Monday, March 11, 2019
A Little History of ECWA's Early Years
Founded in 1999, ECWA turns 20 this year. In recognition, the story of the Ellerbe Creek Watershed Association's founding and early years has just been added to this website.
In this photo from the early days, Sofia Hiltner draws a meandering creek along the front walk of her home in the Watts Hospital-Hillandale neighborhood. The founder's first encounters with Ellerbe Creek were in the park where he took Sofie to play.
Monday, November 21, 2016
Irreplaceable Ellerbe Headwaters Land Threatened With Rezoning
Update: The rezoning request was defeated, providing a reprieve of uncertain duration for this oasis of beauty and biological diversity in western Durham.
A developer is proposing to bulldoze this land, the prettiest and most biologically rich in the Ellerbe Creek headwaters. The 270 proposed units, which in the developer's presentation were referred to as "product" and appeared unattractive and of cheap construction, would obliterate the natural features and impose a massive increase in impervious surface on a headwaters site that biologically and hydrologically is essentially pristine. There are salamanders within a stone's throw of the meadow of undisturbed native, deep rooted grasses, with Atamasco lily in the swale.
In addition to being a window into Durham's rich biological past, the land also shelter cultural history. A section of the colonial Fish Dam Road, dating back to 1600, and an important Indian path prior to that, is still visible in the woods, running parallel to Berini Drive.
There's another beautiful view where the land drops off to the south and east, with mature hardwood forest and deep rooted native meadow.
The land borders the Berini Drive neighborhood, which lacks a park. The proposed dense development would add to the number of residents who will have to drive to find a park for their children.
A developer is proposing to bulldoze this land, the prettiest and most biologically rich in the Ellerbe Creek headwaters. The 270 proposed units, which in the developer's presentation were referred to as "product" and appeared unattractive and of cheap construction, would obliterate the natural features and impose a massive increase in impervious surface on a headwaters site that biologically and hydrologically is essentially pristine. There are salamanders within a stone's throw of the meadow of undisturbed native, deep rooted grasses, with Atamasco lily in the swale.
There's another beautiful view where the land drops off to the south and east, with mature hardwood forest and deep rooted native meadow.
The land borders the Berini Drive neighborhood, which lacks a park. The proposed dense development would add to the number of residents who will have to drive to find a park for their children.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Chad Hallyburton's Fish Survey of Ellerbe Creek
In 2000, a year after the Ellerbe Creek Watershed Association was
established, ECWA board member Chad Hallyburton, who was working at the
time at the NC Museum of Life and Science, surveyed fish populations
along the full length of Ellerbe Creek, from the headwaters in western
Durham easterward to Falls Lake. It was a singular effort, as no surveys
have been done since then, to my knowledge. He also invited residents along the creek to participate, giving us an opportunity to learn fish seining techniques, and get our feet wet, so to speak.
As the list below shows, he found a surprising diversity: 37 species, 29 of which are native to the area. It can also be found on page 122 of the Ellerbe Creek Watershed Plan that we put together in 2003.
I remember Chad being excited about discovering what he thought to be the remains of a nest built of stones by some species of chub. The location was just up Goose Creek from its confluence with Ellerbe Creek, several hundred feet upstream of the East Club Boulevard bridge. I also remember seeing bright red fish in spring, not in Ellerbe Creek but clustered at Fews Ford on the Eno River, north of the Ellerbe, which may have been chubs in mating season. A brilliant mating display like that can give a small glimpse into the abundance and beauty that must have been present in these piedmont streams at one time, and serves as inspiration for work to return Ellerbe Creek to a more healthy condition. Here's a link to info on nest-building chubs.
In the list, the tolerance rating refers to how tolerant each species is to pollution. Being polluted by urban runoff, Ellerbe Creek is populated only by tolerant or intermediately tolerant species. If and when fish species with less tolerance for pollution are found in Ellerbe Creek, that will mean the water is getting cleaner.
Chad's fish survey was a great contribution to knowledge about Ellerbe Creek.
As the list below shows, he found a surprising diversity: 37 species, 29 of which are native to the area. It can also be found on page 122 of the Ellerbe Creek Watershed Plan that we put together in 2003.
I remember Chad being excited about discovering what he thought to be the remains of a nest built of stones by some species of chub. The location was just up Goose Creek from its confluence with Ellerbe Creek, several hundred feet upstream of the East Club Boulevard bridge. I also remember seeing bright red fish in spring, not in Ellerbe Creek but clustered at Fews Ford on the Eno River, north of the Ellerbe, which may have been chubs in mating season. A brilliant mating display like that can give a small glimpse into the abundance and beauty that must have been present in these piedmont streams at one time, and serves as inspiration for work to return Ellerbe Creek to a more healthy condition. Here's a link to info on nest-building chubs.
In the list, the tolerance rating refers to how tolerant each species is to pollution. Being polluted by urban runoff, Ellerbe Creek is populated only by tolerant or intermediately tolerant species. If and when fish species with less tolerance for pollution are found in Ellerbe Creek, that will mean the water is getting cleaner.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Glennstone Detention Basin Clogged
