Herrontown Woods is packed with life this time of year. Frogs are hoppin' and native flowers are poppin'.
With the chance of rain diminishing to 10%, I'm going ahead with a frog and flower walk this Sunday at 11am. All are welcome. Looks like May's Cafe will add even more life to the Barden, from 9-11, with coffee and baked treats. There's so much to see. Tadpoles are growing in the vernal pools.Princeton Nature Notes
News from the preserves, parks and backyards of Princeton, NJ. The website aims to acquaint Princetonians with our shared natural heritage and the benefits of restoring native diversity and beauty to the many preserved lands in and around Princeton.
Friday, May 02, 2025
Leading a Frog and Flower Walk this Sunday, 11am-noon
A Big Fish Story in Herrontown Woods
Herrontown Woods seems an unlikely source of a big fish story.
Its multiple streams take but a few steps to cross. A sustained drought slows them to a trickle and dries some up altogether. It can feel like an event to spot a minnow while crossing the main channel on the yellow trail. How did it reach that far up, given the challenge posed by the cascades some distance downstream? When a boy named Felix found a crayfish in a stream next to the parking lot some years ago, it was a revelation.The only big fish story told until this spring was the tall tale popularized in an article in the October, 1981 Princeton Recollector, entitled Farming Small in "Herringtown". Written by Jac Weller, who owned a farm where Smoyer Park now stands, the article states that Herrontown Road was originally called Herringtown Road, named after the herring that farmers would haul back from the shore in wagons to fertilize their crops. The soil, the story goes, was so poor up along the Princeton ridge that the laborious trip was worth the trouble.
Like many a good fish story, this one's hard to confirm. That fabulous historical research tool, the Papers of Princeton, compiling digitized newspapers dating back to the early 1800s, offers no evidence that there ever was a Herringtown or Herringtown Road. The Herringtowns that pop up in word searches prove only to be someone's misspelling of Herrontown. Still, I found appealing an explanation told to me by John Powell, longtime farm manager for Jac Weller. Long after Weller departed from this world, John lived in a house at Herrontown Road and Snowden Lane, raising two head of cattle each year on his six acres. In an email to me, John told the story this way:
"The story I have on Herrontown Road is that it was where fish wholesalers lived, on small farms on land owned originally by the Gulick farm, a very large farm. When the road became part of Princeton, its name was dressed up so as to suggest the bird."
In other words, or in the case of this particular word, Herrontown is a hybrid, part fish, part fowl. The idea that fish wholesalers would congregate along the eastern ridge makes at least a little sense, it being downwind of the town and of little value for agriculture. And might there have been a time long ago when the herring migrated upstream to Princeton each spring, saving the farmers a trip to the shore?
It was with these thoughts in mind that I arrived in Herrontown Woods to lead an ecology walk for the Princeton Adult School on April 4. I was waiting in the parking lot for the participants to arrive when I saw out of the corner of my eye a great blue heron flying up through the trees, heading away from where the red trail crosses the preserve's main stream. I had never before seen a great blue heron in Herrontown Woods, and in that brief instant thought I saw something large hanging from its beak. As it flew away, I strained for another view to confirm, but the dense canopy got in the way.
Our walk followed an arc along the red and yellow trails, with talk of Herrontown ecology soon eclipsing any thought of that curious heron seen earlier. Then, crossing the main stream on the red trail to return to the parking lot, we heard a splash and saw something incongruously large slicing the surface of the water. There, visible beneath the reflections on the water's surface, were two large fish, about a foot long. Clearly, we weren't in minnowland anymore.
We oohed and ahhed, wondering what sort of fish they might be. I wanted them to be trout, or even better, herring, to make more conceivable the story that the word Herrontown had grown out of Herringtown, just as a real life heron would grow from eating herring. A new logo for Herrontown Woods rose to mind: a heron flying with a herring sticking out of its mouth, or perhaps a chimera--a mermaid with a fish's body and a heron's head.
