where have you been

Where have you been?

Oh, the opportunities to write or load/develop photographs or garden or any of the things you come here to read about are few and far between. But as Tennessee gets older there are times when I can sit and think about this blog and how I have certainly neglected it.

Tennessee adds a new twist to everything on Cricket Bread, as the potential for new experiences in old places is elevated. Last Sunday we went back to rural Chatham County for the first time since we left last August. We went to visit our friend Bobby at Okfuskee Farm and Lynn at Full Circle. We “peaked” the trip at Saxapahaw General Store for brunch with Nicole from Transplanting Traditions Community Farm. Our friends Maryah and Collier from Homegrown City Farms came along for the ride.

Tenners is not quite into looking at and appreciating other life forms, but we figured it had been a little while since the grown ups had scratched a pig belly.

Lynn’s perennial garden was in full bloom!

This entry was posted in biographical, exploring, tennessee. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Where have you been?

  1. So nice to read and view through your eyes again. Honored to be along your excursion.

  2. tanis says:

    Trace,
    You’ve always been my hero. Always will be. It’s interesting to see you holding your baby.
    Tanis

  3. Camille says:

    Nicely done. You belly scratchers and bubble blowers. Give my love to Kristin!

the missing blueberries

The missing blueberries

The secret, abandoned, out-of-the-way blueberry patch that I wrote about three years ago? Yeah, forget about scoring any berries there anymore.  The patch has blown up, the word leaked out and spread out like the tarps and sheets we used to use in the gathering of those sweet little blue spheres.

Kristin and I took our friends Monica and Nick down to Wilmington with one of our “missions” of the trip being the collection of vast quantities of berries. This wasn’t meant to be.

A recent rain had knocked what was left of the ripe berries to the ground for the ants to carry off. What little was left were slightly under ripe and tangy, not worth more than a few pops here and there. The people had invaded and stripped everything else away.

At least it was a nice day – cool, sunny, perfect just for being outside and walking around. The focus quickly changed from the blueberries to the downtown farmer’s market and to fig gathering at the beach.

 

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2 Responses to The missing blueberries

  1. Jean says:

    where at the beach did you find figs?

  2. Trace says:

    Just about every yard has a few fig trees.

mullein harvest

Mullein harvest

Last month while chasing pigs through the woods (a story that I will write about soon) I stumbled into a large area filled with Common Mullein – Verbascum thapsus. Mullein likes to grow in recently disturbed areas, and this place was really disturbed – trees uprooted and bulldozed away into giant piles.

Mullein is a fascinating plant. It easily colonizes disturbed areas, but its growth requirements prevent it from becoming invasive. Too much shade and it is all over for this plant. Rapid succession from other plants will crowd it out.

This early succession plant can actually make itself less viable by its own presence. A study in the Journal of Ecology conducted in our area concludes that as the years progress, the plant will become smaller and smaller and seed production will drop off significantly each year. According to the study, the first generation produced five times as much seed as the third generation.

Our friend Nick came over, so he and Kristin decided that we should go out to the spot and harvest some of the mullein leaves.  These first generation plants had some giant leaves, meaning less time harvesting and more time picking the ticks off our legs.

Mullein has many medicinal properties – it can be made into a tea or smoked to battle a cough. Sounds counterproductive, right?

The plant is also referred to as Nature’s Toilet Paper, but the irritating hairs that cover the plant make me think that you would need to be in some dire need to use it for that purpose more than once in a while.

The dried stalk contains many oils that supposedly make it a good torch.  I am going to try it out this Fall after the stalks are up.

 

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6 Responses to Mullein harvest

  1. fLoreign says:

    Impressive and inspiring. Now I was wondering why I always thought that Nature’s TP was the burdock leaf (the explanation is, I’ve used it myself, please do not ask for details.)

    Both are much better than the nettle for that particular use, although the nettle can be boiled for human consumption (just as you prepare spinach), or freshly mixed with grains for yard fowls.

    Which ones of these do actually grow in the Carolinas? (obviously, besides mullein)

  2. Trace says:

    We do grow nettles in our herb garden, using them for tea and for food (great in scrambled eggs). We are still attempting to grow burdock. I think the trick is finding the correct micro-climate for it to last in the hot summers.

