The Pound Ridge Land Conservancy Green Spaces www.prlc.net P.O. Box 173 Pound Ridge, NY 10576 914-372-1290 Armstrong Education Center 1361 Old Post Road Pound Ridge, NY 10576 914-205-3533 info@prlc.net Private Non-Profit Organization Preserving Pound Ridge Lands Forever Spring 2015 Upcoming Featured Events - Armstrong Education Center 2015 Fall and Winter Calendar We have over a dozen events scheduled from now through the end of the year. See the Events section on our website and our Online Calendar of Events for full event listings and more information. www.prlc.net Workshops and Events Mixing Edibles and Ornamentals in Garden Design Sunday, July 12th 1-3p. Join special guest Xenia D’Ambrosi of Sweet Earth Co. local to Pound Ridge to learn about beautiful garden design that mixes edibles with native ornamentals and supports important pollinators and wildlife. Nature Education and Play for the Whole Family! Sunday, August 9th 2-4p. Take this lazy Sunday afternoon and turn it into pure fun and games! From free-range outdoor discovery to board games and apps, let’s talk and discover what engages young minds to learn about nature in ways that are engaging, spirited and collaborative. Botanical Photography: How to Capture that Perfect Subject. Sat., Sept. 12th 3-5p. PR’s own Gail Jankus has captured images of over 200 species of wildflowers and an equal number of garden plants. We’ll take a good look around us at the Clark Preserve and explore how to capture best the variety of plants that appear in their autumn glory. Guided Walks and Hikes Visit the rare Isaacson Fen Saturday, July 18th 10-12 noon. A Fen is an oasis for wildlife where humans rarely tread. We’ll take a moderate walking tour of the surrounding landscape not usually open to the public. Culminating Invasive Species Awareness Week, we’ll work briefly to wrap up our season to control the spread of the Giant reed otherwise known as Phragmites. Annual Mushroom Foray at Clark Saturday, October 24th 10a-12 noon. Be immersed in the magical world of mushrooms and learn how to explore PRLC’s protected preserves safely finding these often miniature and sometimes sculptural treasurers. Explore the local Geology of the Bye Preserve Sat., Dec. 5th 10a-12 noon. Come face-to-face with the geologic history of PR on this guided hike where the forest is dominated by hemlock growing from thin soils between patches of exposed bedrock. Volunteer Work Sessions in PRLC’s Preserves Gifts from the Garden Saturday, September 26th 10a-12 noon. Harvest and Winter Planting Opportunity. Gather in the harvest from the Armstrong’s permaculture-style Mandala garden, prepare the hoop house for colder weather crops and learn about season extending additions to your garden. Prep home-grown harvest goodies for winter storage. Maintaining Halle Ravine Preserve’s Trails Saturday October 3rd 10a-12 noon. Join local volunteers to help limit soil erosion along the trails and control the spread of invasive species- two actions that protect water quality in the ravine and downstream. Native Plant Propagation & Beehive Seasonal Maintenance Sat., Nov. 7th 10a-12 noon. Learn about PRLC’s ongoing preserve restoration projects. In the course of our field work, instruction will be given on how to collect and process seed and cuttings of select plants, late fall treatment of planting areas and beehive maintenance for an upcoming, productive spring. Private Non-Profit Organization Preserving Pound Ridge Lands Forever Spring 2015 President’s Message… [Inspired by a Feb 8th 2015 NYT op-ed, “How to be Invisible” by Akiko Busch author of The Incidental Steward: Reflections on Citizen Science.] www.prlc.net Board of Directors Elyse Arnow Brill President Deborah Sherman Vice President Michael Kagan Treasurer Steve Greenbaum Secretary Jim Evans Josh Fischer Cynthia Forrester Albert Gunnison Andy Karpowich Ken Okamoto Colin Rudd Krista Munger Land Steward Our Preserves Clark Carolin’s Grove Halle Ravine Russell Bye Richards Thalheim Isaacson Della Torre Fancher Meadow Goldfein Robert Whitehead Armstrong Honey Hollow Sand Schwartz Old Stone Hill Laurel Ponds Preserve The Pound Ridge Land Conservancy is a 501 (C)(3) nonprofit organization tem— including its water, soils health, undeveloped natural spaces and its critical flora making up the diverse habitat needed for other living things to prosper along with ourselves— is the basis of our work with local landowners and their families. Our 2015 request for funds from NYSCPP was approved. We asked for an amount we could handle to continue our work creating resiliency in our varied protected habitats as a small community-based organization supported mostly by our neighbors. We do not wish to grow beyond our means and hope only to dig deeper and do what we do better. In fact, PRLC was awarded a second grant of 5K to conduct a facilitated organizational assessment of our current competencies and strategic planning processes aligned with National Land Trust Alliance published Standards and Practices. It should be an interesting ride! You can help of course. Join others in our community including local private foundations to financially support our work. Become a member in whatever amount is right for you and your family. Take a look at our website where we capture some of our learnings and disseminate them for other’s benefit, and sign up for our monthly ebulletin on our home page, giving you first-hand knowledge of upcoming events and latest news. By participating, understand firsthand how we tie programming to individual learning and accomplishment, through our internship and volunteer programs, partnerships and workshop opportunities. Join us for a quiet hike where our staff will follow your lead and spur your curiosity to learn more. Don’t underestimate your expertise or energy which is needed to provide continuing community leadership on PRLC’s board of directors and working committees. “Invisibility” is important in some respects but not when it comes to supporting