Showing posts with label landscapes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscapes. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2013

Native Chaparral Retakes Former Territory Occupied by Invasives

I discovered something remarkable when I attempted to document one of the rare cacti colonies left in San Diego County of Coastal Cholla cactus. I found a commercial center parking area landscape being invaded by California Native Plants ?
Native Plants = ( Laurel sumac - Toyon - Coyote Broom - Sugarbush - etc, etc, etc)
Invasive Plants  = ( Star Thistle - Wild Mustard - most Non-native Ornamental Landscape Plants from retail nurseries - etc, etc, etc )
Photo Credit: Mine!
While venturing over to a rare colony of San Diego Coastal Cholla near Rancho San Diego, I couldn't resist taking these shots behind the Vons Store in the Rancho San Diego Village on Hwy 94 & Via Mercado south of El Cajon CA. After all I had to park here to be able to walk over to the Cholla colony. The Chaparral shrubs in this landscape behind the Vons are California Holly or Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia)  which are mature enough to produce winter berries and apparently reseeding themselves everywhere along with other Chaparral species of plants within this commercial complex's landscape. You might also take note that these trees are a hydrid cottonless Cottonwood variety from back east and they are struggling terribly. To be honest, many homeowners in general are incorporating native landscape plants in surrounding neighbourhoods as are other's into their commercial landscapes. Unfortunately, this should have been done decades ago. Originally this area caught my attention as I was driving through because of an adjacent large piece of still wild property along Hwy 94 which contains a massive colony of San Diego Coast Cholla (Cylindropuntia prolofera) which unfortunately is in one of those ever so gradually sloping properties along a major highway and ripe for development one day in the future. But the Chaparral plants were clearly fighting back with a vengeance as far as the vacant lot next to the Rancho San Diego Shopping Village was concerned. There are some simple reasons to the chaparral plant intrusion into this exotic landscape and the environmental reasons for the success should provide a valuable teaching lesson here.

Photo Credit: Mine!
Laurel Sumac (Malosma Laurina) aggressively making inroads on the Sea Fig ice plant bank. Much larger more mature parent plants of both the Toyon & Laurel Sumac in the background are no doubt donating the necessary seed base for the reoccupation of former wild native plant habitat.
Photo Credit: Mine
Here is a side view of the bank next to the parking lot with the immediate volunteering of Laurel Sumac retaking it's former prime real estate. Though you may not see them, behind all of these are several California Holly (Toyons) also making an aggressive run on the exotic commercial landscape.
Photo Credit: Mine!
This scene was a pleasant surprise. Two cousins, Laurel Sumac on the left and Sugarbush (Rhus ovataon the right. I have never in my life seen them growing side by side in the wild. Not that they don't elsewhere, I've just never seen it. Generally Laurel Sumac is associated with the lower growing coastal sage scrub, while the Sugarbush is mostly inland and mixed with taller bulkier chaparral shrub species at higher elevations. Very kool! I guess they have to meet at the border of their terrains somewhere.
Photo Credit: Mine!
This is a young California Holly or Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia) seedling above appears to be in very healthy condition. It's beautiful and if the commerical property owners and their landscapers are smart, they'll leave it well enough alone. The main reason this Toyon sapling is gaining such a strong healthy looking foothold here is because water rates are outrageous in Southern California and as the drought lingers on will most likely increase water rates which will change irrigation habitats. Here the Sea Fig is incapable of choking out native plant competition. So the drought is actually helping the native plants to retake former lost territories. A smart landscaper will use that to hs advantag. Allow natives to grow, thin out some and sculpt the others in a natural artistic form to provide a pleasant nature landscape with will mostly be maintenance free and watering requirements to be greatly cutback.
Photo Credit: Mine!

Photo mine May 2014  

Coronado Hills in San Marcos
California -
Cocos Fire
This is Coyote Broom or maybe Desert Broom both are able to make an aggressive come back and actually do well when humans disturb the wild sites. The little bright green shrubs sure are pretty are they not ? Here they are invading open patches of the non-native Sea Fig more often seen as a wild naturalized plant along the sea coast of commonly used on most all banks and hillsides of freeways and other commercial infrastructure. Generally Sea Fig in the landscape settings are more densely filled in, however because of the drought I believe this is why the Sea Fig is loosely thinned out which has allowed all these native to encrouch back into their former territories. Many call it Iceplant because of it's water storing succulent leaf design and structure. It has been used as a wildfire protection because of this water storing ability, but the reality is that it has given homeowners a false sense of security because it will burn ferociously, especially when it is decades old. This is because years of thatch have built up inderneath the top greener portions of the plant sprawl unseen to the average person. The photo on the right is from the (May 2014 Cocos Wildlfire in San Marcos) where numerous home were built on extremely steep hillsides on impossible accesses where the landscapes were planted with borders of Sea Fig in the illusion that this would be a good defensive border protection in case of wildfire. But finally, below is the main reason I came here. The parking lot scenaro was just an added benefit.

