Sneak Peek: CREW Fall Schedule of Events

Sunflowers at Cypress Dome Trails

Fall is right around the corner and that means cooler weather (we hope) and more trail activity, including visitors and school groups coming to CREW to learn and play. We’ve got some fabulous programs planned for you this year. Here’s a sneak peek at our fall schedule. For full details and/or to register for CREW programs, check out our list of events on Eventbrite (or use the calendar on the CREW homepage to scroll through the months and see what’s coming).

September 2014

  • September 24 – 30 – National Take a Child Outside Week (why not bring them the CREW?)
  • September 26 – CREW Board of Trustees Meeting at Estero Community Center
  • September 27 – Mushroom Walk w/ Ben Dion (SOLD OUT – waiting list)

October 2014

  • October 4 – Sunflower Festival – Pepper Ranch (CREW will have a table there)
  • October 4 – Field Trip Specialist Teacher Training (for Collier 3rd grade teachers)
  • October 18 – Fall Wildflower Walk with Brenda Thomas
  • October 19 – Ding Darling Days – Family Fun Day (CREW will have a table there)
  • All month long – Lots of elementary, high school and college field trips 

November 2014

Raccoon (photo by George Luther)
Raccoon (photo by George Luther)

December 2014 – Bicycle tour at Bird Rookery, Geocaching, and more….

See you on the trails – let’s do this!

Wild File Q & A: Witches’ Broom

This week we begin a monthly Q & A post about various natural history topics written by CREW volunteer naturalist, Dick Brewer. This month he tackles a frequently asked question from Bird Rookery Swamp visitors.

Q: What made the large platform up in the tree, and does anything live in it? (This can be seen at the 0.5 mile marker at Bird Rookery Swamp)

Witches broom in tree
A large Witches’ Broom growing on a cypress in Bird
Rookery Swamp above the 0.5 mile post. (Photo by Dick Brewer)

A:      It’s called a Witches’ Broom. It’s a dense cluster of twigs/needles growing from a central source, sort of resembling a broom. It is a symptom of stress found in woody plants, mainly trees but also shrubs. The stress results in a deformed mass of twigs and branches which often appear broom-like. It can be small or up to several feet across.

The term Witches’ Broom dates to medieval Europe when people looked up into trees and saw what looked like a mat of twigs woven together and believed that witches placed them high in the trees and even rested on them. As brooms were once fashioned together from bundles of twigs, and since witches were presumed to be responsible for anything unusual, the abnormalities gave rise to the common name.

Factors which may cause Witches’ Brooms include infestations of mites or aphids or parasitic plants like mistletoe, genetic mutations, infection by fungi or phytoplasmas (wall-less single celled organisms with unorganized nuclei), or adverse environmental conditions that kill the terminal bud of the shoots.

Those caused by genetic mutation may be stable, so people have been able to propagate them vegetatively as dwarf cultivars. Regardless of the cause, each one is the only one of its kind in the world and is genetically unique.

In Florida, many of the Witches’ Brooms are a result of a fungal infection from Sphaeropsis tumefaciens (reference: http://mrec.ifas.ufl.edu/jos/Sphaeropsis.htm). Plants in Florida known to be affected by this disease are oleander, holly, bottlebrush, citrus, crepe myrtle, ligustrum, and even Brazilian pepper.

On some of these plants, the symptoms produced are a knotty gall rather than the mass of twigs known as Witches’ Broom. Sometimes, Witches’ Broom can be caused when the tree is stressed from a branch that broke off by accident or was poorly pruned by a person.

Witches’ Broom can last for several months to several years, and while it may be unsightly to some people, it really poses no serious threat to a healthy tree or shrub.

Witches’ Brooms can be ecologically important. They tend to be inhabited by a wide variety of organisms apart from the causative one. Some species of moths rely on them exclusively for food and shelter for their larvae, and larger animals including many arboreal rodents such as flying squirrels may nest in them.

Summer Rains Mean Wet Trails

Wet trailhead CDT June 30 2014As the rainy season picks up and we get rain events bringing 3 or 4 or more inches at a time, the CREW Trails, as you can imagine, begin to get wet. As of this week (July 1, 2014) trail conditions are as follows:

At the CREW Marsh Trails:

  • Marsh Trail and Alternative Marsh Trail – Some dry spots, but puddles and stretches of several inches of water to a foot deep in places along the marsh edge.
  • Oak Hammock Trail – One to 4 inches deep in places.
  • Pine Flatwoods Trail – One to four inches deep in places.
  • Campsite Gate 3 – needs 4-WD vehicle to access.