The nicest entryway into ECWA's 82 acre nature preserve at the Glennstone development is next to one of the sediment ponds that catches and temperarily holds runoff from the houses and streets. The developer, Craig Morrison, built a nice shelter there with sidewalk and plantings,
overlooking what in 2008 and through to last year was a healthy pond with cattails, soft rush and lots of pickerel weed that blooms all summer.
It was surprising, then, to return this year to find most of the cattails and other vegetation dead, and the view from the pergola quickly being obscured by fast growing willows.
What could have caused the dieoff? Are a lot of herbicides washing off nearby yards?
First thing I noticed was the ring of dead grass around the pond,
and the pickerel weed is doing fine along the edge. What's likely happening is that the drain in the back of this photo is blocked. Storm runoff is supposed to collect in the basin, then slowly drain down until the water is shallow again. If the drain gets blocked, water will remain high for too long, the grass along the edge of the pond will die, and even cattails will drown.
The detention basin likely needs some maintenance to free the drain of debris. Interesting to see that the cattail is killed by high water, because its tendency to take a pond over completely may make future flooding a good option for reestablishing some room for other aquatic plant species to grow.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Ellerbe Headwater Prairie Provides Seed For Eno Refuge
Up Shoccoree Drive, in the headwaters of Ellerbe Creek, a beautiful prairie stretches beneath the three WDNC radio towers visible as you enter Durham on I-85 from the west. I happened upon this prairie back around 1999, and realized that, unlike most meadows, it was packed with native grasses and wildflowers. Milo Pyne helped me with an initial inventory of its native plant diversity. The site was later included on a tour of local prairies during an Eastern Grasslands Conference.
More recently, the NC Botanical Gardens took an interest in the site and got permission from the broadcasting company to harvest seed, for use in restoring prairies at Penny's Bend along the Eno River, and also at Mason Farm in Chapel Hill.
On March 16, the botanical garden crew conducted a prescribed burn at Penny's Bend, as part of its management of prairie and savanna habitat there. Into the ashes they will scatter seed collected in Ellerbe Creek's headwaters. This project underscores the importance of preserving those places in the Ellerbe Creek watershed where exceptional native biodiversity has, through serendipity, survived.
Prescribed burning: For any readers surprised by the intentional burning of a landscape, fire once played an important ecological role in sustaining diverse native landscapes. The careful application of fire by trained crews aims to replicate natural conditions and sustain rare species like the smooth coneflower. The WDNC prairie has survived because it has been consistently mowed once or twice a year, imitating to some extent the fires that would formerly have prevented succession to forest.
Penny's Bend: Where the Eno River runs into a massive protrusion of diabase rock, northeast of Durham, it takes a sharp turn known as Penny's Bend. As part of the construction of Falls Lake, the land within this bend was bought by the Army Corps of Engineers. Management of its rare habitats and wildflowers was turned over to the NC Botanical Gardens. I'm proud of having been part of the committee, led by Johnny Randall, that oversaw management and re-instituted prescribed burning of the prairies there. Since then, more of the special diabase-rich lands have been preserved and carefully managed for biodiversity.
The preserve is out Old Oxford Rd, and is open to the public. (Photo collage of recent Penny's Bend burn provided by NC Botanical Garden.)
More recently, the NC Botanical Gardens took an interest in the site and got permission from the broadcasting company to harvest seed, for use in restoring prairies at Penny's Bend along the Eno River, and also at Mason Farm in Chapel Hill.
On March 16, the botanical garden crew conducted a prescribed burn at Penny's Bend, as part of its management of prairie and savanna habitat there. Into the ashes they will scatter seed collected in Ellerbe Creek's headwaters. This project underscores the importance of preserving those places in the Ellerbe Creek watershed where exceptional native biodiversity has, through serendipity, survived.
Prescribed burning: For any readers surprised by the intentional burning of a landscape, fire once played an important ecological role in sustaining diverse native landscapes. The careful application of fire by trained crews aims to replicate natural conditions and sustain rare species like the smooth coneflower. The WDNC prairie has survived because it has been consistently mowed once or twice a year, imitating to some extent the fires that would formerly have prevented succession to forest.
Penny's Bend: Where the Eno River runs into a massive protrusion of diabase rock, northeast of Durham, it takes a sharp turn known as Penny's Bend. As part of the construction of Falls Lake, the land within this bend was bought by the Army Corps of Engineers. Management of its rare habitats and wildflowers was turned over to the NC Botanical Gardens. I'm proud of having been part of the committee, led by Johnny Randall, that oversaw management and re-instituted prescribed burning of the prairies there. Since then, more of the special diabase-rich lands have been preserved and carefully managed for biodiversity.
The preserve is out Old Oxford Rd, and is open to the public. (Photo collage of recent Penny's Bend burn provided by NC Botanical Garden.)
Saturday, April 10, 2010
New Invasive in Durham's Duke Forest Neighborhood

