Monday, December 30, 2024

FOHW's Annual Appeal Letter -- 2024

Eleven years ago, when three community volunteers teamed up to reopen an overgrown nature preserve along Princeton Ridge, we held to the premise: “Restore it, and they will come.” 

Today, people of all ages come to the preserve—not just for a peaceful walk among the trees but also for diverse events and activities that have breathed new life into Princeton’s first nature preserve. What was once abandoned is now a beloved place of community, discovery, and joy.

FOHW’s efforts to restore this special place go hand in hand with an innovative approach to stewardship and programming. In the cultural zone of Herrontown Woods–composed of the Veblen House, Cottage, and Botanical Art Garden–we go beyond a passive human presence to actively collaborate with the landscape in a way that is healing for both nature and people.

Through our rallying cry, “Incrementalism!”, we have made the critical links and preparations needed to take the next step in “restore it and they will come,” including at last the rehabilitation of the Veblen House and Cottage.
  • Completed undergirding Veblen House for future public assembly, and began stabilization work on the Cottage, with detailed architectural drawings to rehabilitate and utilize both structures.
  • To FOHW’s ongoing partnerships with Gratitude Yoga and the Princeton Public Library, built new collaborations with the Princeton Public Schools, ceramicists at the Arts Council of Princeton, and Grow Little Gardener.
  • Hosted hundreds of visitors at the third annual FOHW Earth Day celebration, the autumn outdoor concert, and new events—Year of the Wood Dragon Festival and Fairyland Halloween—as well as hikes on history, plants, mushrooms, and geology
  • Completed the Voulevarde—a scenic boardwalk and pergola crafted from wood milled on-site, which connects the Botanical Art Garden to the Veblen House.
  • Established the Princeton Salamander Crossing Brigade, engaging students and community volunteers to protect amphibians crossing Herrontown Road during spring mating season.
  • Strengthened stewardship with trail improvements and invasive species removal, hiring our first grant-funded summer interns
  • Created a Tour of Trees.
One comment often heard is that Herrontown Woods is not a static park. Along with the dynamism of nature, changing through the seasons, there’s always something new to discover in the Botanical Art Garden, and now on the Veblen House grounds as well. Building community through stewardship, we continue to host the popular monthly May’s Café, where coffee and conversation blend in a forest opening filled with native wildflowers.

Our community of volunteers, hikers, donors, supportive local leaders, and a dedicated Board are on the way to realizing a vision that began with Oswald and Elizabeth Veblen. Your support will help us to restore and maintain the preserve’s trails and flora for posterity, teach and learn about its natural and cultural heritage, and build a center where people of all ages engage creatively with nature, art, and history.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Making a Table Out of Local Wood

Recently, a student at Princeton University named Frankie reached out. He had taken part in a tour of Herrontown Woods we gave in October to professor Andy Dobson's class on the Ecology of Fields, Rivers and Woodlands. Each student does a special project, and Frankie wanted to build a table out of local wood. He's from California, and has memories of a table his grandfather once made out of a slice of redwood. More than ten feet across, the slice had taken a day to cut by hand.

We arranged for Frankie to come on a day when our chainsaw virtuoso Victorino was working at Herrontown Woods. Lacking a car, Frankie took the 606 NJ Transit bus from Princeton University up to Princeton Community Village, then hiked through Herrontown Woods to meet us at Veblen House at 7:30am. 

Victorino first showed Frankie some tables he had made from a fallen maple tree. 
One invaluable service Victorino and his assistant Wilbur do at Herrontown Woods is to fell dead trees that pose a hazard along trails. After some discussion, it was decided to take a slice of wood from one of the many ash trees that unfortunately have had to come down.
The markings of insects added interest to the grain. The tree rings tell the story of the tree's life before it succumbed to an introduced insect, the Emerald ash borer.
With remarkable precision, Victorino cut legs for the table and discussed with Frankie various ways to attach them to the bottom. Having lived and traveled in various latin american countries, Frankie could easily converse in Victorino's native tongue. 

