Thursday, October 27, 2022
Nature Walk Sunday, Oct. 30, at Herrontown Woods
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Hearts 'a Bustin' -- One of Herrontown Woods' Hidden Gems
Close up, the fruit is reminiscent of a miniature starfish, or a Joker's hat.
Here's what they look like in the Barden, rising to a height of 8 feet or more.
But up along the ridge in Herrontown Woods, they seldom grow more than a few inches above the leaf litter. Deep shade and the appetites of deer have laid them low. I, too, would have never noticed their existence but for a larger clump encountered ten years ago along the yellow trail. A surrounding tangle of other shrubs had allowed it to elude the deer and grow high enough to bear fruit and be seen.
A few little sprouts from that patch were transplanted to the Barden, where they have received enough sunlight and protection from deer that visitors can now appreciate their mature form. A kind of euonymus (Euonymus americanus), its flowers won't dazzle you.
But wait a few months and those flowers become transformed into exuberant fruits.
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
FOHW Hosts Its First Nighttime Concert at Herrontown Woods
History was made at Veblen House on Thursday, September 22, as the Friends of Herrontown Woods hosted our first evening concert.
String lights were bought, the driveway, front walk, and trails leading to Veblen House were improved, and word was sent to local media as we prepared to host the Chivalrous Crickets, an inventive Celtic-based band with glorious voices and a mix of modern and vintage instruments.While the Crickets were bringing British and American folk music to Herrontown Woods, I was bringing American music to England, touring with a latin/jazz band called the Lunar Octet. The photo is from our performance in Kent.
Saturday, September 17, 2022
Accomplishments in 2021
- FOHW volunteers continue to care for 220 acres of public land at Herrontown Woods and Autumn Hill Reservation, removing downed trees and adding stones and boardwalks. Lots of help from arborist Victorino Pineda.
- A beautiful new map of Herrontown Woods trails, thanks to graphic artist Alison Carver, who also developed maps of the Barden and Veblen House grounds.
- Updated trail maps on regional and national trail websites.
- Additional trail markers -- With help from a girlscout troop
- Red Trail Rerouted--after installing many rocks and boardwalks, the red trail is now fully navigable for the first time in its history
- Orange trail to Veblen House created
- Invasive species control -- collaborated with town contractors to catch invasions early
- Concept of cultural and natural zones developed, with the Barden, cottage and house comprising the cultural zone of Herrontown Woods
- Began working with town on better public access to the preserve
- Met with town's new open space manager
REPAIR OF VEBLEN HOUSE BEGINS IN EARNEST
- FOHW hired a highly skilled carpenter, Robb Geores, to repair the house's framing, inside and out, assisted by volunteers.
- Electricity -- Veblen House now has electricity, helped along by the initiative of board member Peter Thompson.
- Existing conditions drawings--board member Ahmed Azmy prepared detailed drawings of Veblen House and Cottage
- Recontouring keeps Veblen House and Cottage dry -- Berms, swales and raingardens now keep the structures dry, even after heavy rains.
- The basement was cleared of old ductwork, furnace and water heater
- More accurate measurements and additional analysis of the Veblen House's systems
- Research on asbestos removal
- Some initial repairs of cottage with help from volunteer Robert Chong
- A scope of work for the Veblen Cottage prepared by architect Max Hayden
- The tranquil setting next to Veblen House has proved ideal for hosting community events. To that end, we have created a stage and expanded parking in the driveway.
- Yoga on Saturdays -- Began hosting classes by Gratitude Yoga during warmer weather
- Among Trees -- Collaborated with professional actors and the Princeton Public Library to host a reading of locally sourced nature writings. \
- Treepedia -- Collaborated with Princeton Public Library to host a talk by author Joan Maloof about preserving old growth forest.
- Other events hosted -- a "flying pig" dedication of the Barden's gazebo, a fourth annual Veblen Birthday BBQ Bash, and a volunteer appreciation party
THE PRINCETON BOTANICAL ART GARDEN (BARDEN)
- During the pandemic, the newly nicknamed Barden has become a popular place to safely gather, learn, explore, and socialize, with its gazebo, native plants, fairy garden and other delights
- The Veblen Circle -- Girlscouts helped create attractive labels on wildflowers encircling the gazebo, along with bird houses.
- May's Barden Cafe becomes a thing -- A new tradition began this year at the Barden, with coffee and delicious pastries now served on the first Sunday morning of each month.
- Ongoing Sunday morning workdays -- this productive and social tradition continues, led by Keena Lipsitz and Andrew Thornton.
- Solar-powered lighting installed in the gazebo--thanks to Forrest Meggers
- Portapotty installed
HISTORICAL WORK
- Paintings traced to renowned artists -- Research traced the remarkable origins of paintings that once hung in Veblen House
- Many connections revealed -- Research revealed the Veblen House's connections to a historic mansion in Jersey City, an artist who lived among the Hopi Indians in Arizona, a prominent ceramist, a movie starring Michael Douglas, the Dogwood Garden Club, and early 20th century Princeton horse culture.
- Interviews with relatives -- With help from Alison Carver, we were able to contact and interview a granddaughter and grandson of the Whiton-Stuarts
- Barden's gazebo's history learned
- Einstein's Begonias -- We found and are now growing begonias descended from those Einstein had in his Princeton home.
- Articles about Herrontown Woods- In Tap Into Princeton, Princeton Family Living, and the ECHO
- Fall nature walks -- FOHW collaborated with the Princeton Public Library to host multiple nature walks at Herrontown Woods.
