BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE -- Careening through a forest dell of four-foot hay-scented fern, scientists pushed into thick underbrush heading toward a swamp.
The earthy smell of peat and spruce gum hung on the wind, and thunder rumbled off the mountain peaks.
Not many humans have traversed this soggy patch of earth, where every step leaves a footprint-shaped pool of water.
Heavy rubber boots can sink up to the knee; they make a giant sucking sound in stride.
Fresh signs of bear, moose and deer were apparent in open areas.
In this setting, New York State Natural Heritage ecologists were exploring deep regions of a 15,000-acre parcel of former Finch, Pruyn & Co. lands sold to the Nature Conservancy's Adirondack Chapter last year.
STRATEGIC RESEARCH
Tucked between the base of Blue and Dun Brook mountains, it's a small L-shaped sliver of the total 161,000 acres.
A final strategy for land-use management is still in the works, but most of the property will be sold in working-forest agreements, explained Nature Conservancy scientist Michelle Brown, who organized the trip.
Ecologist Tim Howard said the region is a likely candidate for special easement restrictions to protect high-grade wetlands sprawled out around Dun Brook.
Howard and colleagues Greg Edinger and Laurie Swift are top scientists with the Department of Environmental Conservation's Natural Heritage Program. They are working in the Adirondacks this summer as hired experts for the Conservancy.
Their research will help govern management of special habitat.
ROADS UNTRAVELED
Assembling at 9 a.m., the expedition rambled in four-wheel drive along old logging roads until the trail vanished in new-growth forest.
"I guess this is as far as we go on wheels," Brown said.
Evidence of skidder ruts and overgrown timber staging areas put the last cut here some 40 to 50 years ago, she estimated.
Using GPS points, Howard and Edinger marked the woodland parking lot and started to bushwhack due north toward the swamp.
Special hand-held computers helped catalog data at observation points along the way.
Through miles of changing terrain, Edinger marked seven or eight sites, where he counted numbers and types of trees and plants at the canopy, sub-canopy, shrub and herbaceous levels.
Edinger also used a Biltmore stick, an old-fashioned lumbering gauge that measures height from a distance and is traditionally used to estimate the board feet of lumber in any tree.
About half way in, Howard noticed a black spruce tree with deformed needles curling inward like a ball.
On closer inspection, he discovered tiny red clumps of dwarf mistletoe, a parasite plant that grows under the bark of a tree.
The mistletoe infects primarily fir and pine trees, causing them to grow "witches brooms," strange-looking bundles of twigs and foliage stuck at the top.
HERITAGE DATA
Information gathered from the swamp will be added to state Heritage Forest data banks.
"The upland forest shows active management," Howard said, "but down in the wetlands, there's a lot less. We could call this a high-quality example of black spruce-tamarack swamp."
He had been up Dun Mountain the week before and had several other sites to visit in these watery regions.
The science will inform good land management, Brown said.
It will also work as a benchmark to observe impact of climate change on pristine areas.
With 74,000 acres tagged for timber management, the Nature Conservancy hopes to learn all it can about condition, habitat and natural communities before the land is sold to an as-yet-unnamed timber company.
Large-scale protection requires more than just mapping, Brown said.
"It is a mosaic of forest preserve and working forest."
kdedam@pressrepublican.com
Local News
Good science makes good neighbors
Conservancy scientists get first-hand look at purchase
- Breaking News
-
-
Surplus funds keep After-School Program alive
The Moriah and Willsboro sites run by Adirondack Community Action Programs is not closing after all.
-
Montreal woman dies in Westport crash
Angela Pierre, 69, was ejected from the vehicle when its driver lost control on Interstate 87 in Westport.
-
Burlington hospital makes interim chief permanent
Fletcher Allen Health Care announced today that Dr. John Brumsted will move from interim to permanent president and CEO.
-
Surplus funds keep After-School Program alive
- New Today
-
-
Recovery Center to hold open house
Smashing stereotypes and eliminating the stigma of mental-health issues has led to formation of a new place in Franklin County for clients to get wrap-around services to help them rejoin the community.
-
Recovery Center to hold open house
- Local News
-
-
Ticonderoga faces severe school cuts
The district is starting its new budget process almost $2 million in the hole. Officials are seeking public input on the problem.
-
One injured in Plattsburgh house fire
A female suffered second- and third-degree burns in a fire at her South Catherine Street home early Sunday.
-
Plattsburgh's Sweet Adelines sing music of the heart
Sweet Adelines spread message of love on Valentine's Day with yearly singing valentines.
-
Love between the lines
Dr. Nell Irvin Painter of New Russia and Plattsburgh State's Dr. J.W. Wiley share historical and current viewpoints on interracial loving, American-style. INCLUDES VIDEO
-
NCCS wins CVAC cheerleading competition
NCCS wins first place for the eighth time in nine years
-
Cheerleading photos (2/12/12)
-
Tentative contract reached with officers
The deal with New York state would cover the 2,800 members of the New York State Correction Officers and Police Benevolent Association who typically work at specialized state centers such as the Sunmount Development Disabilities Services Office in Tupper Lake.
-
Lookback: Feb. 13-19
News stories from around the region from 25, 50, 75 and 100 years ago this week.
-
Of Interest: Feb. 13, 2012
Peru Central School Board to hold budget discussion; Dannemora to discuss highway post; Beekmantown School Board invites budget input; Willsboro School Board to discuss policies; Chazy School Board to discuss budget; SLCS Board to appoint clerk pro-tem; Keeseville Zoning Board cancels meeting; Elizabethtown-Lewis School Board to work on budget.
-
Gourds' shapes create interesting canvas
Georgette Bacon's gourd art is on display through March 10 at Foothills ARTSociety in Malone.
- February 12, 2012
-
NCCS wins CVAC cheerleading competition
NCCS wins first place for the eighth time in nine years
-
One injured in Plattsburgh house fire
A female suffered second- and third-degree burns in a fire at her South Catherine Street home early Sunday.
-
Plattsburgh's Sweet Adelines sing music of the heart
Sweet Adelines spread message of love on Valentine's Day with yearly singing valentines.
-
Ticonderoga faces severe school cuts
The district is starting its new budget process almost $2 million in the hole. Officials are seeking public input on the problem.
-
Tentative contract reached with officers
The deal with New York state would cover the 2,800 members of the New York State Correction Officers and Police Benevolent Association who typically work at specialized state centers such as the Sunmount Development Disabilities Services Office in Tupper Lake.
-
Attempted-murder trial set
The case against Robert J. McCann, who is charged with trying to kill his former girlfriend at a secluded Westville site, begins Tuesday in Franklin County Court.
-
A historic battle for interracial marriage
Forty-five years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all remaining state bans on interracial marriage in Loving v. Virginia.
-
Fireworks to close weekend carnival
The final day of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival is filled with activities and events. INCLUDES VIDEO
-
Ticonderoga faces severe school cuts
- Recent Article Comments