On a wintry day, brisk and bright, the whole adventure made us as happy as Frankie, as we gave him a lift back to the university with his freshly hewn table kit. 


Thursday, November 28, 2024

Seed Collecting Event Captured by Local Journalist in the Making

Recently, a beautifully crafted article about Herrontown Woods appeared in The College Voice--the student newspaper of Mercer County Community College. The article, entitled "The Barden at Herrontown Woods hosts wildflower seed collection for springtime blooming," was written by Jill Weiner for her first big assignment as a new journalism student. She had originally intended to write about the Friends of Herrontown Woods more broadly, but instead captured the spirit of our enterprise in her account of a seed collecting event we hosted as part of October's Sunday morning May's Cafe.

Mathilde Burlion, on the right in the photo, teaches gardening workshops at Herrontown Woods, both at the Barden and up at May's Garden near Veblen House. Part of Mathilde's mission is to reconnect kids with the land and all it provides us with. (photo by Inge Regan)




At the event, FOHW board member Inge Regan helped kids associate the seeds with the plants they turn into. Inge, a physician, is on a mission to cure kids and society generally of what can be called "plant blindness." She has been learning plants one at a time, and wants to help others do the same.

Thanks to Jill for telling the broader community about our work.

A Free Little Library at the Barden

Step behind the sturdy kiosk that greets you at the trailhead at Herrontown Woods' main parking lot, and a world of books opens up. This Little Free Library, stored in a cabinet beneath the kiosk's protective roof, is part of a global network meant to inspire readers who may find a personally relevant book on these shelves.

The nearly 200,000 Little Free Libraries around the world are created and maintained by volunteers. In our case, that would be Laura Heil of Montgomery, NJ, whose son-in-law Adrian has been a FOHW board member. My indelible first impression of Laura came during a workday, when she showed up with a chainsaw to help clear fallen tree limbs. Creating and maintaining this mini-library shows another dimension of her devotion to the community. 

Though this quiet, unassuming collection of books doesn't call out for attention, and may be missed by those passing by to walk the trails, its location is particularly auspicious given the many places to sit and read at our Botanical Art Garden. The Barden, as we call it, is many things to many people, but with two shelves of books at the ready, the Barden becomes an outdoor library, with many little nooks for cozying up with a good book. 

Thanks to Laura for realizing and maintaining this vision. In her own words:

"The Little Free Library is regularly cleaned up and organized, and restocked with new titles for kids and adults.  Fiction, nonfiction, cookbooks, craft books, children's board books  as well as paper, books for teens, and copies of Nat Geo for kids are all in here!  I have been doing this since the beginning of the LFL."

Friday, November 8, 2024

Fairyland Halloween Brings Delight

It was a trick to pull off the first ever Fairyland Halloween at Herrontown Woods, and a treat to witness the joy and whimsy that it brought to the grounds of Veblen House. 

The "magical and spooky adventure" began with a fairy treasure hunt, followed by decorating pumpkins and skeletons. 


May's Garden, site of Grow Little Gardener classes run by Mathilde Burlion and Andrew Thornton, played a big role in the festivities. At some point, the kids got to trade their found treasures into candy. 
Mathilde and Danni Zhao were two of the organizers of the event, along with Inge Regan, who took the photo. Andrew played the facilitator extraordinaire. 
Fabulous fall colors cooperated to make the grounds truly feel like a fairyland. (Photo by Inge Regan)
Participants made lanterns to carry on their "spooky lantern walk" back down to the Barden 
After the skeletons had collapsed in exhaustion from all the attention and fun, we stayed on our feet long enough for a group photo (below). 

