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Oceanside Meadows
Innstitute for the Arts and Sciences presents:
The Salt Marsh Trail begins by exploring the transition forest, which combines both coniferous and deciduous trees. The forest provides shelter for different species within its multiple layers, enabling many organisms to occupy a small space in harmony. As you enter the trail, start by examining the lowest layer: the soil. Fallen leaves and decaying debris are decomposed and processed by earthworms and other invertebrates, providing nutrients for plant growth. These plants, in turn, recycle the nutrients when they shed their leaves or die off. The nutrient cycle is thus tightly controlled and little is wasted. While you walk along, look for animal tracks in wet, muddy areas. Raccoon tracks are easily recognizable, since the hindprints resemble miniature human footprints with abnormally long toes.
Now observe the middle layer of the forest, or shrub layer. In boggy areas you may find Cranberry, with narrow, alternate leaves. Search for low-growing Blueberry shrubs in dry, sunny openings along the trail. Other abundant shrubs are the Speckled Alder, named for the whitish transverse lenticels on its dark bark, and the Bunchberry, characterized by a whorl of oval leaves topped by four rounded white petals.
The Salt Marsh is an extremely rich environment that supports thick expanses of salt grasses. In the eighteenth century, salt hay harvested from the marsh was used as mulch for fields. The hay, adapted to a high-salt environment, did not sprout in agricultural fields where the salt content was low. Plant
Life to Anticipate
Listen for choruses of croaking Green Frogs and Bullfrogs. These animals use camouflage to hide from their predators. Watch as the Great Blue Heron spreads its wings in descent to the marsh, where it will stalk its prey. Search for the great Moose, with high, humped shoulders, and broad antlers. Twilight is the best time to search for these huge animals as they charge into the marsh to escape droves of relentless mosquitoes.
The
Grassy Meadow The last stretch of the Salt Marsh Trail follows the edge of an expansive grassy meadow. This area is home to a variety of wildflowers, insects and birds. Listen for the buzzing of Honey Bees as they visit flowers in the meadow. Try to identify the many species of butterflies - such as the Tiger Swallowtails with pale yellow wings and black markings, or the beautiful Monarch. If you look closely, you may find caterpillars crawling along the undersides of leaves. Observe the deep blue Bird-foot Violet, with its distinctive "bird’s-foot" - shaped leaves, or the Common Blue Violet, whose leaves and flowers are on separate stalks. The Canada Mayflower, a member of the lily family, has tiny white star-shaped flowers. Watch for patches of lovely Bluets, which, as their name suggests, are pale blue flowers with golden-yellow centers.
"The more he [General Cobb] thought about it, the less ditching seemed to be the answer to the problem of the marshes, and he ended by having a series of dykes built to dam out the sea. Almost a hundred acres were thus reclaimed from the tides, and as the salt hay gradually died out on this drier land, the earth was plowed and seed of the best English hay was sown. The land was rich, and a valuable property was developed. In time, when it became clear that the dykes were practical and would hold against the sea, storage barns were built on the marshes, and the area came to be known by the name it carries today, the Dyke Marsh." - Louise Dickinson Rich, The Peninsula
Lo, when the sun streams through the wood, How could the patient pine have known Till the new light with morning cheer For many stretching miles? - Henry David Thoreau, |
Introductory:
Exploring the Seashore Intermediate:
The Rugged Rocky Shore Wonders of the Sea:
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