We need the tonic of wildness... We can never have enough of Nature. …
We need to witness our own limits transgressed,
and some life pasturing freely where we never wander.
Thoreau
Writing projects heat up, and visitors stop by my cabin in
the coastal redwoods outside Willits, keeping me busy. A friend just pointed
out an interesting article in the New York Times, The Busy Trap on the nature of keeping ourselves busy—and telling
everyone we are—to convey self-importance or to reject the validity of quiet
and slow activities as pastimes, no matter how rejuvenating and necessary they
may be. Since I ended my previous post declaring that I’m still a Type-A
personality in the woods, I had to reflect on being driven. I do believe that we
can keep busy in positive ways when working for the good of our communities and
the earth, but rejuvenation is necessary in all living things.
One of the
projects that keeps me busy is tending to the forest around me. I have 23 acres
of redwood, madrone, fir, and tan oak. Learning how to conserve the forest’s
best qualities while minimizing fire hazard is a job in itself. Even as I agree
with Thoreau about enjoying the wildness in these woods, the force of human
hands long ago impacted how the forest grows and looks now, and the woods need
tending.
Debris in the Forest
To get
the picture of what forest stewardship can mean, here is a photo(left) of the woods that were cleared of
brush and small trees along an old logging road just below the house. You can see individual trees and some logs lying on the ground. Compare that to a photo below of woods not yet cleared of brush, an indistinguishable mass of
leaves. The old adage should be, “You
can’t see the forest for the brush.”
Here is another picture (left) of
the trail going down to the creek with Cholo ambling along two years ago, in
the fall of 2010. You can see he’s in the midst of a chaos of fallen tree
trunks and branches. Most of that
debris is from tan oak which grows abundantly throughout these woods, but often
in small spindly forms. Here is a photo (below) of
Sata on the same trail recently.
A Brief History of This Forest: Slash and Burn
This whole area was logged thoroughly in 1951, with the bigger redwood trees cut down. Walking through the woods you come upon impressive stumps of 4’-5’ in diameter.Then, in 1952, a huge forest fire spread throughout the Sherwood Valley and surrounding hills where I live (you turn off of Sherwood Road to get to my cabin). All the fallen treetops and “slash” from the tree harvesting made for ripe forest kindling after a year.
The charred
remains are visible everywhere in these woods. Apparently the small town of
Sherwood burned completely to the ground and never was rebuilt.
As the embers cooled, new life
eventually regenerated in the forest. The fallen trees you see are mostly tan
oak, as in this picture (below)
Present Day Fire Danger
Even
as I write this in July 2012, a forest fire has already burned down 25,000
acres of Mendocino National Forest to the northeast of Willits. A thick haze of
smoke has spread for miles, including the Little Lake Valley of Willits and its
hillsides. The threat of a fire is all too real.
The California Department of
Forestry and our local fire departments find every means possible to get the
attention of human forest-dwelling creatures to insure that we follow a few
basic rules of forest fire prevention: for 100 feet from the house, clear all
brush, all branches up to 10’ on the tree, and any trees smaller than a 5”
diameter. For homes sitting on a steep slope, like mine, the danger of a flames
racing uphill and consuming a property are even worse. So in the winter when I
moved here, 2010-11, I started cleaning up the swath of woods just below me,
relying on a crew of men to cut and burn.
Now
I can enjoy feeling a little safer, and the forest provides more of a sylvan
glade vista rather than a wall of impassable brush. But the environmental irony is bitter: creating
several roaring fires with their particulate matter streaming into the air in
order to reduce fire hazard and improve the environment.
I’ve been learning about building brush piles as a means of continuing to clean up forest debris while potentially making homes for critters. Here is another before (left) and after(below)cleaning at the top of the creek on my land that eventually joins Willits Creek far below.
Malcolm Margolin, friend, writer, and publisher
of Heyday Books for nearly forty years, began his career as a writer after a
stint working on replanting forests in the Olympic Peninsula and leading youth
on environmental education hikes in the East Bay parks. In his 1975 book The Earth Manual: How to Work on Wild Land
Without Taming It, he describes how to build trails for humans and shelters
for small forest animals, recycling branches, brush, and leaves. Guiding my
work here is Malcolm’s purpose in caring for the wildland: “how to stop its
erosion, heal its scars, cure its injured trees, increase its wildlife, restock
it with…wildflowers, and otherwise work with (rather than against) the wildness
of nature.”
I’ve been trying to follow some of these lessons, though I have
much yet to learn. For example, Malcolm warns about creating a trail down hill
that will become a water sluice in the winter. Check!
You can see how neatly I dug the steps on this part of the
trail, and above to the right are pieces of redwood plank and rebar used for
steps. But in the last torrential rain of the winter, I discovered too late that
I had not created enough of an outslope to
allow for water drain off. Well, there’s always time to try again.
Cleaning up a Mile of Trail
As well as
the creek bed, the old logging roads from 60 years ago form the basis for many
of the trails I’ve been renovating. I’ve even found remnants of the old logging
practices, such as this three-inch thick cable used to haul the logs up skid
rows through the forest.
I’ve been creating trails through these acres for the last two years. I always carry clippers and alternately loppers, a saw, a rake or a shovel to clear the path.
Hauling logs and branches up and down the steep hillsides is tremendous exercise.
My puppy Sata is a
little mountain goat, racing up and down the hills, bounding over logs, and
trying to bite the piles of leaves I throw on top of my brush piles.
Various work crews of friends have graced the land over the last years. My friend Nomi with her sons Izzy and Micah helped clear the path.
Katherine likewise
made brush piles and then created an Andrew Goldsworthy type artwork of the
curved redwood branches falled to the earth. (Goldsworthy’s River and Tides is an inspiration for
making art with nature and in nature.) (YouTube shorts)
Recently my crew of my two nieces and nephew, Julia, Laura and Kyrae, helped clear the
trail.
The work of cleaning up
the forests makes me admire ever more the work of the Conservation Corps during
the New Deal, which put thousands of Americans to work in our nation’s parks to
build roads, trails, bridges, benches, lodges, and many other improvements to
our parklands. As I try to make a mile of trails and sylvan vistas, I see how
much vision and hard labor made our forested parks such pleasant glades to
wander in.
The forest offers opportunities for giving back to the earth, and
sustains us in many ways, from Sata’s little swimming hole to places for delight and
meditation.
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ReplyDeleteI TOTALLY DIG YOUR EARTHERN STAIRWAY KIMBERLY. REAL MAGIC. FOR SURE.
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