Beech Forest Painting Donated to Veblen House

A bit of serendipity grew out of tragedy recently. After seeing a Town Topics letter I wrote about the tragedy of Beech Leaf Disease, and another written by Wendy Mager of Friends of Princeton Open Space, Jim Firestone decided it would be highly appropriate to donate a painting he had acquired long ago to the Friends of Herrontown Woods. Jim wrote his own letter to the editor, telling the story. 

It's a lovely painting of a beech forest by William Eyden, Jr., an Indiana painter known for his paintings of beech trees. 

We had a celebratory photo session outside Princeton Makes. That's Jim Firestone on the right. Jim grew up in Princeton, and remembers Einstein stopping by on occasion to visit his parents. 

On the left is artist Robert Hummel, who expertly repaired and refurbished the painting. Robert has painted many images of Princeton, including one of Veblen House. Robert shared some research he had done on Eyden, Jr, who had won many awards for his landscape paintings. Both he and his father, who had moved to the U.S. from Germany in 1866, specialized in painting beech trees. Though Eyden, Jr's home base was in Richmond, Indiana, he lived and painted for a time in North Carolina, and also in NY City. Biographies of father and son are pasted below. 

We plan to ultimately exhibit Jim's refurbished painting in a refurbished Veblen House. One remarkable coincidence: Eyden, Jr. studied for a time at the Art Students League in New York City. Kate Cory, also a painter of landscapes, one of which once hung above the mantel at Veblen House, also had studied there. Nice to think they might have known each other. 

Thanks to Jim Firestone and Robert Hummel for this beautiful gift to the Friends of Herrontown Woods.

BIOGRAPHIES 


Born in Hanover, Germany, William Arnold Eyden came to the United States in 1866 with his mother, who died on the voyage. He traveled to Massillon, Ohio to live with an uncle. After his marriage he moved to Richmond, Indiana where he a studio at 2100 East Main. His mother was an artist and the source of his only instruction in art.

Early in his career, he painted genre scenes but later turned to painting landscapes almost entirely. He like many of the founders of the Richmond Group artists favored the beech trees. He lived in Buffalo, New York for a short time but returned to Richmond in 1904, where twelve of his landscape paintings were on view in the window of Ellwood Morris & Co. His pupils included Randolph Coats and his two sons, William and Walter.


The Eyden names have been familiar to almost anyone with interest in the world of Indiana art. Eyden inherited his artistic talent from his father who was born in Hanover, Germany. He studied from John Bundy, Charles Hawthorne, Daniel Garber and William Merritt Chase at the New York Art Student League.

In addition to being a talented painter, Eyden was an accomplished violinist. He studied with Fredrick Hicks, professor of music at Earlham College.

For eleven years, he operated a gallery/studio in Greenwich Village, painting many New York street scenes. Yet despite his travels, his favorite subject matter would be the woodland scene of beech woods.

During his lifetime, he won numerous awards and honors, including a one-man show of his work in 1968 at McGuire Memorial Hall art galleries. On the closing day of the exhibition, he gave a painting demonstration. He was a consistent exhibitor in the Hoosier Salon and participated in the first salon held in Chicago.

Additional info about William Eyden, Jr. can be found at askart and findagrave.

A Memorial Bench Honors the Legacy of Kurt Tazelaar


Herrontown Woods received an extraordinary gift this fall, when John Tazelaar and Jeff Bergman came down the walkway to Veblen House carrying a very special and very heavy bench.  
Designed and built by Jeff, the bench honors the foundational volunteer work Kurt Tazelaar did in Herrontown Woods, beginning in 2013. Kurt died in August, 2023, after a long and courageous battle with cancer. It was heartening to hear at his memorial service that his last ten years, much of it spent working at Herrontown Woods, often with his wife Sally, were his best. He was an original, talented and insightful in so many ways. Kurt believed in building trails using large stepping stones that will still be serviceable fifty years from now, and Jeff built this very sturdy bench with that ethic in mind.

Through this bench, the trails, and through our memories, Kurt's legacy at Herrontown Woods will live on.