When he showed me the plants he had seen in the Duke Forest neighborhood yard, I began tracking them upstream, using the instinct I had developed in tracking the similarly invasive Garlic Mustard in the Ellerbe watershed.







It's hard to predict how the homeowners are going to respond when you knock on their door and let them know they have an ecological menace growing in their yard. But this time, the news was very well received. At first they were puzzled, then tremendously thankful for having someone explain what was going on with this super aggressive plant.


I had to return to New Jersey the next day, but Perry said he would track the flower downstream to determine the extent of spread. This sort of invasives work benefits from a Swat Team mentality, where swift action determines whether the invasion can be stopped while still limited in scope. Once the plant stops blooming, it will be much harder to track. In another month or so, the plant will turn brown and "melt" back into the ground, where it will remain dormant and be invisible until it emerges again next spring.
Fortunately, the homeowner promised to spray the plants in his yard. He also said he'd remove the plant from his sister's yard in the headwaters of the Eno River, where he planted some before realizing how invasive it can be. In speculating how it might have gotten into his yard, he remembered having gotten compost from the Durham landfill somewhere between five and ten years ago.
This means a visit to the Durham landfill compost site, long since closed, is in order, to see if there is an infestation there. Still to be determined is how to deal with all the plants that have already spread down the creek.
A Wetland Garden Survives at Durham's Williams Water Treatment Plant



After a few years of experience growing native plants in Durham, and after lugging many a bucket of water during extended droughts, I figured out that the easiest way to sustain a wildflower garden is to locate it in a wet, sunny area.
Thus, we finally got smart and moved the remaining plants to the lowest ground at the reservoir, where this brick-lined spring once quenched the thirst of golfers playing what used to be the third hole of Hillandale Golf Course. The water is muddy because the site now receives runoff from Hillsborough Road during rains. But I love this hidden historic feature, and the mystery of how a spring could have been so close to a ridge dividing the Neuse and Cape Fear river basins. (Hillsborough Road runs along that ridge.)
Along with the periodic influx of water from the road, this garden's longevity owes to it being cared for by knowledgeable gardeners rather than untrained staff with little interest in plants. City maintenance crews are good at mowing grass, however, and we are thankful to them for respecting the boundaries of this garden.
Since I now live in NJ, it's hard to do much maintenance myself. You can tell that no one in the neighborhood has yet fallen in love with this garden, because it was getting overrun by brambles, and one of the weed trees was ten feet high. It's a callery pear, a noxious, thorny invasive tree whose shade was a threat to the sun-loving wildflowers.
We cut and treated the tree sprouts, cut, trampled and treated as much of the brambles as we could, flattened the old flower stems so they could rot back into the ground, and admired all the wild senna, cutleaf coneflower and iris emerging. Without this periodic selective weeding, the wildflowers would fade away under a wave of brambles and trees. In coming months, this wetland garden will bloom and provide food, water and cover for wildlife in what is otherwise a large expanse of turf.
The garden could use more attention. Even someone unskilled with caring for native plants could come by and pick up the litter carried down the hill by the stormwater. Its a fine destination for any neighbor wishing to combine an evening walk with a little care for the neighborhood.
But in the meantime, Cynthie and I did the basic maintenance. A garden kept going by four hours of work per year? That's the magic of a wetland garden.