us or being involved! For those of you who have stepped forward to do this rewarding work, thank you. …” when circumstance confers invisibility upon us, perhaps it is something to appreciate and even welcome, as some iteration of the small imprint, low-impact living it makes sense to aspire to. Or possibly as a more profound poise, a fuller appreciation for our place in the greater scheme of things”. …Akiko Busch. As Akiko points out in this op-ed piece, we live in a time and place where personal display is valued and recognition is most often derived from outward appearance and demonstrable effectiveness and influence. Akiko continues … “that we are of a larger world and that our survival depends on knowing this… is not a bad thing to be reminded of“… as our human footprint continues to wreak havoc with natural and environmental systems. PRLC, your town’s land trust, with 18 protected preserves in town totaling just over 360 acres, is conducting an experiment in what it means to do our job well- stewarding land and its natural resources and creating handson learning opportunities to move you, and your neighbors, toward conservation and a smaller human footprint. Our educational outreach and programming, in part, highlighted in this twice-annual newsletter, is meant to speak to your interests and from there, provide opportunities for further self-directed exploration into resource conservation and land protection. Our commitment in 2007 to gut renovate a 1912 residence and create an education center for our community and a land steward residence for our single staff, was intended to build organizational capacity and share knowledge. At the time, it was a huge leap of faith. We are now in our fifth year of programming. The projects, pursuant to a grant in the spring of 2014 from New York State Conservation Partnership Program (NYSCPP) and New York’s Environmental Protection Elyse Arnow, President Spring 2015 Fund, are coming together this spring, summer and fall. Shortly, you will see new signage for a self-guided tour at the Armstrong Preserve of five ‘outdoor classrooms’, which take you through a meadow, vernal pool, woodland trails, and working backyard landscape. This landscape includes edible and native showcase gardens, each a venue for interpretive and hands-on learning tied to long-term land stewardship demonstration projects. Understanding that our backyards are an integral part of the local ecosys- The Armstrong Education Center and Residence Private Non-Profit Organization Preserving Pound Ridge Lands Forever Spring 2015 Notes from the Field… Spring 2015: Armstrong Edible and Native Gardens - A Learning Landscape PRLC’s summer is already backyard landscape’ is our title in full swing at the Armstrong for all this inter-connectedness Preserve and Education Cenand is an important teaching tool ter! Student volunteers for interns, on-site volunteers, and helped to start seed indoors guests. under grow lights powered by Birds and bees are an integral a cliff-side, solar electric part of our backyard ecology and panel array of the Armstrong are served here with a banquet of residence, for both our vegnative trees, shrubs, and flowering etable garden and native plant plants that provide pollen, nectar, restoration areas on the Preberries and seed to wildlife. The serve. Our seasonal garden inhoneybees pay us back by pollitern, Christiana R., a recent nating flowers, resulting in more graduate of Pace, is planting fruits and vegetables for us and daily to bring a bounty of for the birds and squirrels. They food both for our consumpalso make honey to our delight! tion and for local wildlife. Armstrong’s Mandala Vegetable and Herb Garden 2014 . What we chose to plant in our The Armstrong Preserve garbackyard landscapes determines dens, including the permaculture-style edible garden and native plant what and who can live in these landscapes. By selecting productive showcase gardens are a big draw for students, gardening and herb species, we can add to the life we witness; by using nonnative plants clubs and other visitors as they are a microcosm of re-occurring nat- such as the Asian ornamentals that dominate commercial nurseries, ural processes and seasonal events and are, therefore, excellent we literally prevent it. [Suggested reading: Doug Tallamy, Bringing teaching tools. Even at this mid-spring time, their produce is deli- Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife With Native Plants] cious to the taste and beautiful to behold. Our working backyard has created a diverse and colorful landscape The vegetable and herb gardens are arranged in a mandala or circular that is, by design, directly applicable to any homeowner wishing to pattern, with each section housing a complementary group of plants learn how to use their landscape productively and as an integral part that assist one another in achieving their greatest productivity. For of our local ecosystem, conferring its multiple benefits across human example, the pest deterrents of basil and marigold have been inter- created property boundaries and fencing barriers. planted with tomatoes so that no chemical pesticides are needed on As the summer rolls on and autumn harvest approaches, we encourthese beauties; the carrots planted throughout will find a perfect bal- age Pound Ridge residents and their friends and family, to experiance of sun and shade throughout the summer. We have included ence, first-hand, the benefits of mimicking natural processes to create ground covers such as strawberries that a self-sufficient backyard oasis by visiting the flank our blueberry bushes and are visited Armstrong gardens and working backyard by honeybees kept on-site to promote viglandscape. You are invited to visit for a tour, orous flowering and fruiting. Trellis’ hold to volunteer, or on-your-own time, have an inclimbing pea and bean and are spacetimate experience of this special place of learnsavers for the multitude of other flowering ing. The gardens are