Volunteer Highlights -- Robert Chong

Along with our Sunday morning stewardship sessions at Herrontown Woods, we also have volunteers come at other times of the week to help with particular projects. 

A great example of this is Princeton Junction resident Robert Chong. A skilled carpenter, Robert has been helping us with all sorts of repairs and building projects. Recent much appreciated interventions include repairs to the gazebo at the Barden, repair of a garage door spring, and


 

adding a roof to a shed extension. The roof, donated by another friend of the woods, Perry Jones, will channel rainwater to a rainbarrel that Robert recently contributed to FOHW. With this added collection capacity, we'll have more water stored, the next time a three month drought comes along.
When we needed a mini-shed to store tools at Princeton High School, where we take care of native plants growing in two detention basins, Robert offered to build it out of scrap wood we've been collecting. That one, too, will collect rainwater to sustain new plantings.

Robert's wife, Shefali, is on the FOHW board. We're grateful for the skill and positive attitude they bring to all they do for Herrontown Woods.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Boy Scouts Help Out at Herrontown Woods

Thanks to Felix and Oliver Robbins, and their father Dylon, for doing some community service during two of our Sunday morning workdays at Herrontown Woods. They are members of Scout Troop 43. 

Wielding loppers, they helped cut border privet in a woodland near the boardwalk, part of a corridor that we are managing for native species. We took advantage of the lack of rain over the past two months to access this normally soggy area. Along with gaining skill at using loppers, they also learned to distinguish between the nonnative privet and the native blackhaw Viburnums. 

Ultimately, we'd like to create a plank trail through the woodland to access a preserved meadow that borders Herrontown Woods. Clearing the invasive shrubs is the first step to create access. 

The Robbins family and their fellow scouts in Troop 43 have helped out on multiple occasions, including an eagle scout project by Leone Robbins. 


Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Princeton University Students Visit Herrontown Woods

Again this fall, we provided a tour of Herrontown Woods to students taking Professor Andy Dobson's Princeton University course on the Ecology of Fields, Rivers, and Woodlands. His course, now in its second year, has more than doubled in size, speaking to the growing interest in local nature.


It was a chance to speak of many things: the Veblens' founding role in preserving open space in Princeton, the biological richness of a forest clearing, the vernal pools that draw frogs and salamanders in the spring, the perseverance required to quell a giant clone of wisteria, the joy of bringing back native species like Hearts a' Bustin' and Butternut. 

For more on this highly commendable connecting of students to the nature residing all around them in Princeton, here's a writeup on last year's visit and the students' presentations. 

We can also thank Andy for letting us Princetonians know about the extraordinary annual gathering of chimney swifts in town.

Friday, July 12, 2024

Filling the Void--FOHW Restores Donated Land at Herrontown Woods

Across the creek from the Barden, behind some houses, are 7.5 acres that FOHW convinced the town years back to accept as a donation from the Windy Top development on Snowden Lane. We've been thrilled to have this beautiful parcel as part of Herrontown Woods. Much of it is low maintenance, but one compelling reason for acquiring the land, rather than leaving it for the homeowners association to manage, was a massive infestation of wisteria vine. Despite its pretty flowers, the wisteria's rapid growth was becoming a menace, killing trees, spreading into neighbors' yards, creating a monoculture inedible to wildlife that would have continued to expand into Herrontown Woods. 

The town gave us some initial help from the NJ Invasive Species Strike Team, and FOHW has followed up with the sort of persistent effort needed to counter very persistent invasive species. Our super volunteer Bill Jemas has been particularly passionate about taking on the wisteria, cutting its vines and even digging up its roots.

With the wisteria being steadily vanquished, other invasives have predictably moved into the void. FOHW has led volunteer efforts to successfully pull garlic mustard and stiltgrass before they go to seed. One weed left unpulled last year, to our regret, is a native one called pilewort. Good luck with the latin name, Erechtites hieraciifolius

It's massive seed production last year has resulted in an equally massive burst of growth this year. Pilewort is an annual, so if we pull it before it goes to seed, we should be able to tame this beast and bring it back into balance.

