35 acres forever!

35 acres protected

35 acres protected!

Greenbelt is excited to announce that we recently closed on a new conservation easement — protecting 35 acres along the Muddy Creek — forever!

Strategically investing in protecting our water sources, habitats and working landscapes are the foundation of Greenbelt’s conservation priorities.  The Muddy Creek corridor in Benton County running from Corvallis to Finley Refuge and up into its headwater near Alpine, has been a conservation priority for Greenbelt for nearly 20 years.  This region benefits from the fish, wildlife and plant diversity this corridor provides as well as the increased watershed function.

Muddy Creek is designated a priority corridor for restoration and conservation by Greenbelt and our partners including  U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Marys River Watershed Council, The Institute for Applied Ecology, Natural Resource Conservation Service, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and others.  Greenbelt and our partners are working to create a healthy and resilient region that will continue to support the diversity of species and naturally functioning water systems.

If you can imagine walking through a richly diverse forest dominated by Oregon white oak and Oregon ash trees, native shrubs and flowering understory plants you can understand how this area is a culturally significant area for the bands of Kalapuya Indians who traditionally inhabited this region.  Throughout the basin and specifically on this property, the oak structure found in the riparian habitat range from large open canopy trees with branches sweeping the ground to mixed-aged woodland trees with native understory. The understory includes native shrubs such as Indian plum and snowberry and forbs such as camas and fawn lilies. The riparian forest provides shade and bank stabilization to Muddy Creek along with nutrient cycling and acts as a dynamic interface between land and water. The forest supports an array of wildlife species including deer, cougar and bobcat, red-legged frogs and rough-skinned newts, and resident and migratory birds. A vibrant, resilient and functioning riparian habitat such as this, provides the necessary shade, cover and forage for the fish and wildlife benefits of healthy water and creek habitat.

Muddy Creek is a low gradient valley bottom stream that meanders through the riparian habitat of the property. Unique to the Valley bottom Muddy Creek remains unchannelized and has an active and functioning floodplain that inundates regularly. The stream, swales, and floodplain provide refuge, foraging, and migration habitats for Oregon chub, cutthroat trout, and other native fish.

Conserved lands, like these 35 acres, also help provide clean drinking water, improved floodwater storage capacity, increased groundwater recharge,  and enhanced ecosystem services for downstream communities.

Greenbelt’s work to protect the land is strategic and intentional. We develop our conservation priorities around building a connected, healthy and resilient landscape that supports nature and people.

Retirement Project

Four and a half years ago I started a blog:  “Today,” I wrote, “we bought a farm.”  The reaction to this announcement was not unexpected.  “Have they forgotten how old they are?” our friends asked one another.  Our kids texted back and forth between Pasadena and Seattle.  “Weren’t one of us supposed to be watching them?  What’s next?  Beach-front property in Florida?  A Winnebago?”

No, freed from the constraints of a downtown job and the supervisory presence of offspring, we bought a piece of property along Llewellyn Road in Corvallis.  A hundred acres was more than we’d had in mind when we began to search, but there it was.  Rolling oak savanna, wetlands along Muddy Creek, a thick oak copse, and a view of Marys Peak.  We were so struck by the beauty that we didn’t stop to consider that farming is actually not a profession easily learned on the autumn slopes of life.

But that was okay.  We didn’t intend to “farm” this property.  What we had in mind was work on habitat restoration along the lines of the many sites we’d visited during Larry’s tenure as board member of the Oregon Chapter of the Nature Conservancy.  Yes, I know.  Habitat restoration isn’t easy, either, for amateurs like us without a lot of help.

The land had been heavily grazed and was choked with thistle, tansy, and blackberry.  The seasonal streams were degraded, a derelict house slumped on its foundation, the well, though operative, was heavy with nitrate, and the grazing cattle drank freely from Muddy Creek.  Yikes!

At about this point, the USFWS Partners Program came into our lives.  They would come onto the property, assess possibilities, provide plans, and even offer financial help in implementation.  A chance meeting with Jessica McDonald from Greenbelt Land Trust led to our introduction to the conservation community.  The amazing Donna Schmitz of Benton Soil and Water Conservation District led a successful bid for an OWEB grant.

And here we are in September of 2018.  The streams have been fenced and their banks planted with some 6,600 trees and shrubs all thanks to the grant.  Muddy Creek has been fenced off from the attention of grazing cattle.  (Don’t worry, a system of pipes provides water from the well to watering stations for the animals.)  Jarod Jebousek of USFWS is working to restore the natural flow of water across the land, planning to build a vernal pool on behalf of birds and aquatic creatures like frogs and salamanders.  He’s planted 13 acres of native seed to attract monarchs and the Fender’s blue butterfly.

There have certainly been challenges.  Cleaning the barn after decades of dairy animals wasn’t much fun.  Two years pulling tansy led to an acceptance of judicious spraying.  I accidently weed-whacked one of our new apple trees to death.  A little family of mice unknowingly settled into the foundation of the house as it was being built and sadly died over the first summer of our residence.  We drilled four wells, only one of which provides water, that ran dry, however, the morning of the open house we hosted for our Portland friends.  We lost the largest oak on the property to old age or wind last week, though it thoughtfully heaved its huge branches across, not onto, the new perimeter fence.

At the moment, we’re working to relocate the little chicken coop we had built.  Misplaced, it slopes with an endearing charm, but must be moved to a site adjoining our fenced orchard.  This so that the three hens we have yet to acquire may roam freely among the trees neighboring their new home.

While there’s no end to the work, we remain (despite the skepticism of friends and family) enthusiastic, although usually tired by the evening. We are pleased we chose this retirement option instead of golfing in the desert or that beachfront condo in Florida.

Blog Post: By Jane Viehl – you can follow along with Jane and her husband Larry’s restoration and farming progress on Jane’s wonderful blog Hundred Acre Wood.

Jane, hard at work along Muddy Creek

 

Larry, reflecting on newly-downed giant oak

 

‘In the beginning’ – a before photo

 

And, voila – a few years later!