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.
Friday, November 8, 2024
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.
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.
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.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.
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.Friday, July 5, 2024
New Self-Guided "Tour of Trees" Launched at Herrontown Woods
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."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.Friday, April 19, 2024
Our 2024 Earthday Celebration--a Recap
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 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.
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.