I’m pulling the trash out of the fence row in preparation
for completing my invasive plant removal in that area. This collection of junk was obviously brought
from the farmstead years ago and deliberately deposited in the fence row. I don’t know why it wasn’t placed in one of
the already established dump sites. An
abandoned barrel is cause for concern because you don’t know what it might have
contained when dumped. In this case,
both ends of the barrel had been removed prior to dumping, so the chance of
toxic contamination is slight.
A roll of old woven wire fence indicates that someone had
begun the process of removing the fence.
This is a roll of standard field fence; the type typically used for
holding livestock. Since this has been
rolled, there is a stretch of fence row that does not contain the hazard of old
wire on the ground.
The fence roll is held in place by several shrubs that have
grown up through the wire. It would be
easy enough to cut the shrubs and remove the wire, but a couple of the shrubs
are dogwoods that I would like to save.
I’ll have to come back later with a pair of wire cutters.
The dogwood trunk was resting against one of the fence
wires. The damage appeared to be
minimal, but the bark coloration and growth pattern of the dogwood differed
above the scar. It almost appeared to be
a graft scar, but that’s not something that would have happened out there in
the fence row. It’ll be an interesting
tree to watch.
I never know what I’m going to find when I start pulling on
a half buried piece of metal. There were
strands of fence wire running beneath the metal, so I was pretty sure I was
seeing most of what was left here.
Looks like part of a sheet of roofing metal. This could have come from a long way off and
been dropped here by natural events.
I’ve seen wind storms rip pieces like this from barn roofs and carry it
up and out of sight. It could have been
dropped directly into the fence row or left in the field and then carried to
the fence row by a farmer who found the metal in the path of his farm
equipment.
This is why I mowed a strip outside of the fence row. The short grass gives me a place to stack
trash and cut brush for later removal. I
could very easily lose stuff like this in the tall grass.
A thick piece of black plastic looks like it’s been here for
a while. This is another piece of junk
that probably blew in with a storm.
Beneath the plastic is bare ground. There were a few tunnels made by mice or
voles and many insect sized chambers.
Looks like the plastic provided some good shelter.
A shallow pocket formed by the plastic accumulated a healthy
mass of roots.
I used the root mass to cover some of the bare spot. I think most of the roots belonged to fescue
and Japanese Honeysuckle, two invasive plants that I would like to
eliminate. I hesitated leaving the
plants intact, but the surrounding area is full of both plants, so this little
bit isn’t going to make any difference.
When I looked back at the plastic I had thrown into the
grass, it had the appearance of a dessicated lizard head. I may have inadvertently changed trash into
art. That takes care of all the junk
except for the fence wire that’s strung along the ground. The wire will take a little more time to
gather up.
I usually delete advertisements when they show up in comments, but I found this one amusing. I was a great fan of the BBC Ground Force TV show. The first thing the Ground Force team would do at the start of a job was have a skip delivered in which to deposit all of the debris resulting from their garden renovation. Unless this company offers free delivery within 4,000 miles, I probably can’t afford their service.
ReplyDeleteSteve, you've had Blue Jay Barrens now for, what, close to 27 years? You're just now getting to removing trash out of the fence row? This is not a criticism but an observation. I have to say I feel exhausted after reading all your posts about the amount of work you've done this winter. Did you recently retire? Or, is this year's unusual weather simply conducive to all your outdoor maintenance?
ReplyDeleteRemoving items dumped long before I purchased the property has never been a high priority. I’ve always concentrated on those activities that promised to have positive and long lasting impacts on the target ecosystem. The old junk has already done its damage and is now a rather benign part of the landscape. I’m only removing these items because they are interfering with my management of invasive species.
ReplyDeleteThe weather has always been the dominate factor affecting how much work I accomplish during the winter. This winter’s weather has limited my ability to accomplish what I had hoped. I can do very little when the ground is wet and muddy, a condition that has been common over the last few months. If things would dry up, I could really get some work done. February and March 2002 were almost drought like and I got twice as much done in those two months than I expect to accomplish this entire winter.