Image Mine - May 2013

Photo by James Gallagher, Sea and Sage Audubon
And here is the whole original reason I came to this parking lot in the first place. In search of documenting San Diego Coast Cholla colonies which are rapidly disappearing because of prime real estate development in and around all of the San Diego city & county areas. Interestingly, the Coast Cactus Wren like the one on the right have also become a rare sight as a result of habitat loss which must include cacti colonies. I did find one nest in the arms of one of the Cholla plants, but no birds. It may well have also been a Mourning Dove nest. But enjoy the Cholla post.
(Cylindropuntia prolifera) San Diego's Coastal Cholla Colonies Still Thriving on some Wildlife Islands within the city


Monday, May 6, 2013

Saturday in Idyllwild viewing it's most gigantic Ponderosa Pine

Well, at least the biggest I am aware of after living there and exploring for 3 year between 1981-83
Photo Mine!
This is the largest tree I have ever found in Idyllwild that is still alive. Back in the pioneer old west logging days, these were very common. This tree is on Tahquitz Dr near the South Circle Dr in Fern Valley. I used to live across from this tree back in the early 1980s at Fern Valley Corners where Chart House and Baker in the Forest was located. I lived in an apartment above the old Town Crier Newspaper office there as well. Admittedly, I am a bit worried looking at the top of this tree which is showing signs of weakness due to drought which may effect bark beetles being present in the tree. 
Below I attempted to take a full view in three sections. Hmmm, how did I do ?

All Mine!
Yeah I know, it's not perfect, but you get the main idea!!!  *smile*
Sad Update April 18, 2017 on the Fate of this Majestic Ponderosa Pine - Idyllwild
Idyllwild California - The locally named and beloved Ponderosa Pine called "So Big" was finally felled after it had succumb to Pine bark Beetle in just a few months. However, after taking down one of the giant pieces, tree cutters found a surprise near the tree's top.

http://www.myidyllwild.org/collections
Image - Google Earth
Update June 1st 2018 Drone Aerial View Idyllwild
Drone Photo by Frazier Drake (June 1, 2018)

Tom Roberts
The above photo speaks volumes as to the dying forest within Idyllwild and the surrounding landscape of once lush and glossy green Strawberry Valley. This aerial drone photo was taken by Frazier Drake (June 1, 2018) & published in My-Idyllwild. Another couple of years and all of these trees are going to be wiped out for good. If the present system of things is allowed to continue, the entire Southern California mountainous ecosystems will all be converted to chaparral with only small pockets of woodlands where moisture is consistent to remind people of what once was. When I first moved here in 1981, it was some of the richest green I'd ever seen. The pine needles even shimmered from reflection of sunlight. Everyone use to comment on that. Hard to believe such a dramatic turn around has been possible. Oh and this guy in the photograph is former US Forest Service Wildlife Biologist, Tom Roberts, who lived and worked here in the late 70s through much of the 1980s. I had a conversation with Tom Roberts on 1982 at his office in the older US Forest Service office in Idyllwild (now home to the Idyllwild Town Crier). He said all the trees in Idyllwild were going to eventually die and the best replacement tree was going to be the Giant Sequoia, native to the Sierra Nevada Mountains. At the time I could not believe this because the forest within and surrounding Idyllwild was lush and green. I just couldn't picture it. There were numerous large health specimens of Giant Sequoia planted in downtown Idyllwild and in front of the elementary School. Tom Roberts was both right and wrong. Yes, the forest is all dying off by the 10s of 1000s, but so are almost every single one of those more resilient Giant Sequoia trees. Thomas Roberts too has died. Here is his obituary in Legacy.com. Sadly, it seems nobody even remembers Tom Roberts in Idyllwild anymore. Even the Idyllwild Town Crier has no mention of his passing. Most people I knew (like the forest) from there are long since gone.