Directional Signs, Glade Restoration and Monarch Butterfly Enhancement

by Don Richardson

About two weeks ago our new directional signs at 7 trail junctions were installed and are a great new addition to the trail system. We will soon have 7 new informational signs on the newest part of the trail.

Directional Signs at South Fork Nature Center

We have begun cutting again on the second area of the Glade Restoration project. This area is approximately 3 acres and was about half cut last year. We will also move directly to the 5 acre area once this one is cut over. Because of the restoration work going on, the Nature Center will be closed until January 2015.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service is also providing money to enhance habitat for monarch butterflies. We will be planting milkweeds in the glade areas to provide this needed habitat.

A Winter Walk

Dr. Don Culwell, Ph.D of the South Fork Nature Center
by Don Culwell

“Poof!” And, the puffball basidiomycete sent out a cloud of zillions of tiny, brown spores each that could easily germinate growing into a fungal mat of tiny, white, thread-like hyphae of the mycelium…this mass all out of sight inside the already well decomposed xylem cells of the ancient wooden trunk…the tree had for some several hundred years shaded the forest floor where acorns fell and were gathered as a tasty meal by some grey squirrel or white-tailed deer…the same shade created the dimly lit ecosystem where violets bloomed their blue, white or yellow flowers in the early days of a welcomed spring. My number eleven shoe had just fallen on the mass of an old, dried, balloon-shaped cushion lying tucked among the fallen leaf or two and dried-tan tufts of the summer’s grass blades…the brown spore cloud could not be missed! My trek through the woods this winter, this early December day, brought me into an occasional calm breeze that rattled the remaining brown leaves held tightly on the southern red oak as the cool day caused me to hurry along a bit faster pulling up my shirt collar and buttoning up my sleeves…my feet carried me over the knoll of the bottomland woods as if I had a deadline to meet.


I couldn’t help but stop a minute, though, as my eye caught sight of a large bracket high up along-side a tall oak, a large, sturdy bracket of fungus growing firmly attached there…Fomes, a genus of fungus made hard of dried hyphae…the fungus attached on the trunk was the bracket I was seeing. Above its crusty, rough and dark brown upper surface grew a few green moss plants; it is below on its lower surface under the “shelf” of the bracket that one could find many pores. It is from each of these many pores that a great many spores (single cell reproductive units of this fungus) were produced from basidia that line each pore…and so this fungus, too, produces its spores enabling the spread of the species as the spores germinate into hyphae. Come spring this lower bracket surface will be creamy-white colored, moist and soft with a new layer of pores, a growth process that occurs each spring. The old bracket that I see up on the trunk could have been growing there in its spore production for twenty years or more.

And there are so many other eye and ear-catching sights and sounds of the winter woods…just go check them out…they’re fun!

Owl Prowl at South Fork Nature Center

The Little Red River Audubon Society held its annual potluck picnic followed by an “Owl Prowl” at South Fork Nature Center in Choctaw October 28th. A dozen members enjoyed fried chicken together with all the trimmings at the picnic tables by the old Riddle cabin, with a campfire nearby to add atmosphere.

As it got dark after the picnic, members put red cellophane over their flashlights to enhance night vision while walking safely, and LRRAS President Bob Hartmann led the group on a night hike along the loop trail near the bluff. A bird-calling app, iBird Pro, was used to play the calls of the Eastern Screech Owl and other native owl residents.

Owl Prowl at South Fork

The group called up three Great-horned Owls during the walk: two across the lake and one in the woods near the Nature Center. The owls continued calling and answering throughout the hike.
Owls can be heard throughout the winter months as they do their territorial and nesting calls. Calls of the four main native owls are easy to distinguish. The Screech Owl calls in a rapid high-pitched tremolo. The Great-horned Owl is usually a series of lower toned hoots. The Barred Owl says “Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you-all?!” ending in a down-note slide. The Barn Owl sounds somewhat like a woman’s scream, a scary sound, and people sometimes mistakenly think it is a Bobcat.

Owls at South Fork

The evening was beautiful, with temperatures in the 60s. A rain in the morning made the walk silent among the leaves, and Amanita, Indigo, and other mushrooms grew everywhere in the woodlands, gleaming red with the glint of passing flashlights. Everyone enjoyed the night’s adventure.

Meetings of the Little Red River Audubon Society feature field trips and helpful programs about birds, and are generally held at 5 p.m. at the Western Sizzlin Steak House in Clinton the fourth Tuesday of each month. For more information about LRRAS or to join, ask any member or call 745-6615.

“The Haunted Cabin”

by Krissi Graham
Krissi Graham CHS at South Fork
The Clinton High School Environmental Club chalked up a ‘frightening’ good success at our October 18 “Haunted Cabin” event. Forty five visitors were entertained with live music by the Will Shannon and Jake Trogden duet.

Campfire
Jennifer Lovell and Tyler Robinson chopped, cooked, prepped, and fed the group foil packs. Bailey Henry and Faith Scott added Dutch Oven Cobblers to the campfire cuisine. We enjoyed an easy clean-up because there were no crumbs or leftovers to be found.

Fun at the Nature Center
Alahna Martin led a meaningful devotion at one of the scenic circular gathering sites.

Students Osmar Carrizales, Shayla Ross, Colton Cook, Serena Jones, Myra Hawes, Dax Helmendollar, Jeremiah Crabtree and Marissa Kipfer were led by Tiffany Burns in scheming up spine tingling ‘Terror-on-the-Trail’.

Halloween at South Fork Nature Center
The haunted hike was prefaced with the story-telling talents of Dalton James. Hopefully, the SFNC neighbors interpreted the screams they heard as youthful squeals of delight. (From where I sat at the campfire their emotional cries seemed to echo impending doom across the lake.)

Geocaching at South Fork Nature Center
Using the latest geocaching technology several guests experienced success with their first attempts at finding buried treasure thanks to Donovan Turner and Austin Decker.

CHS Environmental Club at South Fork
Our Nature experience was both a welcome respite from the demands of a materialistic culture and a glowing tribute to our students in roles of leadership. I greatly appreciate the help from adults Marc Hirrel, Melvin Browning, Sandi Jones, and Chris Graham.