After finishing the walk, I headed back to explore further. That's when I took this video:
The two fish, alas, proved not to be trout, nor herring, but instead bore the far less appealing name of white sucker, named after their white belly and mouth angled down to eat from the stream bottom. Also called brook suckers, they are native to the eastern U.S. and midwest, living in lakes or streams, then swimming upstream to spawn in the spring. When they spawn, a female is often bounded on both sides by males whose semen mingles with the thousands of eggs released into the stream by the female. There's no nest, nor any followup care. The math of two males to one female would work in this case, if the great blue heron actually did carry off the other male, leaving just two fish. Herons have a remarkable ability to spot dinner in small bodies of water around Princeton. We twice lost our goldfish when a heron came to visit our backyard minipond.
A friend, Fairfax Hutter, who grew up just a quarter mile downstream of Herrontown Woods, remembers the annual migration of foot-long fish upstream to spawn. Most memorable was when a boy in the neighborhood caught a pair of fish and tried to get them to spawn in a bathtub.
Despite the lowly name, the white sucker is native, and a powerful swimmer that has a salmon-like ability to overcome myriad physical obstructions to reach its spawning grounds. Its annual journey to Herrontown Woods connects us to the romance and ecological power of the great spring migrations of the past, when shad, menhaden, and river herring swam up the Millstone River to spawn. Did these other species reach up into small streams like Harry's Brook as well?
Though the Carnegie Lake dam prevents any return of shad and other anadromous fish species to Princeton, there have been efforts to remove two smaller dams downstream on the Millstone to bring spring migrations further up the Millstone.
Shadbush is a native shrub so named because it blooms early in spring when the shad are making their journey up our eastern rivers to spawn. It grows wild in Herrontown Woods, but for decades was kept from blooming by deep shade and hungry deer. Some years back, we transplanted a few of them to the Barden, where sunlight and protection has allowed them to bloom once again.Thursday, May 01, 2025
Who Put the Harry in Harry's Brook?
Since google's AI could not answer the question this morning, it seems time to get the word out as to how Harry's Brook got its name. Harry's Brook, for those unfamiliar, drains the eastern half of Princeton, emptying into the Millstone River portion of Carnegie Lake not far from Kingston. Even a relatively small brook has many origins. The main branch originates in Palmer Square, flowing in a concrete culvert under downtown Princeton until it daylights at Harrison Street. Another branch flows east from Princeton High School and the Princeton Shopping Center.
The cleanest tributary originates high on the boulder-strewn ridge in Herrontown Woods.It was Maine-based mapmaker and internet sleuth extraordinaire Alison Carver who figured out how Harry's Brook got its name, in a free-ranging correspondence with me back in the Covid days of 2021. My original question to her had been "who put the Herring in Herrontown"--a related question whose answer remains elusive.
Harry, it turns out, was really a Henry, as in Henry Greenland. I first learned that Harry was a nickname for Henry while researching Henry Fine, the man who did so much to build Princeton's math and science departments in the early 20th century, including bringing Oswald Veblen to Princeton in 1905. Old Fine Hall, and the newer math building as well, were named in his honor.
Alison sent me a series of maps that showed the evolution of the brook's name,
from Greenland's Brook"In 1683 a New Englander named Henry Greenland built a house on the highway which is believed to be the first by a European within the present municipal boundaries. He opened it as a "house of accommodation" or tavern. Portions of this house survive within the Gulick House at 1082 Princeton-Kingston Road."
The tavern was strategically located halfway between New York and Philadelphia, a day's horse ride from each. Is there something of Harry in the name of the road that bordered his land, Herrontown Road?
