Saturday, February 12, 2011

Guest Blog by Erin Taylor; "Today I Felt a Prairie Fire"

by Erin Taylor on Tuesday, October 26, 2010 at 10:13pm
Today I participated in a prairie burn at LLELA (the 2,000 acre wildlife preserve where I work). I now have a profound respect for the settlers who moved to the prairies and fought wildfires with their bare hands, with shirts and rags. They fought to help neighbors and themselves, to save houses, fields, and families.

I also gained a profound respect for fire fighters. Even several feet away from a blaze of waist-high plants engulfed in powerful, vibrant orange, I felt the skin on my upper arms burning and wondered if I’d walk away with blisters. How do fire fighters do it? How did settlers do it?

After work today I became aware of the bustling activity of a few LLELA employees and volunteers. The winds were right, the time was short, the plans were laid – it was time for a burn! Steady, slow winds and other factors expedient for a burn coalesce rarely, so when the time is right, action must always be swift (even though plans are made well in advance).

I was honored to be invited to watch my first ever prairie burn; I didn’t know I’d get to participate! I showed up to observe the pros at work, but instead was told to park my car nearby with the keys still in the ignition (so someone could start the car fast and get away if needed – yikes!). I was handed a big yellow bag full of water to wear on my back, and its accompanying hose and sprayer to douse unruly flames, and took turns with my boss Lisa using what looked like a mud flap from an 18-wheeler attached to a broom handle to slap little flames (or sometimes big flames) that strayed from their allotted zones.

It was serious work! My eyes would sting when the smoke thickened, my arms were burning, hot ash sometimes landed on my bare skin, my upper back muscles were sore, and the only shade available was from the smoke itself, and only when it became so thick and brown it blotted out the sun! In those eerie times, the glow around me would look alternately green, magenta, and even purple.

As I watched Lisa deftly handle the tools of the trade (the flapper, the hose, the igniter), and heard her conversing with Ken and Richard via radio, I realized how important communication is in such a situation. Teamwork is as essential as any of the other tools. A fire may be planned, but it is a raw, powerful, raging form of energy, and I kept thinking of the word force; it is a compelling, unavoidable, unrelenting Force of Nature which, once unleashed, is hard to contain.

And containing it was the art. The tools were never idle; used against a huge blaze, they may seem paltry, but they were deftly and strategically wielded. We were creating a fire break, an area that would be burned ahead of time so that the major fire would blaze toward it, get to the edge of it, run out of fuel, and subsequently die.

Our purpose was clear, but the method was subject to the caprices of weather. Our supposedly steady forecasted wind proved as fickle as a politician, and constantly shifted positions. Little flames seemed to be constantly testing their bounds, and when we turned our backs, they’d have created messes as toddlers with a new babysitter do.

And a new babysitter is exactly what I felt like! Experience is a grand teacher, and it was obvious that I had none. Lisa could see signs of fire where I saw only grass; she could see flames where I saw only wisps of smoke. When I first started helping, the scene would look placid right up until the point that there were multiple small fires out of my control. Gradually I became more aware of the patterns of the fire, and of the goal behind the smaller actions involved in keeping the fire in line.

At one point I saw flames brightly and colorfully reflected in big drops of water Lisa had just sprayed on the grass. So I knew that grass was wet and had no need of my attention, so I turned to other fires to swat. The next time I looked at the same area, it had become a bustling city of little flames, sprouted there as if by magic, or mischief! Vigilance is a must.

Little flames could also crouch unseen, hiding under small thickets of green grasses and plants. They seemed to watch with bright eyes until I turned away, then they’d suddenly burst forth and consume the towering goldenrod above them, as well as the shorter stems that had covered them. I could understand how ancient people might have attributed animate characteristics to fire.

The movement! The colors! The sound! The smell! The smell of a prairie fire is as homey to me as a campfire. Nothing was as unsettling, though, as the sound it made. Different plants burned with different sounds, but when many plants were burning inside of a wall of angry red and orange, the sound became cracking, popping, and a faint thrumming roar. I think it would have given me goosebumps if I hadn’t been so hot. If I heard that sound anywhere but in a controlled burn, my blood would to turn to ice in my veins. That’s the sound of death rushing straight at you.

And the animals noticed, too. We were only burning about 20 acres, so I’d guess that most of the animals we’d consider cuddly and cute were able to get away before they were in real danger. But the grasshoppers were caught by surprise. Some of them didn’t seem to be able to figure out which way to hop. Are they geriatric at the end of their season?

I had only a little time to contemplate the fate of some roasted grasshoppers, and wonder at the other animals who were (hopefully) making their escape. (In particular, I asked Lisa about snakes, her area of expertise. Could they slither fast enough?) But as I drove home, the implications of the power of fire wielded by human hands settled on me like heavy ashen dust.