  3. Marlow says:

    I was hoping the cold winter would help limit the tick population. Many afternoons in the woods with Max has proven me wrong!

  4. fLoreign says:

    Yes, they like the cool weather near the forest, but not inside the forest, since they don’t have enough sunlight there.
    The only such place I can think of is near a creek or a lake, if you have one nearby. I still don’t know how well they tolerate humidity.

  5. kathryn says:

    I never thought to put nettles in eggs, but that does sound good! I really like a sautee of nettles with apple cider vinegar, garlic and butter. There is also a trick to folding it up and biting down on it to eat it raw. Supposedly, when you bite it a certain way it deactivates the stinger, but I have always ended up with tingly gums.

  6. Trace says:

    The ticks have been horrible this year. None of the weather fluctuations did anything to drop the population. While the pigs were in the woods they became fully covered in ticks. They still pick them up in the tall grass, but the ticks are much easier to control and pull off.

trails

Trails

Our land is still pretty mysterious, not knowing what is around or who is around.  With each trip some of the little secrets are revealed, and I feel that we are becoming more and more part of the sparsely inhabited community.

We met a neighbor who told us a little about the trail network that crosses a dozen or so properties (ours included) and found out more of the family history of the place we bought.  The trails are miles long, dumping out onto various properties or ending up at creeks and roads.

As a start, we walked west on the trail that leaves our property.  It was apparent that the forest had been clear cut in recent history, more recent on the properties south of this particular trail.  Many of the older trees were spaced in a way that indicated that the land had been used as a pasture.  Almost all of the large trees had scarring from when they had been used as fence posts.  Others were just big and dead.

The recently cut forest gives great glimpses of how succession works in our area. We have several models in action though.  Since clearing land for pasture usually leaves the remnants of hardwoods in the area, what would usually be pine dominated growth is now a heavy mix of young hardwoods.

Also, since we have not begun farming our open space yet, fast growing scrub and trees are coming up all over.  Sweet gum, tulip poplar, sumac and cedar are already a few feet high in some places.

So, with the research I was able to look through, I figure the forest around us was cut more than thirty years ago but less than seventy years ago.  I could be wrong as I am also relying on some things that I learned twelve years ago in ecology classes.

Along the trail we found some late ripening wild blueberries.  If I had to guess, they will probably ripen around the first of September.  I haven’t been able to find the name of the wild berry that ripens late.

We also saw quite a few wild creatures, from deer to beetles to spiders.  Several large spiders made great use of hollow tree parts for their webs.

This luna moth (Actias luna) was at the end of its life, having lost its tails.  The adult moths live only a week, long enough to mate.  They don’t even have mouths to eat with, such is the singularity of their purpose.

Noel caught a crayfish (Cambaroides sp.) big enough to use as fishing bait but not big enough to make a very good meal.

The stony creek at the end of our walk deserves much more exploration.  I imagine we will all spend a lot of time there poking around among the rocks and pools.

From the looks of the high banks, it also looks like we could have some nice little swimming holes if the rain would cooperate.

As usual there is an end of the line, which we will be sure to adhere to until we can get some permission to trespass.  It usually isn’t hard to get such permission as long as the owners know your name and intentions.  It should come in time, but we have enough space to explore for the time being…

3 Responses to Trails

  1. mike says:

    Trees, creeks, crawfish, deer…….wild blueberries in september….hmmm…

  2. I randomly ran across your very interesting website. NC grown living in OR. I love your dead tree picture. Would you give permission for me to paint it? Check out my website and you’ll understand why I _had_ to ask. :) Dendrology in acrylic is my current addiction…

honeysuckle

mulberries creatures and trash

Mulberries, creatures and trash


Yesterday we got the bug to clean up our room and get rid of some of the piles of papers and such that had collected over the last few months. I am pretty big on creating piles of crap – receipts, fliers, magazines, various notes, paystubs, etc. – but I am not so big on cleaning them up. The rain outside facilitated our cleaning rampage, and I even had time to roll up a few dollars in loose change.

In the afternoon the weather turned, and we decided to “blow off some stink” and take a walk to the train bridge. The rain had been pretty intense so the massively polluted Burnt Mill Creek was pretty high.

