stumps of cut plants) are left to parks people. What we did was fairly light work (though definately exercise) and required no noticable skills. I really enjoyed the afternoon. It's nice to work with a set of friendly folks on a useful job. Munchies were provided. In addition to trail cutting, we'd go after any invasives we happened to come across. In fact, nearly all of the trees and shrubs cut for the trail were invasives too. The main invasive species here are buckthorn and honeysuckle. Both are rather pretty plants, still green late in the fall, with lots and lots of pretty berries on them. They were imported as decorative yard plants, and because of their massive seed production, soon spread out into the wild areas, especially rather disturbed and stressed wild areas like Bandemer. In Bandemer you can see whole forests of buck- thorn and honeysuckle where virtually nothing else grows. Normally the native species would do better against the invasives, since the are more tolerant of fires and of the annual flooding of the river, but neither of those things happens any more. So instead we see these few imported species eradicating everything else. So the idea is to try to undo some of the mess made by human intervention with further human intervention. I'm afraid that's the story in conservation these days, and we aren't likely to get away from it soon. So the policy is to cut out invasives, plant natives, do controlled burns, and try to re-establish a richer, native ecosystem. I had a nice chance to see a contrast to the badly degraded wilderness at Bandemer this sunday when I joined the Sierra Club for a botanist guided tour of a little patch of woods along the shore of the Huron in the Lower Huron Metro park. There are in excess of 54 species of woody plants growing there, with very, very few invasives. There are more species of plant in that little plot of land than in all of northern and western Europe. There are lots of gorgeious old trees that are among the biggest in the state, centuries old. I've never been a big plant freek, but that was a fascinating tour. The contrast between this and Bandemer really helped me understand what is meant by a "degraded forest" and by "loss of biodiversity." Incidentally, the Metro-Parks are planning to put a golf course into that bit of woods. Anyway, I really liked the work day at Bandemer. There is another one tomorrow (October 28) at Bird Hills from 10:00 to 1:00 (oops, conflict with Grexwalk) and on Sunday (Oct 29) from 12:00 to 3:00 (oops, conflict with Grexpedition). The first meets at the Barton Dam parking lot and the second at the Newport Road parking lot. Both of these will be mainly Sierra Club things, since the Sierra Club has adopted Bird Hills. You can call Triona Mortell at the Leslie Science Center (996-3266) if you want to get more info on Workdays, or get on their mailing list. Most of the workdays are backed by some volunteer group or another, and the Parks Department is encouraging groups to adopt parks. Probably they want to have some group organize getting volunteers there, so there will be some one to work with the parks people who come out there on the weekends. But they don't mind at all if people who aren't with the group show up. I was wondering if there would be enough interest among Grex users to think about doing some workdays, or even adopting a park (maybe even jointly with Arbornet and HVCN). I intend to do more of these myself.
25 responses total.
Thats a neat idea. You can't telnet to it, but rather walk into it. I like that. It's an attraction to the long distance Grex members who make the pilgrimage to the holy city...
I missed the Grexwalk to go cut a trail in Bird Hills. It'll be connection the Barton Park parking lot up into Bird Hills so folks won't be walking along Bird Rd (not that Bird Rd is such a high traffic street). This bit of land was apparently last used as a police shooting range. There are some cool old falling down buildings back in there buried in all the buckthorns. One is an old pumphouse -- a little brick blockhouse crowned with a steel girder tower with the remains of a big huge electric pump inside. It'll be demolished (attractive nuisance, they say). The electric pump is probably from the thirties, but someone claimed that there had probably been a steam pump in there before. Ann Arbor used to get most of it's water from wells in that area. Rather few people showed up for the workday. The Parks people very nearly outnumbered the volunteers. Got a lot done anyway though. They always spend the last half hour doing a guided walk through the area. I haven't really seen that much of Bird Hills Park before. It's nice, but pretty far from a natural state.
Did anyone take pictures of the pumphouse? Curious what the destination of the water was. I'm lazy - where is Bird Park. BTW, I like your idea of having the on-line systems adopt a park or nature area. Seems to have a certain Ying/Yang quality which appeals to me. <adbarr wants janc to slow down - hard to keep up with all this IE.>
I used to do a lot of work in Bird Hills. Not organized work, but I would be biking in there and see things that needed to be done and do them. I gave up on Bird Hills after they banned bikes (and violated the Open Meetings Act in the process).
I've got some pictures of the pumphouse... I discovered that area a couple years ago and had some fun exploring it all. :)
I have no pictures. If you park at the Barton Park parking area off Huron River Drive and walk up Bird Road from there, the area we were working in will be on your right (the main section of Bird Hills Park that most people walk in is on the left). Finding the pumphouse and other old buildings is easy -- someone just cut a trail right past them. I had the impression they were going to be demolished in the next couple weeks. They aren't all that great, but it's kind of cool to find such stuff lurking in the woods. The Sierra Club kinda fell down on the job on yesterdays workday. They only got about five or six people out there. I think ten or twelve would make more sense. Theoretically, we have the communications needed to organize these sorts of things and get people out to do them. This is something that requires no special skills, and is actually rather pleasant and satisfying. I was thinking that by doing it jointly with Arbornet, we could actually spice it up with a bit of friendly competition. The thing to start would probably be just to do one workday, see how people like it. Sure, it makes no particular sense to mix computers and city park work, but lots of groups pick up charities (I believe the Science Fiction fans do a lot of fundraising for the blind).
I'm interested in helping, and also going on Sunday Grexpeditions... It's jsut that the last 2 weeks I've been busy Sunday. Next week should be different!
tht's wahat i keep saying....but if they want to pay me to come to work...well that wins...
Re 6 - mixing high-tech afficiandos and park clearing/cleaning seems balanced, somehow.