Is this, then, what it means to be human? To have the power of life and death in our hands?

We decide when to burn; we decide when to plant. We decide what to kill; we decide what to preserve. We decide what to contain; we decide what to eradicate. Fire is the most blatant display of such powers I’ve ever seen. The scorched land we’d created with the use of fire recalled scenes or war, or descriptions of a hellish wasteland, a true gehenna. What will spring from these ashes, though, is a healthier prairie, covering the scars of fire with breathtaking greens, golds, reds, blues, browns, and purples in less than a year.

Fire kills, and fire brings life. It’s a heady experience to control a power like that, even just to see it. Maybe control is too strong a word; perhaps manipulate is better. Manipulate – is the root word related to hands? That would be appropriate. With our own hands, and our own brains, we choose how and when to use a power like fire.

Fighting that fire (for that was my role, though others had different roles) was tough and rewarding. Though I’m inspired by the prairie settlers’ tenacity, bravery, and toughness, I can see that they were fighting a perpetual battle against a force of nature. Prairies and fires are as inextricable as forests and leaves.

Restoration ecologists know this about North American prairies: you can’t have a thriving prairie ecosystem without bison… and fire. Fire, as destructive as it seems to humans, is necessary for the renewal of the prairies, and the removal of trees.

Trees, yes – those symbols of restoration. “Plant a tree!” we’re told. But trees are the enemies of some ecosystems. Trees and grasses are ancient enemies; where one thrives, the other rarely survives. So, fire it must be to keep the prairies alive. Fire, bison, and now humans, for so much of the prairie is incarcerated behind concrete bars and barriers that we are the new bison; we are the new force of nature, and in our hands is the power to protect or destroy.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Snowed in; Reflections on a Different Time

 February, 2011, Superbowl weekend; snowed in and climbing the walls with cabin fever.  My unoccupied mind wanders to another time and place.  At LLELA, a restored original 1850's homestead stands as a reminder of what life was like, as Europeans settled the plains.  Back then, "snowed in" was potentially fatal, and the "cabin fever" really was due to being inside a single room, dirt floor cabin structure...




February, 1850 and the wind and snow blow in through gaps around your windows, shuttered tight and dark.  If the chinking you stuffed between your logs falls out, the walls themselves will become little barrier to the cold.  You pray that your log chimney doesn't catch fire again, forcing you to shove it away from your one room home in order to save what you can.  There you are, alone, in the dark, cold, waiting, wondering if you will simply survive until the spring thaw.  You ration the candles you have made for times only when light is necessary.  Is there enough food and game?  Will wild predators attack in an attempt to feed themselves during these long cold months?  Will unknown hostiles avail themselves of your belongings, or worse..?


Photo Catherine Atkinson
The last time it snowed here in Texas, I stumbled and slipped my way  out and took some shots of the wonderful cabin, sod house, smokehouse, and other scenes at LLELA.  I've added a little sepia tone on some, to enhance the "what if" factor of these, but I assure you, they were all taken at LLELA in this century, with a digital camera no less.  What would we do without television, the Internet, football, grocery stores, cars, even electricity and fresh water?  Could you survive a winter alone in a single room cabin, dirt floor; your ingenuity and imagination all you have to stay sane and alive?

 Although I love these shots of the cabin and homestead area during the snowstorm, to me Owen Richard's wonderful bison shot (below) looks the most like something from a long lost distant place and time.  None-the-less, even this herd of genetically pure bison still exists today at LLELA.  Given the attendance level of our bison tours, and the almost inevitable, "Can we see the buffalo?" from our volunteers, I must dedicate a post to them in the future.  But for now, I'm sticking with cold, bored, and snow...

Photo Owen Richards



Friday, February 4, 2011

Breaking mobile news!  I have just learned how to send blog posts from my Blackberry.  They may not be as pretty as my regular posts, but they will be more up to date with things happening at LLELA. 


P.S.  If you use Blogger (e.g. blogspot.com) then you can learn how to post from a mobile device here.

Secrets Under the Snow; Standing Cypress

Photo: Richard Freiheit
In my last post I recalled collecting foxglove seed on a cold winter day in 2006, and how foxglove is now well established at LLELA.  Although today is once again a cold, frozen over winter day, under the ice and snow there lives a wonderful secret.  Since last fall, standing cypress seedlings have been quietly forming little Christmas-tree-like rosettes that now lie hidden in congested groups under the snow.  They have spent their entire first year in this form, barely resembling their majestic second year siblings.  But by May or June, Ipomopsis rubra, or standing cypress, will have shot up to around five feet, and produced one of my very favorite displays of color.  Bright red or sometimes orange trumpet like blossoms cascade down each stalk, drawing attention from various insects and hummingbirds.  When walking in one of these incredible congested second year stands, I feel as if I were walking in a miniature forest of flowering color.  By the end of the year, the color will be gone, and each plant will have died off, leaving pods of profuse seeds behind to restart the biennial cycle.
Photo Richard Freiheit

Photo Richard Freiheit
Although I enjoy the color, the many deer at LLELA seem to enjoy cypress for its flavor.  As the time for blossoming approaches, and each singular stalk creeps higher and higher, I often find numerous chewed off cypress tops.  The plants don’t seem to mind, as they simply produce multiple stalks from the chewed off tips.  More flowers (and seed) for everyone! 