Tuesday, April 6, 2010
INVASIVE ALERT: Lesser Celandine Found in Watershed

First time I saw this plant, in Princeton, NJ, I thought it was pretty. Then I saw how it was spreading rapidly through nature preserves, displacing native wildflowers as it forms dense, impenetrable colonies.




It's hard to ask any homeowner who has been pleased with a flower to begin viewing it as an ecological threat to the watershed. Just beyond this quickly spreading patch in her backyard is a small tributary of Ellerbe Creek, which in turn is a tributary of the Neuse River.
If, or more likely, when, the lesser celandine in her yard gets in to the creek, it will spread rapidly downstream.
But it's pretty, one might say, and survival of the fittest is nature's law. But this exotic plant left its natural predators back in Europe, and so has an unnatural competitive advantage over native species. Since nothing appears to eat it, any floodplain or yard that Lesser Celandine comes to dominate will become devoid of food to sustain wildlife.
The best thing that can happen in this instance is to have the invasive sprayed, and replaced with plants that won't take over. If the homeowner can be convinced the lesser celandine is a menace, there's hope it can be stopped before it spreads to the creek.
For a fact sheet on this plant, go to: http://www.invasive.org/weedcd/pdfs/wgw/lessercelandine.pdf Note that the distribution map doesn't even show it as having spread yet to NC.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Painted Buckeye
Monday, December 15, 2008
Sun-Loving Prairie Wildflowers of Glennstone



Native Flowers Near the Landfill

People tend not to have fond associations with landfills, but this one is an extraordinary landscape. Essentially a mountain, it boasts an extraordinary panoramic view of Durham county. Watching a glorious sunset there years back, I saw fifteen wild turkeys foraging just down the slope. Many years ago, during a tour, while the landfill was still in operation, a city councilwoman who had recently returned from Africa gazed out across the side of the landfill, turned bronze by broomsedge grass in the winter, and said it reminded her of the Serengeti. At the time of its closure, residents living nearby had requested that it be turned into something akin to a botanical garden. Currently, the landfill is not open to the public.
Though the landfill is a profoundly altered landscape, along its edges are some of the best preserved remnants of Durham's natural heritage, as can be seen in the first photo. Looking across a beaver pond, you can see the landfill rising in the distance. But in the foreground is a pinxter azalea, a beautiful native shrub that is rarely seen in the watershed.



Most people don't know that bison once lived in what is now North Carolina (traces of a bison migration route can still be found north of Durham), or that in precolonial times the piedmont was a mosaic of forest and prairie.
Remnants like this one near the landfill, which survives only because roadsides were left unplowed and trees are prevented from growing under powerlines, serve as valuable windows into an extraordinary past. Because this remnant is biologically special and irreplaceable, ECWA officially adopted it some years ago, through an arrangement with Duke Energy, to prevent it from being sprayed with herbicides. ECWA maintains the site by cutting down any tree growth.

The sustainability of this site's rich botanical legacy would be greatly enhanced by expanding it into the adjacent city-owned land.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
A Detention Basin Becomes a Wetland



The last two photos show the basin in May of 2008, as it began its third growing season. The basin has in fact been transformed into a wetland, with soft rush, pickerelweed, cattails and other native plants.

Nature and Culture at Glennstone Preserve


Healing Construction Wounds at Glennstone

In the foreground of the first photo is one pleasant surprise--passion flower, a vine that spreads underground and sends up shoots each year with beautiful, incredibly complex flowers.


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