On the walk to the bridge, Kristin grabbed some honeysuckle and started eating the nectar. It is really good, but you don’t get a lot out of it.

honeysuckle

 You basically just pick the flower off the branch and pull out the filaments.

honeysuckle filaments

 When the filament comes out of the flower, a drop of nectar will form at the base.

honeysuckle nectar

 Among other uses, honeysuckle vines make strong cordage.

Along the walk to the bridge there are a huge number of mulberry trees, all hybridized into various shades and tastes. We found red, black, pink and white, some tasty and some not so tasty and others that we pretty gross. I thought the white mulberry had the best taste, but a few of the trees we sampled had no flavor at all.

Here is a white mulberry ready to pick –

 mulberry tree

 Me picking black mulberries, sporting a well-worn AK Press t-shirt –

picking mulberries

 You can see all the various shades and sizes of the ripe berries in the sum total of our picking –

mulberries

Unripe mulberries are hallucinogenic. With the hallucinations come severe nausea and cramps, so it might not be the best idea to run out and get some unripe fruit. Also, large amounts of ripe fruit can act as a laxative so take it easy unless you need that sort of thing.

Our walk brought us into contact with a bunch of creatures, most notable a huge amount of young frogs. The frogs were no bigger than a fingernail, and they were everywhere under our feet.

frog

 We also ran into a family of geese near the flooded creek.

geese

geese

While I was taking pictures of the geese, a man came down from this house to ask if we had seen the alligator that had come out with the flood. We hadn’t. He said it was about six feet long and traveling slow.

The next creatures we had to dodge were the fiddler crabs hanging out in the grass near the creek. Since the creek is inter-tidal and brackish, there are usually thousands of these crabs hanging out in the mud. With the flooding there were plenty in the grass and puddles as well.

crab

And of course the flooding also brings out the record of human progress. Plastic bottles, Styrofoam to-go food containers and plenty of basketballs rush towards the ocean at low tide and back into the neighborhoods at high tide. The trash never really makes it anywhere as it builds up into floating rafts of debris or settles into the mud on the sides of the creek.

trash in the water

This is our legacy. If you contributed (and we all have at some point), thank you for helping build this pile of shit. If you need a reminder of why you should use refillable containers, why you should use the recycle bin or simply use a garbage can, then just come back and look at this picture…

trash

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3 Responses to Mulberries, creatures and trash

  1. Ashley DeLaup says:

    Would it be possible for me to use your trash picture in a presentation about how we are feeding wild animals? Thanks for your consideration!
    ashley.delaup@denvergov.org

  2. Kris Kiessling says:

    Curious… it is more than a year later. Is the trash still there or, since you know where it is and it is accessible to you, did you get friends together and clean it up, recycling what you could and properly disposing of what you couldn’t?

  3. Trace says:

    I no longer live in Wilmington, but I visited this past weekend. I went out to the trash area and it was actually pretty minimal. A few stray bottles here and there. Either the city has started cleaning the water up or something else is going on. Without access to a boat it wasn’t possible for me to get to the trash. It would be more effective to get a group of school kids out there to clean it up to remind them that trash doesn’t go into some ether world when they throw it out the car window or off their bike.

waste water pipe

foraging becomes exploring

Foraging becomes exploring

One of my favorite places in Wilmington is a train trestle that bridges a tidal creek, specifically Burnt Mill Creek, near my house. My profile picture is of me and Kristin throwing rocks off the bridge. The trestle is only a short walk or bike ride from my house, so I end up there fairly often. It is a great foraging area most times of the year, and I went out today expecting to find something good. However, I got sidetracked and ended up exploring instead of foraging.

Under and around the train trestle are a series of above ground waste water pipes, pushing storm water and human “waste” from downtown and the surrounding area out to the Northside water treatment plant. I have walked on several of the pipes over the years, ending up in all kinds of interesting places. One of the pipes ends up behind the back lot of Screen Gems studios where you can see the prop buildings and various other crap from the movie and television industries. Another pipe weaves around the backyards of homes and businesses. Another goes to a small, but fairly often used homeless camp.

Today, since the tide was low, I was able to hop on one of the pipes that I had not followed very far in previous explorations.

waste water pipe

My intent on these walks is to not have an intent. Walk the pipe and see what happens. I basically walked until the vegetation growing around the pipe grew too thick and I couldn’t get by. Again, since the tide was low I jumped to the side and got to some dry high ground.