Ahh, one of my favorite stomping grounds exposed to the masses. Oh well. I use to explore the old firing range / pump house once or twice a year. Very few people knew about it and was pretty much left alone. I'm sure those old buildings would be a problem once exposed. The old pump house seems to be build on an artisian well since there was always watter flowing out of it when I was there. The electric pump motor has been stripped of its field windings leaving only the stator. Cool place to explore. I'll miss it.
Sorry.
Don't be sorry! Another part of me feels it should all be cleaned up before someone gets hurt.
Agora 82 has been linked to Environment 33. The issue of the golf course "planned" for the very old flood-plain forest at Lower Huron Metropark, described in #0, is also the subject of Item 20 in the environment cf (responses #2ff and #9, in particular).
I don't like the idea of putting in a golf course in this flood-plain. The whole thing from the monoculture, Chem-Lawn field to people chasing balls in little go-karts (Excuse me. Exercise?!) is pretty sensless to me. Why don't they just but in a bunch of small greens scattered throughout those old trees if they just have to play golf there. No karts either. Would be a lot more chalenging!
Huron-Clinton Metro Parks considers themselves a recreation provider, not a conservation agency. They really, really like golf courses. Seven of the 13 metroparks already have golf courses and there'd probably be more but some parks (like Delhi) don't have room. Why do they like golf courses? Because the produce lots of income. Of course this flood-plain forest is a lousy place for a golf course. The metroparks already have some golf- courses on flood plains. Guess what? They flood. This time they will carefully place the last nine holes on the lower sections, so that even when they flood you will have nine holes high and dry. Still, on the whole one might think that one could find a better place for a golf course someplace in the area. There are so plots of land of no special natural value around.
The Lower Huron Metropark floodplain forest is the home to several MIchigan threatened plant species. They would be trampled in any heavy use of the area, if they aren't poisoned first in trying to maintain the "greens". They have already mowed a path through a part of the forest so the Metropark Commissioners wouldn't get their shoes damp when they took a stroll there. You should read environment cf responses noted in #13 above, if you can stomach tales of bureaucratic arrogance and disdain for the public they "serve".
This is a great item!!! I would be very interested in helping to
restore this area if it's someplace I can get to from Ypsi without a car.
Also is there someone I can write to, call, e-mail or fax to oppose
this golf course? Building a golf course on a flood plane is unexcusable.
People reading this item might also be interested in my item # 21
on the disappearence of public space in the U.S.
A coalition is forming to oppose the golf course plan for the floodplain forest at Lower Huron Metropark. Organizations like the Sierra Club, Audubon Society, Michigan Natural Areas Council, and others, will be involved. If you are a member of one of these, you can learn of their plans for member participation (some of these groups have already held field trips to the forest). I will continue to post relevant items from the MNAC newsletter in environment cf (the whole newsletter is also on file). A group of naturalists have taken a look at natural areas in all the other H-C Metroparks, and I heard that they declared that there is *nothing* elsewhere of equal significance to the forest in Lower Huron Metropark.
This really looks like a Nature Conservancy job to me. H-C Metroparks is a fine organization, but they aren't equipped to do conservation of a plot of land like this. They are a recreation provider, and since usage fees are a key finance source, they are strongly motivated to have their land earn money. I think an attempt should be made to move that northwest section of the park to some group that will run it as a preserve, possibly providing Metroparks with some other land in compensation.
I don't know of any further workdays scheduled. I'll post here when I get the next mailing.
Re #19: TNC would not touch this. If it were private land, they might well attempt to buy it, but then they would transfer title (with easements, perhaps) to a state agency for managment. The most appropriate state agency is, believe it or not, the Huron-Clinton Metropark Authority. Genevieve Gillete was a moving force in founding the HCMA, and her purpose was to *both* provide recreation and protect natural areas. What has happened is the the HCMA commissioners have lost sight of the founding purposes. They need to be reminded, or forced, to act upon the purposes of the Metroparks. This is an advocacy challenge, which the TNC does not undertake. However the Michigan Natural Features Inventory, which was essentially created - and funded - in Michigan by TNC is also involved now, and they have vast "networking" resources, which will bring in even more group to the coalition. Think of this as a gathering storm. What is still missing is a means of public mobilization, which would be one objective of the coalition.
The Ann Arbor Parks and Recreation Department will be holding the final
volunteer workday for the season this weekend:
Time: Saturday, December 9, 11:00 am to 2:00 pm
Place: Furstenberg Park
Furstenberg is a park directly adjacent to Gallup Park. It's entrance is
right across Fuller Road from Huron High School. It has been closed for the
last few months as they are building a connecting bridge into Gallup Park and
doing some work to try to restore it to more of a native oak savana.
The workday will consist mostly of hauling invasives plants that have been
cut out of the woods and stacking them for chipping. Neither any skill nor
any unusual physical fitness is required. Dress for the weather and for
getting dirty. Bring work gloves, if you have them (they do have spares).
They will provide food and hot drinks, and will do a tour of the area,
describing the restoration efforts in progress there.
If you plan to go, it helps to phone Catriona Mortell (the Volunteer Steward-
ship Coordinator in Natural Areas Preservation) at 996-3266 so they can plan
how much food to bring and such-like. But nobody will complain if you just
show up.
(Yes, this conflicts with the Grex Walk. Oh well.)
If the Grex Walk still leaves from Gallup, perhaps this would make a good stop.
How did this go? I would imagine that the weather kept many of your volunteers indoors.
Actually, it was one of the better turnouts I've seen. Probably about a dozen volunteers showed up. It was plenty warm enough as long as you kept working, but it wasn't much of a day for standing around. We stacked a good size mountain of cut buckthorn and honeysuckle, but still hardly made a dent in what was there.
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