At the Cypress Dome Trails:

  • Green and White Loops – completely under water, depth from one to 6 inches.
  • Blue shortcut from Yellow to Green Loop – inundated with 3 to 6 inches of water.
  • Yellow Loop – some dry patches, wet in low areas near seasonal ponds.
  • All trails mowed on June 26th.
  • Campsite – dry and accessible.

At Bird Rookery Swamp:

  • Most of the trail is still dry. A few soft and wetter spots between map points 3 and 6.
  • Water rising fast.
  • Grass getting tall.

Of course, how wet the trails are depends on the frequency and amount of rain. A few days without and it’ll dry down. But as the ground gets saturated, even small rain events will fill the low spots with water.

Either way – wet or dry, summer is abuzz with life on the trails. So , come get your feet wet and enjoy the essence of summer in the swamps and marshes of CREW!

 

1-Year Old Panther Killed Near CREW

This morning (6/25/2014) a one-year old, uncollared, female Florida panther was hit and killed by a vehicle on Corkscrew Road just north of the CREW Cypress Dome Trails. Florida Fish and Wildlife officials have the panther and will be sending it to Gainesville for a necropsy. According to FWC, this is the 17th panther death in 2014, the 12th from vehicle collision.

dead panther 6-25-2014

CREW is a wildlife corridor and provides essential habitat for panthers, bears and other wildlife. Unfortunately, the proximity of these protected lands next to Corkscrew Road and the all-too-often speeding traffic along it means wildlife deaths are inevitable. The CREW Trust encourages everyone who travels Corkscrew Road (CR 850) to observe the panther speed limits (55 mph in daylight, 45 mph at night) and to be extra-observant for all wildlife. If you don’t travel that road, please remind your friends and neighbors who do to watch for wildlife and drive the speed limits.

If you see a dead or injured panther on the road, report it immediately to FWC Wildlife Alert at 888-404-3922.

 

Trailwalkers…

It’s always a treat when we get photos from the remote sensing trail cameras that CREW volunteer Bob Melin and Ricky Pires of FGCU’s Panther Posse/Wings of Hope program maintain out on the CREW lands. If you’ve hiked the trails, you may have seen these cameras. They help us monitor wildlife when we aren’t there.

Today, Ricky sent us these beautiful shots of a bobcat hiking the trails recently. Isn’t it fun to know what critters you might see when you come visit the CREW?

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Bear Sighted at Bird Rookery Swamp

A Florida black bear was sighted at Bird Rookery Swamp today by CREW volunteer George Luther as he worked to remove some downed trees off the trails. The bear was seen twice within 30 minutes along the grassy tram trail.

Bear at BRS

So next time you are there, be on the look out for these magnificent creatures who make their home in Bird Rookery Swamp.

Have you seen a bear on the CREW Trails? Tell us when and where.

CREW Announces 4th Saturday Summer Walks at Bird Rookery Swamp

The CREW Land & Water Trust is pleased to announce new 4th Saturday Guided Walks at the Bird Rookery Swamp this summer. 4th Saturday Walks at Bird Rookery Swamp are offered FREE of charge on the 4th Saturday of each month, May through August. Join CREW Land & Water Trust volunteer naturalists, George Luther and Bob Melin, for an entertaining and informative 2.5-hour guided walk on a portion of the CREW Bird Rookery Swamp trails near Naples, FL. 

Walks are open to the first 24 people who register. Walk-ins are welcome if space is available on the day of the walk. Registration for 4th Saturday Walks is online at http://goo.gl/IHpbTA

Bird Rookery Swamp Trail
Bird Rookery Swamp Trail

 

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Eagle Scout Project Beautifies Cypress Dome Trailhead

Eagle Scout candidate, Kevin Link, completed an outstanding project at the CREW Cypress Dome Trails last week. Here, he shares some of the process via video. Thanks to Kevin and all of his team for an extraordinary project to help beautify and provide shade and seating at the Cypress Dome Trailhead and parking area and to help educate people about native plants and landscaping.

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