The edge of an estuary is the perfect habitat for the cottonmouth, the high grass able to hide those venomous little pricks of misery. I saw one about six years ago near the train trestle, but that was the first and last time I had seen any type of snake out there. This trip was no exception; just a few birds and the widely scattered remains of a deer.

Also scattered all over the place were various plastic flowers and ribbons, scattered into the grass never to decompose, only fade in the bleaching sun. They joined the hundreds of plastic soda bottles and aluminum cans, deflated basketballs and Frisbees floating in the estuary and piled on the ground.

I came to a gravel trail that seemed pretty well traveled by vehicle and feet. With the brightly colored potato chip bags scattered about, barely touched by the sun, and the fresh boot tracks in a somewhat dried mud puddle, I figured folks came back here all the time.

Back here, everything is kudzu heaped over dying trees, the vines themselves browning after the first frost. In the summer the kudzu piles become mountains, climbing and killing everything. The vines’ march is stopped only by the estuary. If kudzu could grow on water it would.

The kudzu opened up and I stumbled upon a discarded pile of those grave side stands that hold funeral flower wreaths. After finding a few more pieces of evidence and getting my bearings, I figured out that I had ended up behind Oakdale Cemetery.

I followed the path more, passed a dozen piles of chopped up trees, pallets and freshly dug dirt. I guess it makes sense that the unused dirt from a grave has to go somewhere. Might as well be in a pile that will eventually be colonized by kudzu. The path finally ended behind a chain link fence. The loosely locked gate had my favorite sign attached…

The view through the fence wasn’t that inviting, so I decided not to jump it. The cemetery is several hundred acres, a place I could easily explore using the front gate. The one time I actually went in, the guy at the gate gave me a map since it is pretty easy to get lost in the labyrinth. I didn’t make it far that time, but if they allowed bicycles I might consider another try.

At the gate I turned around and headed back home. Well, headed back home after throwing a couple hundred rocks from the train trestle. The other things of note for the exploration were a rope swing near a waste water pipe…

a thick stand of river cane

river cane

and a plant in the mint family that I haven’t figured out yet.

It smelled like mint, but a bit “gamey”. It wasn’t catmint, and it wasn’t wild mint. I did find wild mint (Mentha arvensis) nearby. The closest picture I can find online is for apple mint. I couldn’t smell any apple. Anyone know what this plant is?

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8 Responses to Foraging becomes exploring

  1. Jessica says:

    That mint looks like the wildly invasive stuff we accidentally planted in our garden a couple of years ago. Well actually- the planting wasn’t an accident, we just didn’t know that it would take over like it did.
    We got it from Home Depot, and the tag says simply: Aromatic Herbs. Helpful. Ours has a strong, heavenly smell when you rub it.

  2. Trace says:

    All mint is invasive (or it just grows really strong and well, depending on your viewpoint I guess). Some people bury plastic pots or bricks in their garden and plant the mint in that area in order to contain the plant. I would rather just pull it up and make some tea. The mint always makes it out of containment anyway…

  3. Sean says:

    You know, after reading that, I got to thinking. All that land the cemetery takes up could be prime real estate for a nice sprawling housing development. Call it, “Oakdale Acres…where the quiet and serene are never disturbed.”

  4. Sher says:

    Just found this post while googling this very plant, trying to prove to a friend that what she has in her garden isn’t truly mint but is what I quickly remove as a weed. Here’s info you may find helpful.

  5. Trace says:

    This is actually apple mint.

  6. Marcin form Poland says:

    Today I found also this mint in my garden a LOT of this mint and after some reserch in internet also I think that it is Apple Mint. And you know what its perfect for MOJITO! much better than peper mint :) so Im very happy that I have this mint in my garden :)

    You are welcome for Mojito Party in my garden :P

  7. Dennis says:

    The unknown mint-like weed is Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule), and is indeed a member of the mint family. I am not aware of any commercial or culinary value, but that’s what it is.

  8. Elaine says:

    I used to pick that mint growing up to make tea, never knew what the true name was. I’ve looked everywhere for it now and can’t find it growing wild anymore.

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