- Veblen Circle of Wildflowers completed -- Board member Inge Regan collaborated with Girlscout Troop 71837 to create interpretive signage for the Veblen Circle of 30 native wildflowers around the gazebo
- Ongoing research and website posts about nature, FOHW's activities, and the fascinating history of Veblen House at VeblenHouse.org, FOHW.org, and PrincetonNatureNotes.org
- Opened instagram account--thanks to board member Adrian Colarusso
- Many students participated in workdays at the botanical garden
- Seasonal displays on kiosk about plants in the preserve
- Progress on developing a new website, working with Pilar Castro-Kiltz of MoreCanvas.
- Continue to acquire donated stepping stones, centuries old wood, a pottery wheel, chairs for event seating, and many other items
- New board members and many new volunteers.
- Progress on developing a master plan
- All donations go to paying for the skilled labor and materials needed to repair the Veblen House and Cottage, and maintain the Barden and Veblen grounds.
Friday, September 16, 2022
The Visionary Mathematician Speaks To His People of Math and Love
We're going to do a lot of things. Lots of really small things. And they're going to add up, to something. Something larger than ourselves. It's called addition. Yes. And we're going to subtract things, too. Resentment. We're going to subtract resentment from our repertoire. Resentment corrodes relationships. And hate. We're going to subtract that, too. Because it takes way too much energy to hate. Wasted energy. We don't want to waste. In nature there is no waste.
People ask us: Are we going to divide? No! We're going to bring people together. Love them just as they are. Because this is that kind of place, and that's what we do here. Love is additive. Totally additive. The more of it you give, the more of it you feel. The more you spend of it, the more you have to give. It's a miracle! Love is its own miraculous economy.
Some people subdivide, but we're going to undivide. We're going to bring parcels of land together, and share them. Then bring people together, to enjoy nature and each other's company.Yes, and we're going to multiply. Probably not sexually. That's way too slow. We're going to multiply asexually, like some plants do, until there's a zillion of us, all doing good things, little things, quintillion zillion little things that add up. To something. Something good.
Thank you.
Sunday, August 28, 2022
A Scavenger Hunt in a Scavenged Garden
As part of a recent birthday celebration at the Botanical Art Garden (Barden), the father of the birthday girl, philosophy professor Alexander Englert, created a whimsical map of the Barden and used it as part of a scavenger hunt for the birthday party.
Friday, August 5, 2022
Sunday, Aug. 7: May's Barden Cafe and Native Plant Tour
Sunday, July 17, 2022
The Fruits and Flowers of Our Labors at the Barden
The Botanical ARt GarDEN at Herrontown Woods, nicknamed the Barden, is many things to many people. For kids, it's a place that stirs the imagination and rewards curiosity, with a fairy garden, a small frog pond, and winding pathways to explore. It's also a botanically rich setting where we socialize in the gazebo or explore the plantings that offer an introduction to native plants.
On a recent Friday, invited to a late afternoon repast in the gazebo with friends, I decided to photograph some of the flowers and fruits of our labors. Our volunteer work sessions on Sundays, starting around 10:30 and continuing into the afternoon, are a collaboration with nature that unleashes a wave of abundance, continuing through to fall. As we ate and talked, a monarch butterfly flew circles around us, segueing into fireflies later on. It was a magical evening. What follows are snapshots of what this wave of abundance looks like in mid-July.
It's fun to see a purple coneflower (actual) presenting itself in front of a photo of same, mounted on one of the cages that protects the many species of flowers surrounding the gazebo in the "Veblen Circle."Later in the evening, as fireflies began to emerge, an evening primrose presented a new array of flowers. These are "volunteer" wildflowers that pop up on their own.
This is the first year that a black cohosh has bloomed in the Barden. Such beautiful spires of white. More will be encountered along the trails of Herrontown Woods, up along the ridge.
A black chokeberry was donated some years back, and is now bearing, benefitted by the open canopy that lets sunlight into the Barden.
A newly discovered tasty treat is the berry of the blackhaw viburnum, the most common native shrub in Herrontown Woods. Haw means berry, and these berries turn black in the fall when ripe.
My parents made delicious elderberry jelly and elderberry pie when I was a kid. These turn purplish black when ripe. Catbirds usually win the race to harvest.
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Among Trees II a Great Success
There was considerable suspense leading up to this year's Among Trees sequel. When the first date was rained out, actor and organizer Vivia Font had to cast a wider net for fellow actors and musicians who could make the alternate date of June 18.
The host, Friends of Herrontown Woods, was meanwhile grooming the grounds and trails, and summoning its full array of orphaned chairs to spread across the lawn.With Covid winding down, would an audience find the time and find its way to the outskirts of Princeton for a presentation of nature poetry and music?
The answer proved to be yes, as 100 people of all ages gathered for the second annual Among Trees. Vivia shared the stage with four other actors and five musicians who shared their gifts with a rapt audience.A Tale of Three Orchids
One way that we're able to help native plants prosper at Herrontown Woods is by growing some of them in the Botanical Art Garden (Barden for short). There they can get more sun than is available in deep forest, protection from deer, and more attention in general. For instance, springtime is when I start looking for green-fringed orchids popping up. It takes a sharp eye to distinguish them from the abundant grass and plantains. Each year they seem to pop up in a different spot.
They were first found growing near Veblen House, a short walk up the trail from the Barden, but this year, I found only one up there, and promptly surrounded it with a cage to keep the deer from eating it.Then, down in the Barden, I happened to look down and saw another, already in bloom. That one too got a cage to protect it not only from deer but also from people straying off the paths.