An email from Alison shows the spirit of inquiry:
"I did a little research … Harry was the first landowner in the area. He had about 400 acres, (about 2/3 of a square mile) part of which is now the Gulick Preserve … but the cool thing is that Herrontown Road runs along the north edge of it. So, I wonder if Herrontown Woods was named after the road? And how old that road is? If it’s really old, then maybe the road was Henrytown or Harrytown, something like that, and it got changed over the years … it has a gap in the middle of it which makes me think it must have been an old road, since maybe that part was a footpath or was let to grow over …
questions questions …"
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
Salamanders and Frogs in Herrontown Woods--Spring Goings On
This is the third spring that the Friends of Herrontown Woods (FOHW) has helped frogs and salamanders safely cross Herrontown Road on their way to their breeding grounds in vernal pools. The work of the Princeton Salamander Crossing Brigade is documented in a blogpost on this site from last year, and in an article this week in the Town Topics. This year the Brigade was able to collaborate with Princeton's police department, which closed the road on one of the nights when the amphibians were on the move, dramatically reducing the customary carnage from road traffic down to zero. FOHW is hoping to collaborate similarly with the police department in the future.
Along with upcoming nature walks about amphibians during FOHW's Earthday celebration on April 13, I co-led an amphibian walk this past weekend, described below. Another walk I'm leading on April 5, through the Princeton Adult School, about plant life and forest ecology at Herrontown Woods will also touch on spring amphibian behavior and still has a few spots open.
The walk at Herrontown Woods this past Saturday delved into the lives of frogs and salamanders along the ridge. We were fortunate to have two members of the Princeton Salamander Crossing Brigade with us. Inge Regan (second from left), who started the Brigade two years ago, is passionate about helping the frogs and salamanders safely migrate to their breeding grounds. This involves helping them avoid getting squashed by traffic when they cross the road on rainy nights in early spring.Wednesday, February 19, 2025
A Special Bluff With Special Flora
There are places in nature that feel special in some way, places we find ourselves returning to. One special place for me is a bluff in the lower valley of Ellerbe Creek--a stream in Durham, NC for which I founded a watershed association a quarter century ago.
During a recent visit, I took a walk with naturalist Cynthie Kulstad in one of the preserves we created back then, 80 acres called Glennstone Preserve. Cynthie is the botanist/horticulturist who helped sustain many of the plantings I had nurtured in parks and nature preserves while living there. The trails and our inclinations led us down to this special spot, on adjoining Army Corps of Engineers land.Crowned by a massive white oak, the bluff is a collection of diabase boulders and uncommon plants overlooking the creek.
One of those uncommon plants that makes this spot distinctive is resurrection fern (Pleopeltis polypodioides), all curled up and dried out on one of the boulders. Resurrection fern is an epiphyte, meaning it builds itself largely out of water and air, pluse whatever few nutrients collect on the rock it clings to from fallen leaves. Unlike most plants, this fern's leaves can dry out during droughts, then rapidly rehydrate after rains.Looking up, I spotted another unusual native plant, eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron leucarpum), growing high on a tree branch. This one's a hemiparasite, meaning it extracts some sustenance from the tree but also has green leaves to make some of its own energy.
Other trees nearby also had dense balls of vegetation high up in the branches, but they weren't mistletoe. Those are witch's broom--a dense cluster of twiggy growth that is the tree's response to a pathogen or other irritant. Cynthie pointed out they are common on hop-hornbeam, a tree I hadn't seen in a long time and had been wanting to run into.
Turned out we were in the midst of a grove of eastern hop-hornbeam (Ostrya virginiana), growing along the edge of the bluff. (Upon returning to Princeton, I found some of these with their distinctive bark growing in Autumn Hill Reservation.)
It would be interesting to know if pine needles, like those high up on this shortleaf pine, also vary according to how much sun they receive."If there is some sunlight however, even a little diffuse light (see below), then a tree makes the most of it by producing shade leaves lower down in its canopy. Shade leaves are larger and thinner than normal sun leaves, and often appear a darker green (they contain more chlorophyll). They also have half as many stomata than sun leaves, or even fewer, and so have a lower respiration rate. They can react quickly to brief bursts of sunlight and dappled shade.
Shade leaves can turn into sun leaves and visa versa; providing that the change is gradual. This is something that a gardener moving a plant outside that has been grown indoors or in the greenhouse, must be aware of. When a plant is taken outdoors, place it first under shade and gradually over several days increase its exposure to bright sunlight."