Volunteer seedlings dug up and potted up from the Barden will help us fill the void with diverse native species that "play well together" rather than seek to dominate.

Princeton Day School volunteer Kavi and our new intern Matt Falleta worked with board member Scott Sillars to shift one area from pilewort to less rambunctious native wildflowers. We surround the new plantings with fencing to protect them from the deer.


Now comes the watering, and more pulling of the pilewort. If all goes well, a wisteria monoculture will ultimately be replaced by an open woodland with diverse native understory. 



Friday, July 5, 2024

New Self-Guided "Tour of Trees" Launched at Herrontown Woods

Take a walk around the Barden or Veblen House and Cottage at Herrontown Woods, and you may notice some new labels on some of the trees. There are 38 of these professional-grade labels thus far, each with a QR code that takes you to information on the Friends of Herrontown Woods website about the tree. 

This wonderful addition to Herrontown Woods would not have happened but for the generosity and organizational and technical abilities of Alastair Binnie, whose recent retirement has afforded him time to pursue this community project. 

Inga Reich, who is now Princeton's open space manager, also has helped, researching and writing the tree descriptions. Assistance also came from FOHW's webmaster Nicole Bergman and mapmaker Alison Carver.

Herrontown Woods has long been called an arboretum, but only now is it moving towards living up to that description, with 26 native and nonnative species labeled thus far. Though labeling is limited to the "cultural zone" of the preserve, there are now more than 300 tagged trees along the trails, 57 species total, with the identity of each tagged tree available on the website.

Alastair announced the completion of the labeling at FOHW's Veblen Birthday Bash on Sunday, June 30, celebrating the birthdays of Elizabeth and Oswald Veblen, whose donation created Herrontown Woods in 1957. In this 50th year since Elizabeth passed, I'm thinking the Veblens would be delighted with such a birthday gift.


 

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

The Little Kickwheel That Could -- Making Pots From Herrontown Clay

There's a book from childhood that resonates more and more with what I've seen of the world since then. The Little Engine That Could is a story about how things get done. Like the train cars full of toys that lack a steam engine to pull them over the mountain, so many projects languish in our personal and larger worlds, not for lack of someone capable of doing the work, but for someone who is simply willing. Find someone willing, maybe even find someone passionate about the task, and the job will finally get done. The train will make it over the mountain. 

That's what has happened time and again at Herrontown Woods, be it a lovely platform for seating we call Scott's Landing, named for Scott Sillars who decided to finish it, or the boardwalk that Victorino and Wilbur took on and finished up, or May's Garden that sat mostly empty until Mathilde Burlion and Andrew Thornton teamed up to grow food and teach classes there. In fact, the Friends of Herrontown Woods only came into being through the willingness of Kurt and Sally Tazelaar to take the lead in clearing the long-neglected trails.

The same story can be told of the kickwheel we salvaged several years ago from a house that was going to be demolished. A kickwheel is a potter's wheel that is turned not with a motor but with the kick of your foot on the hefty stone flywheel. It can make pots anywhere, anytime, without electricity, that is, if you have clay, and a potter to mold it into shape. For lack of clay and a willing potter, the kickwheel sat for years under a tarp, drawing attention only from a family of mice. A woman attending one of our May's Cafes last year took a look, and said she would be glad to teach a class on kickwheel pottery, but then didn't respond when I followed up. She was like one of those very capable steam engines in the story that chooses to pass the train cars by. 

But finally, as in the children's story, the right person came along. Rebecca Graham proved to be the skilled potter, but the story begins with Ryan Lilienthal, an artist with no formal training in ceramics but with a newfound passion for clay. He came in February and dug some samples of clay at Herrontown Woods not far from the parking lot. 

