The Bark River |
Spring was
still trying to catch up from our unseasonably cold April last week. But this
day dawned brightly and suddenly turned unseasonably hot. Shedding jackets, a
dozen or so of us gathered at the Cottonwood Wayside for a hike into Hartland
Marsh led by Jeff Romagna, a volunteer with the Ice Age Trail Alliance.
Hartland
Marsh Preserve is nestled between the Lake Country Industrial Park and the
Gleason Commerce Center in Hartland. Its 180 acres is protected by the Waukesha County Land Conservancy
in partnership with the Ice Age Trail Alliance and the Village of Hartland. The
Bark River meanders through the middle of it, somewhere out where we couldn’t
see it from the Wayside.
Our tour
began on a mulched path, known as the John Muir Overlook, through a hardwood forest
featuring ancient bur oaks. The trail narrowed, then led to a boardwalk across
the marsh and over a small wooded island.
Birds were plentiful, it being migration
season. This is a rose-breasted grosbeak.
Another
boardwalk looped through last year’s cattails and back to the forest. Here the
trail was hemmed in with thickets of buckthorn.
Most of the preserve has a far
more open understory and the difference was striking. Jeff, our guide,
introduced us to Paul Mozina, known as The Buckthorn Man, whose volunteer
efforts have been largely responsible for removing this particularly obnoxious
invasive species. Along with being more aesthetically pleasing to hike through,
the cleared portions enable a more robust diversity of native species to
flourish.
Across an
open field we watched as a pair of sandhill cranes shepherded two chicks away
from us towards a pond.
A side trail
led us through a beautiful glade, over a hill and across the Bark River on a
footbridge to another small island. Paul pointed out the many natural springs
around the two hills that had led to its being a homestead, now vanished.
Four more sandhill
cranes watched us warily from the marsh, their colors a nearly perfect match
with the dead cattails. Can you spot all four?
According to
the Ice
Age Trail Alliance, wetland preserves like this are becoming more and more important
as land is developed and urbanized. Wetlands serve critical ecological
functions that help maintain environmental health as well as sustaining
wildlife habitats.
Hickory sapling in bloom |
By absorbing
rainwater and nutrients, a marsh helps reduce flooding, prevents shoreline
erosion along waterways, recharges groundwater, and enhances water quality.
Preserves like this one also provide
opportunities for recreation, research and education, serving as both a
laboratory and outdoor classroom for students and teachers.
The
John Muir Overlook is a 1¼-mile loop linked (across Cottonwood Avenue) to the
Hartland segment of the National Ice
Age Scenic Trail. We hiked east along a portion of the trail until we reached
the Aldo Leopold Overlook. The 45-foot tall glacial hill—which could be an
esker or a moraine, according to Jeff—gave us views of the surrounding marsh. As
we turned to go, a pair of brilliant white egrets sailed in to land on an open pond.
Tree huggers! It took three to reach around this enormous oak. |
Great pics and story Eddee! Thanks for sharing the Hartland Marsh.
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