Photo Richard Freiheit

Standing cypress is one of the best success stories to date regarding a species once lost at LLELA.   Hand collected from local remnant prairies, mixed with grasses and other native seeds, Ipomopsis rubra is now easily collected in bulk, and germinates so readily that we have used it at LLELA as a marker species to show where we have sown seed.  If you collect this one on your own, be prepared with a face mask and goggles after it dries.  The dust particles of Ipomopsis rubra are a VERY strong irritant, and we have learned the hard way not to even open a bin of this seed indoors.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

My First Treasure Hunt; Foxglove


Given that I have been involved with LLELA since winter of 2006, when I went on my very first treasure hunt, this blog isn't going to be chronological.  Rather, past impressions as they seem fit, blended with the super cool from the here and now.
Courtesy Richard Freiheit

So, first impression; hunting the surprisingly not-so-elusive foxglove (Penstemon cobaea) seed  on a cool day, when everything seemed dead to the world.  My mood matched the grayness of the weather, so my brother Richard decided I needed to get outdoors, smell some fresh air and feel alive again.  Yeah right.  Whatever.  So we grabbed paper bags and drove to a park we had played in as children.  Okay, what are we doing here?  A little too old and a little too cold for the swings Richard.
  But Richard didn't want to swing.  He walked me into the dry grasses and showed me sticks coming up from the ground with little capsules attached. "Collect these gently, and don't spill the seeds 'till they're in the bag," he said.  Sure enough, each odd shaped pod was full of little correspondingly odd shaped black seeds.  After my first attempt of snapping off a stick, and watching seeds fly everywhere BUT my bag, I knew what he meant.
  A few minutes more of holding THEN snapping sticks, and my bag began to have a nice rattling sound to it.  Before long, there was quite a little pile of blackness at the bottom of my brown bag.  And that was just what had spilled from the yet-to-be-processed pods.  All the while, Richard told me stories of years past when he would pick these flowers, not knowing anything about them other than how pretty they were.  Every year, he would present a bouquet of them to our mother.  This year, we would collect seed for his job as Restoration Manager at LLELA.  As we crunched through what Richard called big bluestem and little bluestem I began to see my growing pile of blackness as a treasure, ignored by people speeding by on the highway next to us.  Blinded by the grayness of the weather and the rush of the holiday season, they failed to see a most beautiful gift right under their noses; tiny specks of life waiting to be planted, waiting to grow, to blossom, and to spread new life as the cold returned once again.  I had found my first treasure, and that's when I got hooked.

Courtesy Richard Freiheit
Penstemon cobaea, or foxglove, has since become a story of  success at LLELA.  Although some stands existed before restoration began, this species can now be found April to May in numerous locations, as it germinates and grows readily, coming back year after year, from those seeds I had collected that depressing winter day in 2006.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Where to begin...

LLELA; 2,000 acres of severely degraded undeveloped land in the heart of Lewisville Texas.
LLELA; the place where I gather, propagate, and restore native Texas plant genetics.
LLELA; just a weird acronym that stands for the place where I play scientist. 

Okay, I jumped in, my feet are officially wet, and the water seems fine so far...

You see, I've never read a blog, much less written one.  The closest I've come is looking at (I didn't say picking up) the appropriate "For Dummies" book at Barnes & Noble.  I'm no dummy, but I am ignorant of how this all works.  Forgive my learning curve as I hit the ground not running, but tripping, falling, rolling over a few times, hopefully getting back up, but eventually learning, and possibly sharing.

What I have to share are my experiences, observations, successes, and even failures encountered along the way, as a small group of people struggle through bureaucratic red tape, droughts, floods, fire, and more as we work to bring a piece of Texas back to the way it was before Europeans arrived and did all the things that were done to the land.  Granted we can't know exactly what that land actually looked like, but we can make a reasonable guess at restoration from tiny remnants of prairie that still exist, tucked away in forgotten corners and easements, hidden like treasure to be found by those who know how and where to look.

Sowinging Seed -- Courtesy Richard Freiheit
So that's what I do in a nutshell.  Let the treasure hunt begin!

(Oh yeah, LLELA is also known as the Lewisville Lake Environmental Learning Area.)