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Protecting a natural
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For the public good
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| Future Vision | ||
| THE CHALLENGE AND PROMISE
OF A SMALL WOODS: The Future of the Conservation Area By Jeff Strate, June 10, 2007 “Simplicity in all things is the secret of the wilderness and one of its most valuable lessons.” Sigurd Olson
36 acres of the 41-acre Birch Island Woods complex of trees and wetlands form Eden Prairie’s smallest conservation area. This compact size presents advantages and challenges in keeping it a sustainable, urban-bound natural area. The Birch Island Woods Conservation Area Management Plan (May 21, 2002) is intended to provide guidance for the preservation and management of the sanctuary and to enable safe, public access and appropriate educational and recreational uses. CHALLENGES: Inappropriate uses
The diminishment of the natural integrity of Birch Island Woods Conservation Area (BIWCA) can be prompted via other guises. So called amenities such as benches, trail signage and picnic tables in the woods seem nice, but would create visual clutter within the small complex and deny visitors the experience provided by this in-town alternative to a busy and manicured suburb. Fallen tree trunks or stumps can serve well enough as sitting places and arguably are more interesting than the ubiquitous park bench with a bolted-on dedication plate. As the management plan recommends, interpretative signs or kiosks and trash receptacles can be positioned at trailheads. It should be noted that a nature trail with interpretative signs was recently laid out next door at Eden Wood; any similar signage in the woods would be duplicitous. A concrete slab (from a hog barn), clumps of concrete and sawed tree trunks along Indian Chief Road and a landfill on Birch Island Road are unsightly intrusions. The City needs to develop and implement procedures for cutting storm-felled trees and limbs that respect the guidelines of the BIWCA’s management plan. Despite repeated requests, trees and large limbs toppled by summer storms in 2005 were not tended to until 2006 – some heavy, fractured limbs that were barely propped over woodchip trails were a safety hazard. One uprooted tree, an enormous dead veteran that had fallen over a wood chip trail, was sawed into large segments and left as unsightly debris when it should have only been partitioned for the path’s right-of-way and left mostly whole as critter habitat. Again, in late autumn of 2006, city tree trimmers working along Indian
Chief Road Piles of cut and uprooted buckthorn and bags of pulled garlic mustard
can also be unsightly if left in unsuitable locations for an extended
time. The large hill owned by Twin Cities and Western Railroad needs to be managed as part of the conservation area. Erosion prompted by bikes and walkers on the hill’s steep slopes and discarded lawn furniture and debris at the illegal fire rings on its crest are recurring problems. The previous parks director recognized that a use easement for the approximately 5-acre parcel should be secured by the city so that the hill can be managed as if it were part of the conservation area. The hill top with its panoramic overlooks has, according to Friendship Venutres, been a hiking destination of the special needs campers from Eden Wood.
MAP KEY 1 Picha Heritage Farm ADVANTAGES OF A COMPACT SIZE: Community stewardship & management Although the small size of the woods presents challenges, it also presents opportunity. The conservation area’s compactness and its proximity to Eden Wood have made it a convenient and popular place for organized groups to work with the City Parks Division to remove invasive plants such as buckthorn and garlic mustard and to construct and maintain woodchip trails. The woods is likely to be an inviting place for future native habitat restoration projects particularly in areas that are being cleared of invasive plant species and at the impaired sites of a demolished house, a land fill and an old orchard along Birch Island Road and the concrete slab in the northeast corner of the woods. Trailheads could be landscaped with native plants, shrubs, trees and wildflowers, (favored by the Birch Island Woods Management Plan Task Force) to provide visitors with a sense that they are entering a special place that deserves their respect and support. A woods keeper CONSERVATION EASEMENT: What are the benefits? A number of Minnesota Cities, including Red Wing, Grand Marais, Minnetonka and Maplewood have acquired open spaces for their park systems with conservation easements or are considering CE’s on their existing parks. Note: The Glenshire unit of the Edenvale Conservation Area (Edenvale Boulevard and Sunshine Drive) and the Kaerwar property (Gerard and Gordon Drives) that is slated to be donated to the City, are protected by Minnesota Land Trust Conservation Easements. Non-conservation interests and political and development pressure can sway a city to abandon protected open spaces. And it can happen in Eden Prairie. To wit: an initiative to consider the woods and other conservation areas as off-leash dog parks did occur in 2004. Although the question was eventually scuttled, it should be noted that the “bark park” concept for the woods and the Richard T. Anderson Conservation Area was presented for public consideration by the former parks director and others and received support from off-leash dog park advocates who exhibited little knowledge of or interest in the ecosystems or the high value that residents and organizations like Friends of Birch Island Woods place on these natural areas. (See this website’s December 11, 2004 news item.) This kind of challenge to Eden Prairie’s conservation areas - be it from the likes of dog park or paintball range proponents - will certainly occur again. And future city councils may lack the set of values or the motivation to protect the woods or even be aware that voters and taxpayers chose to keep the woods a natural sanctuary. A conservation easement attached to the property title, would remind them.
The historic camp at Eden Wood still welcomes kids in need; the Picha Heritage Farm still produces raspberries and vegetables; bike riders share an old railroad line with ghostly steam engines bound for Seattle, Sioux and Chippewa spirits gaze upon Birch Island Lake where migrating loons still call out as they have for thousands of years. The idea of designating the greater Birch Island area a Heritage District was received with interest several years ago by the Eden Prairie History Society, the EP Heritage Preservation Commission, the Friends of Birch Island Woods and others. A heritage designation would most likely be in the form of a special, city overlay district that could be used to guide and coordinate both voluntary and required management and development procedures of the respective resources within the district. A heritage district designation would provide branding power that would help provide people with a sense of place, perspective and stewardship linked to very real, local assets. In this vein, Picha Heritage Farm has considered becoming a venue for Chautauqua events featuring agricultural, environmental and cultural themes. Eden Wood Lodge already hosts a variety of crafts, education, community service and environmental meetings. When one considers that the mix also includes the club house at Glen Lake Golf Center, the regional trail, the woods and soon to be rejuvenated Birch Island Lake, it becomes clear that Eden Prairie has a very special cluster of resources that can, with very little work or additional investment, be fashioned into a destination for small, regional conferences and meetings set in up-north landscape. Click to read more about the Heritage District concept. IN CONCLUSION The gift of simplicity that wilderness philosopher Sigurd Olson writes of can be discovered at the edges of our neighborhoods -- in our conservation areas and parks and the Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge -- in places where the quiet, natural processes of the earth can still be detected. Birch Island Woods and Park form such a place.
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Sponsored by The Friends
of Birch Island Woods. Copyright © 2000-2003. All rights reserved.
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