Sunday, January 19, 2025
Training Deer to Eat Invasive Plants -- Japanese Knotweed
Here's a story and a partially forgotten concept from ten years ago that a commenter on this blog helped me reconnect with. The concept has to do with actively training deer to eat invasive plants. Thanks to Mark Nowotarski of Stamford, CT for reminding me of this concept, and adding his own interesting twist.
Deer manage our landscapes with their appetites. Whether it's your unfenced yard or the local nature preserve, deer largely decide what can grow and what gets eaten down. Introduced plant species can become invasive if they are left uneaten by finicky deer, thus allowing them to proliferate rapidly and overwhelm native flora. Wouldn't it be great if we could train deer to eat invasive species, and thus restore balance to the landscape?
"I've seen a similar phenomenon where I live in Stamford CT. We have a little bit of woods in the back yard where deer tend to congregate. There is a dense stand of Japanese knotweed down by a small stream. A few years ago, I started foraging the tips of the knotweed in the spring and noticed that the deer continued to browse the knotweed through the summer. Every time the knotweed would send out new shoots, the deer would browse the tips. At first they just browsed where I foraged, but in the past few years now they have expanded the browsed area and are actually beating back the knotweed. If you see any knotweed browsing in your area, I'd love to hear about it."
He sent photos and more text to illustrate:
"About 4 years ago, I noticed that the deer on our property had started browsing the spring shoots of a stand of Japanese knotweed. The knotweed grows down by a swampy stream and has been there for at least 30 years. Each year the deer have browsed the stand more intensely.""The knotweed in the browsed area is kept to about 3 feet tall and is very sparse. Abundant sunlight falls on the forest floor and there has been a substantial increase in the plant biodiversity of the browsed areas."
"The deer only browse a portion of the knotweed stand. If a knotweed shoot reaches full size, it’s not browsed. Nonetheless, each year the deer have been browsing a larger and larger area. They originally browsed just an outside edge of the stand where I used to forage knotweed shoots in the spring, but last year they started hollowing out the center of the stand."
Friday, January 17, 2025
Seeking "Lingering Trees"--Some Hope for Ash and Beech Trees
Most people attentive to nature are aware that Princeton has lost nearly all of its native ash trees over the past decade, and is now poised to lose its native beech trees as well. These are only the most recent losses due to assorted introduced insects, nematodes, and diseases against which our native trees had not evolved resistance. Also gone from the canopy over the past century are American chestnuts and American elms, with bacterial leaf scorch also taking a toll on red and pin oaks. As additional organisms enter the country due to an appalling lack of biosecurity, other species are threatened.
What is there to do other than mourn, and mourn again, with each new wave of devastation?
One answer to that question may be: Keep an eye out for "lingering" trees. It would be easy to assume that all our native ash, not having co-evolved with the Emerald ash borer (EAB), would be equally defenseless as the introduced larvae eat through the cambrium, cutting off the tree's circulatory system. But an initiative in Ohio has shown this not to be entirely true. Jennifer Koch, a research biologist with the USDA Forest Service, has been leading an effort to find "lingering ash", that is, mature ash that survive while others all around them succumb. Some ash that she and others have found have natural defenses that kill 20-45% of the larvae that bore into them. A very few trees kill 100% of the invading larvae.
A very watchable video features Jennifer Koch, and also Holden Arboretum's Rachel Kappler, telling the
story of ash lost, lingering ash found, and the effort to increase resistance among lingering ash through research and breeding programs.
One particularly impressive slide in the presentation showed how the resistant trees are able to stop the invading larvae before they do damage to the tree.
Here are some of my notes from the video:
- Ash wood is/was used for bats and guitars
- Native ash species in our area: White, green, black, pumpkin
- 300 million acres of black ash-dominated forest in Minnesota could be lost (apparently no other tree species can survive in those wet areas)
- green ash is an important riparian buffer species in the plains states, hard to replace
- The lingering ash are found individually or in clusters, e.g Swan Creek, Oak Openings Park, near Toledo, 108 out of 11,000 had healthy canopies. Two specimens had no evidence of attack. Most resistance is partial, but resistance can be increased through breeding
- greenhouse tests can reduce the amount of land/labor needed for field tests
- resistance is inherited, though uneven
A central point these researchers make is how very limited is the area they have surveyed for lingering ash--only a small area near the Ohio/Michigan border. They call for similar initiatives in other parts of the country.