Months later, he showed me some bricks he had made of the clay. 

That was cool, and cooler still was the day more recently that he and other clay enthusiasts showed up at the Barden. Their goal, unbeknownst to us, was to make some pots on the kickwheel from clay dug right there in Herrontown Woods. It was the morning of May's Cafe, with people sitting at various tables, enjoying coffee and conversation surrounded by native plants. Little did we know we'd be treated to a workshop on potmaking. 

Rebecca Graham, who teaches pottery at the Arts Council of Princeton, showed us how to get the clay just the right consistency for turning. If it's too wet, you spread it out on a flat stone to dry a bit.

We had dug some clay from a promising spot along the red trail, but the potters said it wasn't "plastic" enough. I heard that word and remembered another spot where I had encountered some particularly slick clay while planting some sedges. I went and dug up some of that clay, and they said, yes, this should work.

Rebecca turned Herrontown Woods' first pot on the kickwheel. Surprisingly, the kickwheel doesn't require much kicking once you've formed the clay into the general shape of a pot. The heavy kickwheel gains considerable momentum once up to speed.

FOHW board member Inge Regan also gave it a go, drawing on memories of a highschool art class.

Ryan and a friend shaped some pots by hand. 

The pots were left to dry for a week. Ryan has a small kiln of his own to fire the pots, but he also has been getting to know the folks at the studio of famed ceramicist, Toshiko Takaezu, who, at one point in her life, reportedly dug clay from, of all places, Herrontown Woods.

And that is the story of The Little Kickwheel That Could, 

and did.

Note: For anyone curious about the lettering on the bricks, Ryan explained in an email:
"The word on the brick is "emet" (אֱמֶ֑ת), which means "truth" in Hebrew. According to one version of Jewish legend, it is possible to create a golem--a human figure--who can be brought to life by writing the word, אֱמֶ֑ת, on the figure's forehead. Accordingly, a golem is possessed with the superpower of discovering and revealing truth. To put a golem to sleep, the first letter of the word, אֱמֶ֑ת, is erased and becomes, מֶ֑ת, or "met," which means death."

Thursday, June 6, 2024

Plant Sales Begin at the Barden

Many of the plants that pop up in the pathways of the Botanical Art Garden (Barden) are native. We call these plants "volunteers", and have begun potting them up for sale. Everything about our little plant nursery has to do with reuse: the plants, the pots, the pallets we use to display the plants, and the collected rainwater we use to water them.

Come to May's Cafe this Sunday, June 9, 9-11am, and check out our selection. 

Currently in stock:

Sundrops (see photo below)

Shrubby St. Johnswort

Joe-Pye-Weed

Ironweed

Wild Senna

Sensitive Fern (see photo below)

Mountain Mint

Mistflower

Evening Primrose

Enter the Barden next to the kiosk and follow the path straight up. The plant nursery is next to one of the sheds, to the right of the gazebo. Many of these native plants are local genotypes. 

Sundrops is a lower growing perennial that spreads slowly and provides bright yellow flowers in June.  
Though Sensitive fern is sensitive to frost and drought, it is a robust native that spreads slowly to create a lush groundcover. 


Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Welcome FOHW's First Summer Intern

Thanks to a grant from a local charity, Green Matters, FOHW has hired its first summer intern! 

Meet Sandy Shiff, who has just finished her first day of work at Herrontown Woods. Sandy's a rising junior at Boston University who has returned home for the summer. We started with what all gardeners spend considerable time doing: weeding. There were some garlic mustards left to pull before they go to seed, and some path rush to dig out of the Barden's pathways.


Sandy's a quick study, and was soon potting up plants to sell in our expanding plant nursery. Many native wildflowers pop up in the pathways of the Barden, begging to be given a new life somewhere that's not underfoot.

Sandy helped organize and label the rescued plants, which now sit in reused pots on reused pallets in the repurposed spaces of the Barden. Somehow I think she's going to help us do many things that hadn't quite gotten done before.

