On Ticks, Starving Owls, and Restoration

Ticks, Lyme disease, ecological disruption, climate change and biodiversity loss, a thread about how it is easier to break something than it is to fix it.

Two days ago, after a one hour walk in the woods I spent another hour removing ticks (55 of them! - mostly deer ticks, and thus potentially Lyme disease carrying) from our big black furry dog, changing my clothes and taking a shower to make sure I was tick-free myself.

55 ticks - talk about an ecosystem out of balance!!!! And for those of you who are lucky enough to not live with deer ticks, picture the search for 55 sesame seed sized black specks in long black fur.

I'm still learning about the complex ecology of Lyme disease and its hosts and vectors, and I don't think there is a definitive science of this ecology. But enough is known to make it clear there's not just one simple thing out of balance in these Northeastern woodlands.

Though we work on removing it, our land has some amount of non-native brushy/shrubby/thorny invasive plants - things like barberry. Studies have shown that these areas make safe havens for mice and other small mammals on which the ticks live and multiply. More invasives means more mice, which means more ticks.

Another reason there is a boom in small mammals is a lack of predators. Vermont used to have rattlesnakes, which preyed on small mammals, but with a state sponsored bounty on them in the early 1900s they were mostly wiped out. Habitat loss and past waves of hunting mean other large predators are missing too, like wolves and bobcats. That leaves foxes, weasels, coyotes and some raptors to keep prey species in balance. Fewer predators means more mice, means more ticks.

Around us last winter (noted for layer after layer of ice storms - a pattern that is maybe becoming more common for us with climate change) Barred Owls were found starving in high numbers, because…they hunt their prey by plunging through the snow to capture it. Their body weight is enough to do this through powdery snow, but not through layers of ice. Mice, safe from owls below layers of ice in the winter, means more mice in the spring, means more ticks.

Can you see the years of violence, short-sightedness and disruption all coalescing in something that now, finally registers as a problem? Generations before my birth, mass culls of snakes, DDT harming raptors, someone importing pretty ornamental shrubs without thought to ecological consequences, greenhouse gas emissions changing snow and ice leading to starving owls.

We are talking now about how to make our land better habitat for predators, whether we can build nesting boxes for kestrels and owls and corridors for larger predators, and how to make it less good for mice, by working harder on removing invasive species.

That's a lot of work, and a lot of repair. It's also interesting, enlivening work, to think that we may be able, at least in small ways, to help repair, restore and reweave, to begin the centuries-long work of restoration that we know must begin almost everywhere starting now.

Cobb Hill Winter Woods

By Karyn Stack

Some might think that not much goes on in the woods during the cold and quiet winter months, here in Vermont, but to the contrary.   I just got back from a walk with my trusted dog Gillie, after having seen some new, neatly piled mushroom logs that my husband Bill and the other Shiitake Stooges cut in preparation for the Spring Inoculation Party.  Ten minutes prior, I noticed small deer tracks on the Snowshoe trail I had cut weeks ago above the Sheep Pasture and use most days.  Makes me smile to think that I have made winter walking a bit easier for the young four-leggeds.

Winter woods karyn.png

 

Earlier in the week, I caught a glimpse of and heard, one of my old forest friends, the grand Pileated Woodpecker.  Days before that, I was treated to a Barred Owl conversation, between two who were hooting from a distance. 

More than a month ago, while cruising along in my Snowshoes, I spooked up what I believe was a Grouse.  I also regularly see remnants from a squirrel/chipmunk meal, scattered across the snow.

I like the independence of snowshoeing. Really, I can roam anywhere in our woods to create a trail, making it a bit easier the next time I venture out.

Sometimes I walk with friends or run into others while I wander, but many days it’s just Gillie and me.  She’s great company and spending more time in our woods, I have come to feel very comfortable and at home out there. 

Summer Abundance

It's been a full and busy summer at Cobb Hill. All the things that signify summer on a Vermont Farm have happened in due course: swimming in the pond, making hay, watching the wildflowers progress from bloodroot all the way through to goldenrod. There have been pot-lucks and community meals, birthday parties (including an elegant mermaid cake), 4th of July fireworks, blueberries, raspberries, and corn on the cob.

There have been some farewell parties and U-haul loadings as several families have left Cobb Hill. Some after 15 years - imagine all the memories and gratitudes and intertwined relationships! And two young women who have grown up at Cobb Hill have just headed off to start their first years of college - more celebration, and more bittersweet feeling,  for sure. 

And, best of all for me, has been the welcoming of new families into the pattern of life here and the fun of watching parents and kids discover some of the richness of this place - whether it's rip-sticking in the basement of the Common House or having the whole community march up the hill to share your birthday cake on your fifth birthday!

Posts on this blog have been a little sparse of late - attributable to summer abundance of course! But school starts next week, and with the wind down of summer you can expect more frequent updates.  

