Posts Tagged ‘forest’
An Ever Changing Forest
Posted in Around the Garden, Gardens and Collections on December 6th, 2012 by Travis Beck – Be the first to commentTravis Beck is the NYBG’s Landscape and Garden Projects Manager, overseeing large landscape design and construction projects here at the Garden. His current undertakings include the redesign of the Native Plant Garden and trail restorations taking place in the Thain Family Forest.
The Thain Family Forest at The New York Botanical Garden is a remnant of the deciduous forest that once covered most of the region. Unlike many of the remaining forests, the Thain Family Forest was never cleared for timber or agriculture, and includes numerous grand trees. Today, many of these are well over a century old.
Superstorm Sandy reminds us, however, that humans are not the only ones to fell trees. Her strong winds uprooted or snapped the trunks of over one hundred trees in the Forest. Where these trees fell, gaps now exist in the canopy, creating opportunities for the next generation of trees to grow. Our records show that Sandy was the most damaging storm in the Garden’s history to impact the Forest, but hurricanes, nor’easters, and thunderstorms are part of the natural disturbance regime for northeastern forests. Such storms open gaps in the canopy and allow for new growth to fill the space.
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Good Old Days
Posted in Gardens and Collections on November 20th, 2012 by Sonia Uyterhoeven – 1 CommentSonia Uyterhoeven is the NYBG’s Gardener for Public Education.
When I was a kid, there was an old-fashioned candy store in a nearby town. The counter was lined with glass containers full of candy canes in every flavor you could possibly imagine, along with curiosities that have become harder to find as the years have passed. Original birch beer, black cherry soda, and old-fashioned root beer were a few of the “unusual” drinks available in this candy store, full of reminders that our diet was once intimately connected with the land and its bounty.
As I strolled through the Forest in The New York Botanical Garden, I found a woodland area full of ingredients from the past. At the edge of the Forest are many stately black cherries (Prunus serotina). These trees reach 50 to 60 feet tall, making them hard to miss. In the spring, the flowers are a haven for hungry bees, and in the fall, the black cherries are covered with edible–if bitter–fruit. These are generally used as flavoring for soda, liqueurs, and preserves.
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Morning Eye Candy: Evergreen
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on October 25th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentMeanwhile, the evergreens prep for their stint in the winter spotlight. Our Forest doesn’t need Photoshopped lens flares to look this good.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Morning Eye Candy: Golden Hints
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on October 14th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentMorning Eye Candy: Loam and River Smells
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on September 10th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentIt makes me want to dig up earthworms, skip rocks on the misting river, and any number of other campy childhood stereotypes. But spend 20 minutes on the Forest paths and tell me with a straight face that you don’t get the same feeling.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Morning Eye Candy: Late Greens
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on September 5th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentMorning Eye Candy: Swim in Green
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on August 19th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentIt’s been sort of a green-filtered past few days on Morning Eye Candy. I suppose I’m trying to heap as much appreciation as possible on the themes of summer before the trees transition for autumn. That and this picture from Ivo makes me want to swim, Scrooge McDuck style, through the Forest.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Where the Wild Things Are
Posted in Around the Garden on August 8th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to comment
When you’re home to more than 250 acres of flora, you don’t have to stray far to uncover a virtual menagerie of fauna within it. Cormorants and wood ducks draw zig-zags in the duckweed of Twin Lakes, while Red-tailed Hawks hunt skinks and black squirrels from far overhead. There’s even a cranky snapping turtle or two. But for every rabbit or warbler out to make itself seen in the NYBG, there’s another species living out its life away from our cameras! As Director of the Forest, Jessica A. Schuler has turned some of her focus toward the elusive creatures living in our woodland.
Through a collaboration with Jason Munshi-South of CUNY Baruch College and Mark Weckel of Mianus River Gorge Preserve, Jessica is doing her part to help the pair document the many animals living throughout the city and Westchester county, as well as the effects of the urban environment on evolutionary biology. In the case of the NYBG, this is done by arranging four motion-activated, all-weather cameras in locations throughout the Garden’s 50-acre Forest, ready to capture the movements of any and all woodland wanderers that might amble by. And after only a month on site, capture they did! Calibrated to go off at even the slightest hint of a passing animal, these cameras accurately snapped shots of several familiar species lurking in our woods.
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Morning Eye Candy: Chill Spectrum
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on August 3rd, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentI once had a middle school substitute teacher who told me I should stare at greens and blues if I wanted to “feel cooler.” I still think she was a tad kooky, but in the dead of summer, the Forest always strums the right chord for me.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
