That's where we come in, as keen or at least intermittently keen observers of the landscape through which we walk. It's important that any tree we believe to be lingering be a mature, wild tree--not a cultivar in a planted landscape--and that it be a tree that has weathered the massive wave of EAB over the past ten years, remaining green while others nearby have succumbed. Photos of lingering ash, and one story of their discovery, can be found at this link.
A brief mention of the various species of ash: I associate white ash with higher ground and grander specimens found or once found around town. Green ash are less statuesque and more associated with wetter ground. Black ash I think of as growing, or having grown, in swamps, such as at Rogers Refuge in Princeton. The Ohio initiative is apparently finding most success with resistant green ash, though the video mentions lingering white, green, and black ash having been found in NY state.
In addition to the info below, there's also anecdata.org--a platform where citizen scientists can set up reporting initiatives.
This keeping an eye out for "lingering" ash can also be applied to other imperiled species in our area. The Ohio researchers request that people report lingering American beech, hemlock, and American elm as well.
Related posts:
Emerald Ash Borer in Princeton
Sunday, December 15, 2024
An Homage to Princeton Ecologist Henry Horn
I knew him primarily from nature walks--those he led in various Princeton preserves and those of mine at Herrontown Woods that he would show up for and add so much to, often with his wife and botanist, Betty. On these occasions, his sonorous voice would convey warmth and clarity as he shared his deep knowledge of geology and forest ecology.
At the May 5 memorial service under the vaulted, ornate canopy of Princeton University Chapel, a colleague called Henry "the heart of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology." For me, he occupied a similar place in the community. Talking to him, I felt no sense that I was on the other side of a wall that some professors construct between themselves and the outside world. I found in Henry Horn no sense of division or Other, no Nassau Street of the mind dividing ivy league from community.
After the service, I mentioned this to one of his younger brothers, and asked how this combining of academic achievement and commonality had come to be. He said that, though later Henry would go to Harvard, their parents had insisted that their children attend public schools, where they were around people of all walks of life. Henry's mother had had a hard life growing up, and there was always something to restore humility when their heads got too big.
At the service, we learned that Henry's father had been a minister, whose various positions had taken the family from Virginia to Georgia for four years before moving north to Boston. I asked him (the younger brother) if the family's southern roots might have something to do with Henry's easy connection with people outside academia. I explained that I had lived in North Carolina for eight years, and had felt in many ways like I had found home. It was the habit of people there to consistently acknowledge the existence, the humanity, of others. Known or stranger, it made no difference. He immediately knew what I was talking about, and said this aspect of the south is not sufficiently appreciated in the north, where people tend to stereotype southern sensibility in negative terms.
While many scientists studying nature conduct their research in distant locales, Henry found value and meaning in local woods and fields. He was quoted at the service as saying, "You don't need to travel far away to study nature". His treasuring of the local could be considered prescient, given the university's recent efforts to connect more with the community.
Henry was one of the older among nine or so siblings, in a house they filled with the collected gleanings of nature. Most were brothers, but the oldest was a sister who would return from school and share with the others everything she had learned that day. That sharing was described as a university education in and of itself.
Most of us who knew Henry a little or a lot knew him as warm, insightful, infinitely curious about the world, whimsical. It was a surprise, then, to find out that he had a competitive side, and had an inner toughness, as when he stoically endured the brutal welcome dished out by a gang of boys when his family first moved to a neighborhood in Boston. He and his brothers ultimately gained the new neighbors' respect and became friends with some.
As a kid, he had a passion for tinkering with watches and electronic devices, taking them apart and putting them back together again. This tinkering led during his years as an assistant professor to what he would later call his "tenure machine," a device for assessing forest canopy and shade tolerance that led to an influential book that in turn led to his gaining tenure.