Note: A shout out to our volunteer extraordinaire, Bill Jemas, for helping us apply for the grant funding.


Friday, April 19, 2024

Our 2024 Earthday Celebration--a Recap

Though the day began with a light sprinkle, by mid-morning we had a cool but comfortable day, as several hundred people came to enjoy the woods, five walks, good food, and many exhibits, both at the Barden and up at Veblen House. This was the third Herrontown Woods Earthday celebration--the brainchild of board member Inge Regan, developed in collaboration with the Princeton Public Library, with lots of ideas and organizational effort added by board members Shefali Shah, Pallavi Nuka, Nicole Bergman, Scott Sillars, and Adrian Colarruso. We held it a week early, April 13, to avoid overlap with other Earthday celebrations in Princeton. 

Herrontown Woods' Earthday 2024 began with a 9am frog and flower walk led by Princeton native Fairfax Hutter. Kids crowded around to see crowds of newly hatched wood frog tadpoles in the vernal pool.
Then I led a tree walk through what I'm calling the "Valley of the Giants"--accessed via a new trail meant to show off some particularly large tulip trees, oaks, and ironwoods that thrive on a seepage slope along the ridge. It took six of us to fully hug this tulip tree. 

The photo was taken by Alastair Binnie, who has been donating his time, funds, and organizational capacities to create a Tour of Trees for Herrontown Woods. During the walk, we used our phones to access an inventory of some 300 tagged trees that Alastair had just posted on the FOHW website. 
The tree walk ended on the Veblen House grounds, where kids and adults quickly became immersed in various displays. The Princeton Public Library helped promote our Earthday celebration. Their staff and volunteers hosted a table and later held a story hour for kids. 
Beekeeper Allison Gratton had many stories to tell about honeybees, 
and some wonderful products made by the bees, including some honeycomb from the remains of a wild beehive we had found in a fallen tree this past winter, and the heavenly smelling propolis that bees use for glue. 
Bhavya, a Princeton High School student who has been studying vernal pools in Herrontown Woods, hosted a table on salamanders. Earlier in the spring, FOHW organized a Princeton Salamander Crossing Brigade that involved Bhavya and other PHS students in helping amphibians cross the road to reach their breeding grounds. 


Philip Poniz shared his knowledge of mushrooms, edible and not. He and his family have a long tradition of collecting edible mushrooms. 
One of the tree walk participants collected the wild onions that pop up in the lawn. They are not native, and we think of them as weeds, but he and his family use them like chives for cooking. 
Nicole Bergman hosted her fabulous May's Cafe at the Barden. 
The popular restaurant Ficus donated some savory sandwiches to go with Nicole's sweets and coffee. 
Sophie of FloreOrganicBotanics sold pressed flowers, donating some of the proceeds to FOHW. 

FOHW board member Adrian Colarusso led a fun children's walk, past the streamside skunk cabbage and the ping pong/skeleton barn, up to the Veblen House grounds in time for the story hour presented by the Princeton Public Library staff. Photo from Town Topics.

An afternoon geology walk was led by not one, not two, not three, but four geologists from Princeton University. Thanks to Lincoln Hollister, Blair Schoene, Laurel Goodell and Frederik Simons for explaining some of the deep history of Herrontown Woods and the Princeton ridge. 

Meanwhile, fritillarias and primrose bloomed in the Veblen House garden. The most gratifying thing for me was seeing how much fun kids were having, clambering over rocks on the cascades, watching the tadpoles, listening to stories. The many talents and interests brought to bear in organizing the event are a reflection of the many dimensions of Herrontown Woods itself, where flowers, trees, geology, amphibians, and multiple cultural histories come together. 

We took a group photo of the geology walk, with the boulder field in the background. Back in the Barden, people lingered long after the 3pm finish time, in a kind of afterglow. A
special day at Herrontown Woods.