Thursday, 13 October 2011

Trees - Copeland Forest, October 12th 2011

                                                                                It is hard to argue with trees. They are big, they are enduring and they outlive us by hundreds of years. In Ontario it is sometimes hard to imagine that in the 1940's most of the land was scrub because we'd logged out all the trees. It is even harder to imagine that the logging was done with horses, men and saws on non-mechanical nature. If you go the Logging museum in Algonquin Park you'll hear amazing statistics. For instance, in the early half of the 19th century 80% of the workforce was involved in logging over the winter months. It's hard to argue with trees but you sure can cut them down.

Ordinarily you'd have to hike out to the West Coast or Temagami to really get the scope of a tree in all its glory. Last hike we noted some pretty large eastern white cedar. That was odd when you consider that this area was easy to log. Odder still was this last hike when we noted some very large white pine. Straight as an arrow some of that pine - representing a small fortune in lumber. Then there was the black cherry. Cost out some black cherry flooring. Expensive.

 
So, all in all, its pretty cool that the Copeland Forest contains some very large trees. Today we went out to learn how to identify a few - pretty neat trick what with much of the canopy either changing colour or down. There is more to a tree than just pretty leaves though, there's bark.

Tree #1 was an evergeen in any case. I'll set it up with tree #6, another evergreen. The two are very similar. One has smaller needles and the needles have stems. The bark has blisters. The other has broader needles. Two of the pictures are Hemlock, one is Balsam Fir.


Tree #2 is being hugged up top and has 5 long needles in a cluster. It is not to be confused with Tree We Didn't See, which has 3 long needles in a cluster, this being Red Pine. 

Tree #3 was Yellow Birch, a softer and more mellow version of the White Birch, which we saw but did not investigate since it was off the trail on a slope. White Birch is clinging to the southern end of its ideal growing range here. We don't often see big ones.

Trees #4 and #5 were maples. Red maple is also called soft maple but probably not considered soft wood. Yellow leaves denote sugar maple.

Tree #7 has very distinctive bark that looks like burnt cornflakes. This is the highly sought after black cherry. If you have one of those in your yard then tend it lovingly. 



 Last of all, Tree #8 is cute and shaggy and straight as an arrow. This is Ironwood.

We also saw some Aspen, also called Poplar and a Beech. The latter does not always drop its leaves so you'll see those in early December clutching faded gold leaves about them. We did not see Tamarak (Larch) but they're worth mentioning because they are a conifer that does drop its needles. They're turning yellow right about now and you'll see them on the border of wetlands.

On this excursion we also found ferns with seeds on the underside and trees with holes bored into them by a woodpecker called a sapsucker. It's a good bet that if you're being attacked by a sapsucker then a mushroom infestation won't be far behind. Eventually, barring some unforeseen circumstance, you're going to fall over and rot.
                                                      While in the forest we also made Twig-a-ma-Jigs, nice for anything from a quick game of lacrosse, to snowshoeing out of an emergency, to hanging on a wall, all festooned with foliage. 

The mushrooms on this pine tree are somewhat deceptive. Last walk we saw a trillion shelf mushrooms of the Boletes Family. Are these ones Boletes?

 A bonus shrub is at the bottom. In August you can boil the fruit gently and add lemon juice and sugar for a nice scruvy fighting drink. We also found a bonus bug, elegant, but currently Nameless - also, thankfully, Toothless.






Wednesday, 12 October 2011

20 September - We Meet our Study Area and Hunt for Mushrooms


Mushrooms are very cool, or I think they are at any rate. They've been a motif of my entire life, lying around on folk art and in books about fairies. Probably one of the first things I ever wanted to draw well was a mushroom. Even by the name toadstool they are cool. Little Miss Muffet sat on a tuffet but she ought to have sat on a toadstool. 
The only downside to mushrooms is that a great many of them when picked in the wild and subsequently cooked tend to cause gastric upset, if not death. My mother, being from Poland, has fond memories of mushroom picking in the woods but she told me, and still tells me never do that without someone who knows 100% the poisonous from the not. Here, in Ontario we have a lot of questionable shrooms as well as 3 deadly ones.  If you want to eat a mushroom then buy it in a supermarket. Otherwise, though, enjoy your shrooms because they are beautiful. 

We leaned some things today. Mushrooms aside, we learned that the Copeland Forest is beautiful. I just want to state this right off the bat. We have ourselves a lovely study area. 

Shroom-wise we learned about 3 types: Gilled, Morels and Boletes. 

Gilled mushrooms are the ones we see in the supermarket with the gills under the cap. The spores fall out of the gills and you wont see the gills until the mushroom is ready to drop them. This is your classic toadstool.
Morels also have caps but the caps are long and sponge-like. We did not find any morels on this expedition. Most are edible and most are quite good. Of course, mushrooms being mushrooms, there is a False Morel out there which spells DOOM to the unwary.  

Boletes are shelf mushrooms. These are the ones you'll see lined up along the length of a rotting tree. You'll know the tree is rotting, even if it still has leaves because this is what mushrooms do. They break things down. They are an integral part of the decay cycle.  Boletes are mainly edible but not all that yummy as mushrooms go. If you are stuck in the woods and hungry then this is your safest bet fungus-wise. Boletes donot have gills. They have a dense sponge-like texture on the bottom.
 

This is not a mushroom we found in the Copeland Forest. This mushroom was growing in Bay of Fundy National Park this past August. The picture shows us that slugs eat mushrooms.Slugs are quite keen on mushrooms. Between the mushrooms and the slugs you have very efficient breakdown of organic matter, though it can takes years for mushrooms to spread. 
 
After our look at mushrooms we investigated the pond next to where we were settled and also the culvert that drained the pond. There was still quite a bit of life in the pond and someone found a water boatman. In the spring we will look more closely at the pond. 
 
Back at home we took our forest notes and put them into a journal. Here are two mushroom related  links:
Photos on this page are by Lisa BC and Tracy Ward.


http://www.ont-woodlot-assoc.org/sw_mushrooms_2.html
http://blog.mycology.cornell.edu/?p=68