His scientific inquiries seem frequently to have led to art, and vice versa. As can be seen in a wonderful video portrait of Henry, entitled Boy Wonder Emeritus, he got ideas for art from the patterns he saw in his photos of canopy, and the carved wooden animals he would pull out of his pocket to use for scale in his nature photography served as ambassadors to help convey science to youth.
He was a force for cohesion on campus, providing advice and constructive feedback to all who sought him out. Resisting the academic temptation to withdraw into this or that silo of specialized study, he showed up for a wide range of talks. He also somehow avoided the human tendency to focus questions or comments on perceived flaws or gaps in a presentation. He instead would ask supportive questions that suggested new avenues of inquiry, and sometimes would even help clarify for a less than articulate speaker what he or she had been trying to say. His aim was to bring out the best in others, not tear them down.
As Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings filled the chapel, above and all around and in our hearts, I wondered if Henry Horn's passing represented also the passing of an era when the work of biologists took them outdoors, rather than into a lab. A colleague of his assured me that much research in the EEB department still takes professors out to the field.
Having learned about Oswald Veblen, the renowned mathematician and conservationist who preceded Henry Horn at Princeton by sixty years, I can't help but see Henry as Veblenesque in many ways. Both reached beyond academia to connect with the community. Both were deeply drawn to the land. It was Veblen who worked to acquire the land that later became Henry's beloved Institute Woods. Both worked hard to support and advance others' careers. And when they faced physical challenges--for Veblen it was partial blindness, for Henry it was a handicapped child--their response was to invent devices that would help not only in their own situations but for others facing similar challenges.
In 1991, he led the University into a new era of interdisciplinary environmental research as founding director of the Program in Environmental Studies. He transferred to emeritus status in 2011.
“He had an original mind and was so caring. He saw patterns in the natural world that others often overlooked"Henry lives on in many ways, including some online videos:
Henry's nature walks
https://www.princeton.edu/news/2018/07/16/nature-walks-henry-horn
Skunk Cabbage
https://vimeo.com/278156799
Mockingbird
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=632608590467273
Comments on Henry in memorium
https://blogs.princeton.edu/memorial/2019/03/henry-horn/
Thursday, December 05, 2024
Touring a New Preserve in Plainsboro--Bulk Farm Nature Center
Though lacking any topography, the preserve's trails take you through a varied landscape with broad vistas across meadows. At first, the meadows are solid with goldenrod, but deeper in some of the native grasses--broomsedge (as in "Andropogon Trail") and purple top--become more prevalent.
The groves of nursery trees prove yet again that it's easier to plant a tree than to sell it.
Towards the back of the preserve, you reach a gate that will be closed and locked for the first seven months of the new year. Bald eagles nest in a tree near the river, and are not to be disturbed.
It not being January yet, we were able to hike all the way to the back of the preserve, and see the very impressive eagle nest. The tree appears to be a red oak fighting a bad case of bacterial leaf scorch.
Beyond the eagles' nest, the trail ends at a tranquil spot along the Millstone River. James said the water continued to flow through the long drought this fall.
On the way back, James partook of a pet pleasure--releasing milkweed seeds to the wind.
One curious plant you may encounter in the expansive meadows is this shrub with red stems. Though multiflora rose is a highly aggressive, thorny invader of our natural areas, it is sometimes slowed down by a disease that spread to NJ from the midwest. Called rose rosette disease, the disease stunts the leaves of the multiflora rose and turns the stems red, particularly in sunny locations.
A gray birch's bark doesn't flake like the bark of a white birch. Both of these birch species are native further north.
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Whither the Migration of Monarch Butterflies?
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Still Here--A Late Fall Walk in a Desiccated Forest
On a Sunday morning in November, sipping coffee and socializing at May's Cafe in the Botanical Art Garden,
a couple of us got to thinking: "Wouldn't it be a nice day for a nature walk in Herrontown Woods?"