Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

Salt Marsh, Silk Stockings

Marine Park is the largest park in Brooklyn, but most people think it ends at the NW end of Avenue U. Across the street, however, is the Salt Marsh Nature Center, which overlooks Marine Park Creek, which connects to Gerritsen Creek and flows into the Atlantic. This part of the park is a large, U-shaped (with man-made island in the center) area. Until a couple of years ago, the Nature Center’s path wended its way through a field of towering phragmites, and, given phragmites, not much else. All that has changed, and is very much in the process of being changed. This part of the park is not open to the public now, but I got a chance to go behind the fence into the restoration efforts being run by the Army Corps of Engineers and the NYC Parks Department. The tour was part of NYC Wildflower Week and given by Kat Bounds of the Parks’ Natural Resources Group.

This is a good place to note that not every plant has a pretty flower. And not every lovely flower blooms all the time. (“Wildflower” is a sexier name for a wild plant.) Seaside goldenrod, beachplum, Virginia creeper, staghorn sumac, and bayberry were just a few of the plants we saw in their infancy. Tree saplings included chestnut oak, red oak, pitch pine, Virginia pine, black tupelo, tuliptree, and sassafras. (See the comments for a full list.) The restoration includes the building/planting of low salt marsh, meadows, and mixed forest regimes, including Atlantic coastal maritime.

This is a park in the process of becoming. But then, Central and Prospect were once in swaddling, too. (These pictures are big so open them up for the full effect.)The broom sedge and switch grass meadow.One of the woodland areas, here obviously dominated by pine (three species). The soil seen in the left background is glacial till from several hundred feet below the surface, excavated elsewhere in the city and reused here. The wood chip mulch is from blow-downs caused by last year’s deadly tornado and micro-burst.The low salt marsh, planted with spartina grass, and on the bank in the foreground a mix of species. The entire marsh is currently crisscrossed with yellow streamers to keep Canada geese away. Although coddled by self-styled “animal lovers,” the invasive geese are profoundly destructive to certain habitats, and would simply devour the infant marsh if not for this protection. A couple of killdeer, who are nesting in the area, were spotted in here, along with spotted sandpiper, American oystercatcher, and red-winged blackbird, so the goose netting doesn’t bother smaller birds.

Landfill was once used to expand the city into its squishy edges, before we realized how vital salt marshes and wetlands are. That landfill consisted of all sorts of crap, including coal dust, rubble and construction debris, and household garbage. For some reason, the garbage here included lots of silk stockings (bless those caterpillars, the stuff doesn’t seem to break down when buried!). Someone’s great uncle Morty was a wholesaler maybe and lost his socks when nylon came in? Bounds said they find the stockings in almost every hole they dig for plantings (along with bottles, shoe soles, and et cetera). Clearly a park, then, with great legs.

UPDATE: I’ve learned that the western part of Marine Park, left out of this restoration effort, is under constant threat from ATVs. These monstrous toys, illegal in the city’s parks, ravage this section the area with impunity. This schizophrenia seems so typical of the Parks Department: on the one hand, millions of dollars (in this case mostly federal) for a careful restoration effort, while right next door nothing is even done to maintain and protect the area.

3 responses to “Salt Marsh, Silk Stockings”

  1. Joy Keithline

    Thanks for the post. It was most uplifting.
    I didn’t know a new open space was in the making.

  2. Species info – all woody plants planted this spring were grown specifically for this project, from locally collected native ecotype seed – included the following species:

    Carpinus caroliniana
    Celtis occidentalis
    Juniperus virginiana
    Liriodendron tulipifera
    Myrica pensylvanica
    Nyssa sylvatica
    Parthenocissus quinquefolia
    Pinus rigida
    Pinus strobus
    Pinus virginiana
    Prunus serotina
    Quercus alba
    Quercus bicolor
    Quercus coccinea
    Quercus macrocarpa
    Quercus phellos
    Quercus prinus
    Quercus rubra
    Quercus velutina
    Rhus typhina
    Sassafras albidum
    Juglans nigra
    Aronia arbutifolia
    Baccharis halimifolia
    Celtis occidentalis
    Diospyros virginiana
    Ilex verticillata
    Juniperus virginiana
    Liriodendron tulipifera

    Prunus maritima
    Quercus marilandica
    Quercus palustris
    Rhus copallinum
    Sambucus canadensis

    The list of herbaceous plant species seeded and planted as part of the grassland and marsh restoration include the following: Spartina alterniflora directly in the tidal area, plus
    APOCYNUM CANNABINUM
    ASTER LAEVIS
    EUPATORIUM FISTULOSUM
    EUPATORIUM MACULATUM
    MONARDA FISTULOSA
    PANICUM VIRGATUM
    RUDBECKIA HIRTA
    SOLIDAGO SEMPERVIRENS
    VERNONIA NOVEBORACENSIS

    Thanks again for coming out! Cheers, kat

  3. […] May of 2011, I got to go behind the scenes at the restoration project at Marine Park, courtesy of NYC Wildflower Week. Two weeks ago, the […]

Leave a reply to Joy Keithline Cancel reply