beech bark disease, emerald ash borer, what is a forest canopy, what thrives in a forest understory, where dune and forest meet

The Wonderful Understory

We live atop a terminal moraine along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan where northern forests abruptly meet perched dunes left by retreating ice. The dunes themselves have particular personalities formed over eons by wind, water, and erosion. Some are filled with bowls of fine, gentle sand, others are, especially on the lee side of a foredune, more stable, with an increasingly diverse plant life that will transition slowly over centuries into forest. Because the dunes themselves are in constant flux, caving and calving in giant blowouts down into the lake and blowing in a never ending effort to build more dune, it appears as if the forests behind the dune scarps are in constant peril of falling into Lake Michigan. In reality, the dunes are just as likely to give way to forest over the centuries.

The forest here is itself transitional, a mix of mature hardwoods of beech, ash, sugar maple, birch, basswood and oak, trees that took shameless advantage of copious sunlight when the loggers of the 19th and early 20th centuries voraciously harvested every white pine in the area. The towns here are all old logging towns, built quickly to handle the loads of lumber needed to build (and rebuild) Chicago, and to fire smelting operations up and down the coast. 

What is interesting about the forest that sprang up behind the white pine decimation is its inclination toward increased diversity. This is especially evident in the understory, which is that sub-canopy of life that resides in the scarce light beneath the skirts of the overstory canopy created by the largest trees-here, the beech and ash particular. 

The understory is what is a fascinating study. A first look in summer reveals a tangled mess of saplings, seedlings, mosses, lichen, ferns, and bracken all competing mightily for even a taste of the sun, and just a smidge of the soil’s nutrients and rain hogged so mercilessly by the overstory. They don’t just survive, they thrive. It’s an important adaptation since the canopy itself is aging-out. A grand beech may live 150 years. Here they are already about 120, and severely tested by beech bark disease. Most will be gone within the decade. The stately ash ARE already gone, succumbed to the emerald ash borer like so many foot soldiers hopelessly advancing into waves of cannon fire and bullets. 

So, the oak and maple and basswood have had to accept the mantle of keepers of the canopy, along with scattered hemlock, cedar, and balsam fir. And, happily, the understory pulses with life: deer, trillium, wild leek and blackberry, porcupine, pileated woodpecker, screech owl, wolf spider, wild turkey, coyote, bobcat and cougar. I love the victorious understory, patiently waiting its turn, secure in the relative protection of the older, more mature trees, then stepping into the light when its turn arrives. 

It is the same, I think, for my own family. Our grandparents came to the area 90 years ago, when the ash and beech were young, the town languishing in a post-logging and post-war hangover. They began a legacy that we now carefully steward and nurture because they, like the forest, went from young to old, from healthy to ailing, and from upright to fallen. So it is our turn to take up the mantle until we too age-out and leave the canopy to younger lives. What is glorious to me is that life will go on here without us in all its beauty.

Thanks for reading,

J.A.P. Walton

jpraywalton.writing@gmail.com

Anishinaabek, beauty, Birds, Blessings, Creation, Creator, Forest, God, Hardiness, joy, Kindred Spirits, Losing yourself in nature, Nature, Peace, Praise, Silence, Spring, The forest and the dune, The sounds of nature, The squirrel and the rabbit, The white cedar, Trees

Losing Yourself

We went exploring yesterday in neighboring Sleeping Bear National Lakeshore https://www.nps.gov/slbe/index.htm, and discovered an old cedar gnarled in grace at the edge of a small lake. It has the typical cedar’s look of a tree in skirts, the deer having browsed the lower vitamin C-laden branches years ago. Underneath a lush, loamy, fragrantly pungent blanket of woodsy compost harbored what I imagine is a million little insects awaking to the spring sun’s warm invitation. The whole scene was one of peace. Calm. Rightness.

An imperial tree rooted securely beside living water.

A stunning preservation of a tree so old I could not reach my arms around it (a white cedar can live to be 800 years old). Who was here in its youth? A young Anishinaabek family collecting nuts and berries, chipping Charlevoix chert for knives and spears, and drying salmon for the winter? An 1800’s logger who somehow missed this section of forest? What birds have taken refuge in its thick gown? How many fawns have bedded down with their mothers underneath its umbrella?

Any thought of the forest and its inhabitants awakens my imagination. Just today I watched a robin pair building a nest in the Frasier fir out back, using stuffed beakfuls of bluestem grass cut back in March and laid along the split rail fence for a bird salad bar. How pleasant to see the old grasses carpeting the fluff and cheep of new bird life. Still, the robins will have to be wary of the lazy cowbirds lurking nearby. We have heard and seen the trumpeting sandhill cranes flying over, gawky and loud like they’ve had too much to drink. An evening grosbeak came to the feeder two weeks ago for a two-day layover; he has an appointment further north. Then we were thrilled to see a pair of ruby crowned kinglets snipping in and out of the white pine. Now we await the hummingbirds and orioles and rose breasted grosbeaks, our very best friends of summer here at the bluff.

The other day a heavy, pregnant doe crossed my path down the lane. She wasn’t much bothered by me, so I talked with her a few minutes. I wanted to tell her to leave my red osier dogwoods alone, and she wanted to thank me for my hospitality in planting things she finds tasty.

In the end, I live in her world, not she in mine, and I must concede the right of way for browsing when there will be little ones to feed and fatten.

The squirrel and the rabbit have signed a truce under the bird feeder, where we often spill a little seed for the ground feeders. Those two, black and gray, sleek and fluffed, poke around in the sand for breakfast, sometimes surprised to come nose to nose. Yet no fight ensues. Neither chases the other away. They bow their heads and keep on feeding. Do I really own this land? I think not. It is theirs and always was. Their descendants will long outlive my own family line.

I am headed out to plant more lettuces, to transplant several balsam fir out of the little nursery where I have been babying them, and to soak my being in the sights and sounds of forest and dune. The newest catchphrase for getting out into nature is “outervention”-a sort of psycho-babble for letting God’s creation soothe your soul, and bring peace to your anxious heart.  My prayer for you this spring is that you too can get outside, lose yourself in watching the birds and flowers and trees and creeks and lakes in a way that nudges you to remember, always, to praise their Maker.

Thanks for reading along! Sorry it has taken so long to write something for you!! 

J.A.P. Walton

Email me with comments: jpraywalton.writing@gmail.com