Mushroom Inoculation

An annual spring event at Cobb Hill has become the inoculation of a new batch of hardwood logs with shiitake spores. What could be a long and arduous job – they need to inoculate more than one hundred logs and each log has dozens of inoculation sites – is made more fun by inviting in neighbors from surrounding towns to help and learn about growing mushrooms. In return, each helper leaves the day with two inoculated logs, which they carry home and tend until they produce mushrooms next summer. 

Civil Disobediance

Cobb Hill Member Coleen O'Connell took part in the Democracy Awakening protests in Washington D.C. last month. Here are some of her reflections:

Coleen with Ben Cohen.png

I went to DC this past weekend to take part in the Democracy Awakening rallies including civil disobedience direct actions.  Democracy Arising was a coalition of many, many different organizations – from Sierra Club to the NAACP – all of whom are concerned about getting dark money out of politics, overturning Citizens United, passing a strong immigration bill, reinstating and updating the Voting Rights Act, ending gerrymandering etc.  A small group of 100 marchers walked from Philadelphia where the constitution was signed to the Capitol building the week prior to last’s weeks rallies.  Each day last week highlighted one of the issues and people marched and then did sit ins on the Capitol steps.  The culmination of the week was a big march around the Capitol on Sunday followed by a Monday morning sit-in; I was involved in both of these events.   I was arrested, but because I went willingly off the steps, I was not handcuffed or put in jail.  300 of us (Ben and Jerry included) were held on the Capitol lawn while they processed each one of us separately.  On Tuesday we had to report to the police station to be fingerprinted and pay a $50 fine.  Here I am waiting in line with Ben Cohen.  Over the years I have participated in many marches and nonviolent civil disobedience actions.  I have never chosen to be arrested.  As I turn 65 this year, I have determined that it is my time to step up for Democracy and the planet we all love.  I cannot sit quiet and allow all I love to go up in flames.  Expect more of this from me. 

Cobb Hill Frozen Yogurt Featured As Example of the "Slow Money" Movement

When she wanted to expand her business, Cobb Hill member Jeannine Killbride, founder of Cobb Hill Frozen Yogurt, turned to the local investing movement in Vermont for financing to help her obtain the equipment she needed to increase her production. Earlier this month, the Vermont Sustainable Jobs Fund interviewed Jeannine about the process and her advice to other small-scale, food-system entrepreneurs. You can read the article here.

Donella Meadows’ Work and Ideas Live On

Our local paper, the Valley News, carried a remembrance about Dana Meadows this weekend, written by Cobb Hill member, Stephen Leslie. Here's an excerpt to give you a taste. You can read the whole article here.

While Dana was deeply concerned about the future, about the generations that would follow us, she was a natural optimist. She believed in our ability to rise up together, to care for one another, to reinvent the world. And she knew from her own life experience that hope and strength have a way of building on each other once we set our intentions and create systems to put them in motion. It is 15 years ago last month that we lost Dana, but her great spirit and the power of her ideas and her vision are not lost — they are all around us. 

 

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Operate From Love

Operate From Love

OPERATE FROM LOVE. One is not allowed to say that seriously any more. Anyone who calls upon the human capacity for love, generosity, wisdom, will be met with a hail of cynicism. “Of all scarce resources, love is the scarcest,” I have heard people say.

I just don’t believe that. Love is not a scarce resource, it is an untapped one. Our jazzed-up, hustling, quantitative culture does not know how to tap it, how to discuss it, or even what it means.

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Cobb Hill Prom

The second annual Cobb Hill Prom happened last weekend - timed perfectly to break up the winter season. Cobb Hill teens Nora, Gretta, and Jenna invented the idea last year and brought it back this year, with glittery confetti, blue and white streamers, dozens of balloons, and a chocolate fountain! I think it's fair to say it was the first prom for Caleb and Maeli who are getting a jump on prom-going before entering pre-school! It was fun to see just how fancy my Cobb Hill neighbors can look when they shed their farm clothes and winter gear - check out a few photographic highlights:

 

Jenna, Nora, and Gretta (from left to right)  made the prom happen!

Jenna, Nora, and Gretta (from left to right)  made the prom happen!

Sampling the chocolate fountain!

Sampling the chocolate fountain!

Fancy treats!

Fancy treats!

The prom was a family affair!

The prom was a family affair!

Small House on Wheels

Cobb Hill member Jenna Rice, one of the group of young adults who have grown up at Cobb Hill, is on a gap year between high school and college. She's using part of that time to build a small, energy efficient home on wheels. After spending the fall months designing the house and picking out the manufacturer of the high energy efficiency panels the house is made of, Jenna visited the factory to watch the assembly of her house and made a time-lapse video.

A week or so later the house arrived, in the midst of a snowstorm.

You can read more about the house and Jenna's other projects on her blog.