Showing posts with label Brown's Creek Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brown's Creek Trail. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Wildflower Walk


Wild Geranium
I was in Stillwater for the Memorial Day weekend and so had the opportunity to hike the Brown's Creek Trail.  Saturday I went with a DNR Naturalist on a wildflower walk.  We were a fairly small group, but even so we didn't walk very far because there were so many plants to identify along the trail.  The rain didn't help either but it kept the bicyclists to a minimum so that part was great.

White Campion
There were some plants that I know I will remember because they look so odd.  I have started seeing this one everywhere.

Poison Ivy
There are some plants you don't notice but you should!  If there's three let it be.  The thing about the Poison Ivy plant is that the middle stem is longer and the leaves are not symmetrical.  This plant is all along the trail. We don't have Poison Oak in Minnesota so we don't have to worry about that one.

Jewelweed
If you got into some Poison Ivy, wash your skin with cold water and then take the leaves and the juice from the stems of the Jewelweed to treat the rash. And good luck because I don't know if that actually works. Little droplets of water that look like jewels shine on the waxy leaves after a rain, thus giving it its name.

Leafy Spurge
Some plants are actually on the noxious weed list and can be pulled.  I think these little yellow flowers are interesting looking though.

Bittersweet Nightshade
Some plants will make you sick if you eat the berries or any part of the plant.  Good to know.

Bedstraw
You could make a mattress out of this plant and I guess people did that once upon a time.

Fake Solomon's Seal
This plant was all over the trail too.  Up close the blooms have tons of little star shaped flowers.

Real Solomon's Seal
There's the Real Solomon's Seal hiding only to be found by the expert!  I prefer the Fake Solomon's Seal.

Blood Root

Here's an odd shaped little plant with just the one leaf.  I would not have noticed it.  The flower which only blooms for a day or two is long gone.  It could have bloomed as early as March.  The juice from the stems can be used to make natural red and orange dyes.



Our group only got about a half mile up the trail and so I went out the following day to the 2 mile marker.  There is plenty of Colombine along the trail  I don't know why, but I get this flower confused with the state flower, the Lady Slipper, which is nearly impossible to find and looks like a little orchid.

Yellow Goat's Beard
I spotted these along the trail too. Up close, the flower is very distinctive with little green spikes that shoot out from the underside of the yellow petals.

Spittlebugs
Spittlebug Nymphs were making their frothy hiding spots in some of the plants.

Unidentified
We looked at a variety of other plants over the course of the weekend; Fleabane, Jack in the Pulpit, Sweet Cicely, Burdock, Curly Dock, Creeping Charlie, Mint, Phlox, Alyssum, and  a variety of Mustard Weeds.  I want to be able to identify plants as I take my walks but I wonder just how much information I can retain in my head. The Minnesota wildflowers website is a good place to help identify what you see out there on the trails.  There are about 400 varieties of white wildflowers listed on their site so it could take me a while to identify this one.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Brown's Creek Trail


View of the creek from the trail
I was out in Stillwater for Mother's Day weekend and had the chance to walk the new Brown's Creek Trail.  It starts at the old train depot and follows the St. Croix River north for the first mile before crossing highway 95.  At that point the trail turns west and follows Brown's Creek.  It's really lovely out there. The trail is situated on an old railroad bed so it's level and easy to walk.
Trash heap off the trail
About a mile and half into the trail we noticed a heap of trash off to the side.  According to the DNR, their property runs about 100 feet wide starting at the middle of the path.  They are in the process of cleaning up the trash along the trail so I guess this heap is just waiting to be collected.  I bet they found some interesting stuff.
Trash on the hills
Everything else out there is private property.  There are homes up there on top of this ravine and years of trash that has been pitched down the hill.  It is weird to think that folks used to get rid of their unwanted items in this way.  Now it's an eyesore.  Is there a city ordinance prohibiting this?  I left a message with the city. Now that the trail is open I'm pretty sure others have noticed and complained.  Do they need help cleaning it up?  Could they get volunteers out there?  We just picked up trash along the flat sections of the trail and I'll have to be happy doing just that.