open Wednesdays during the summer from 11am to 2pm. To visit, turn and fruiting edibles including borage, nasturtium, cauliflower and squash, to name in to the driveway to the Armstrong Preserve a few. Lettuces, chards, kales and herbs and Education Center at 1361 Old Post Road are beginning to exhibit colorful, textured (Rt 121 just north of the causeway), and proceed to park at the top of the driveway. Visifoliage throughout the garden. tors are welcome during these scheduled open Since the summer of 2011, when the hours. (As the gardens are also the backyard educational garden was first planted, soil for our resident landsteward/educator and famhealth has been improved through regular ily, we do need to maintain some privacy duradditions of compost and mulch, and niing other times.) Feel free to pack a lunch, but trogen building cover crops. It is easy to no pets please. Check out our upcoming garsee which beds have received the most nuden events where we combine hands-on learntrients, both from the color of the soil and ing with small group instruction and plenty of the color of the plant leaves. Our enriched compost was created through a mixture of time for questions and personal exploration. “greens” (lawn clippings, vegetable peelPlease let us know if you would like to bring a ings, coffee grounds) and “browns” larger group and we’ll be ready for you! You (leaves, hay, paper). The dozen or so may even be treated to a fresh, cold glass of herb or minted water- pumped from our well chickens that roam the preserve also contribute with their waste, bedding, and Visiting Herb Group to Armstrong’s Backyard by solar generated electricity. All this- to live lighter on the land we share. cracked eggs. ‘Armstrong’s working Working Landscape. Preserving Pound Ridge Lands Forever Private Non-Profit Organization Spring 2015 PRLC’s Preserves: Perfect Areas for Habitat Restoration and Place-Based Education Look to PRLC’s website to document much of our work in the field. forest understory changes in these exclosed areas. In fact- editions of this newsletter are an easy way to follow our At the Armstrong Preserve, the vernal pool dried up early this spring. progress on a number of longer-term projects. They are be found This month, interns and volunteers have put in 100 new plants to atunder the ‘About Us’ tab at www.prlc.net. As reported in spring and tract pollinators that will encourage seed and fruit product and therefall 2014- our single staff- land steward and educator, Krista Munger- fore, the regeneration of native flora. Swamp milkweed, bonset and along with our summer, student intern teams and volunteers, have Joe pey weed have been planted as they like wetter soils. Trees and been busy in the field protecting and restoring wildlife habitat and shrubs planted in 2013 and 2014 have had their protective tubes recreating outdoor learning venues. Our 43-acre Armstrong Preserve placed with fence cages to prevent deer browse. In the Armstrong now claims a fully looped and marked trail with an information kiosk. meadow, enclosures on four corners have a variety of native plantings Find out about this trail and oththat correspond to different light ers by going to our Preserves and moisture conditions. Arwebpage where you’ll see rowwood viburnum and Eastern downloadable maps and links red cedar are growing in the for directions, along with a desunniest part of the meadow and scription of each preserve. willow and silky dogwood preSeveral of our 18 preserves have dominate where soil conditions ongoing projects being done in are wetter and light conditions conjunction with both funding shadier. The seed mix we and conservation partners. At planted in fall of 2014 has taken Carolins Grove, the Winfield hold over approximately 50% of Foundation and the family of the the invasive stiltgrass. Several original Carolin, made a 10K days in May were spent pulling gift to have the significantly second-year Garlic mustard as damage Grove cleared of a myrthe seeds mature early, and a iad of downed Spruce and topgroup of AmeriCorps students Installing deer exclosure fencing - Carolin’s Grove pled limbs from Superstorm assisted in clearing remaining Sandy. This created a cleared understory for a replanted, more di- Japanese barberry and tree strangling vines. verse, conifer forest. In addition, a one-hundred foot perimeter deer Throughout various habitats, we have been planting and protecting exclosure has been constructed, with others planned, to facilitate re- native understory shrubs and trees to augment a layer of the forest. generation. This spring, we are witnessing wonderful new growth on Red chokeberry is doing well, with and without protection, as is the forest floor. shrubby St. John’s wort, spicebush, and winterberry with plantings At the 70-acre Clark Preserve, committed volunteers continue to re- designed to create a softer edge around clearings beneficial to wildlife move invasive Japanese barberry and Oriental bittersweet from an and songbirds. Flowering raspberry is replacing the invasive ever growing number of acres of forest understory and multiple, large Wineberry with intervention. Also seen at the Armstrong Preserve deer exclosures have been established viewable from the trail, all with deer exclosure, several young tree seedlings: black and white oak, ongoing support from the NYS Watershed Council. Private donations sugar maple, hickory and in the understory, serviceberry, witch hazel have been made of native woodland shrubs and small trees to repop- and wintergreen- all in the soil seed bank and emerging now that deer ulate these protected areas. Watch for future updates as we document have been excluded. Adults - Be a Volunteer! Students: Earn Community Service Credits Email us at info@prlc.net Donate Today! Online at www.prlc.net or with the Donation Envelope provided Support our projects and programs This newsletter is printed on sustainable forested paper
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