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I went for a perfectly pleasant walk in the Dedham Town Forest today, but I got home and looked at my pictures and some of them are pretty off-putting. This first one is just an old sign indicating part of the "fitness trail," but it feels very foreboding to me. Be warned, this series includes at least one very unpleasant photograph.




A deer skull in the leaf litter is my standard representation of the Dedham Town Forest. Most of this piece of land is fenced in, but one section is open to a very busy highway. My friend who led the walk thinks that deer get hit on the highway, then walk the edge until they find their way into the forest at the open part, then collapse and die there.


It's certainly possible--we found the remains of at least 4 deer, 1 coyote, and one raccoon. This bone has been here long enough to provide habitat for some moss, and a whole mess of springtails.


Did somebody say springtails? You could have collected them by the bucketload, if you could think of a use for them. I just think they are cool, so I played with them and left them to reorganize.


Here's the group looking at the most impressive carcass of the day. Shall we look closer?


It's a coyote, and it's become the focus of a mating frenzy for hundreds of carrion beetles.


Let's look at this beautiful birch bark for a moment. Anyone know which species of birch it is? Perhaps you've bought Bark: A Field Guide to Trees of the Northeast, as I hope to do soon. In fact there's a possibility that the author will lead an Urban Nature Walk soon!


On another chunk of birch, I found these little bumps--hardened packets of spores of the wolf's milk slime mold! Opened up they are very similar to tiny puffballs.


I found two specimens of this previously-new-to-me mushroom (actually my first time seeing one was at Drumlin Farm on the winter mushroom walk last Saturday). It looks like a regular cap and stem mushroom somehow ossified for the winter, but it is in fact a polypore (relative of all those hard or leather brackets on dead trees year round) that has evolved to take the same shape.


On our way out of the Forest, my friend called to me "Watch out for land mines, Jef!" I puzzled over this joke--were there piles of scat to avoid stepping in? What could she have meant. Then we got to the other side of this sign. Surely they mean "mines" as in mineral mines dug into the ground? But then the sign has the word "Army" on it (you can't see it in my picture but you can see it here.)

Oh well, foreboding and morbid as it was, the sun came out and the temperature rose into the 70s! The rest of the day was spent laying around the back yard playing with the puppy--but that's another post yet to come.

Wow

Date: 2012-03-19 12:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mike howlett (from livejournal.com)
Such a beautiful day, such beautiful photos. I wish I was with you guys, despite the morbidity!

Mike H

Re: Wow

Date: 2012-03-19 01:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
Me too, Mike! I hope we get to do a walk together soon.

Date: 2012-03-19 01:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anais2.livejournal.com
Very cool. Very.

Date: 2012-03-19 02:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] americanbeetles.livejournal.com
Are those silphids? I can't quiiiite see well enough to tell whether they're silphines or agyrtids, but regardless: NICE CARRION BEETLES, THUMBS UP.

Mine's and arms

Date: 2012-03-19 02:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dedhamoutdoors.livejournal.com
The signs were placed in the Town Forest in the 1970s when some Eagle Scouts created a fitness trail, not long after the town got the land back from the state (it was taken by eminent domain in the 1950s for construction of route 128). The small text tells you what to do at each location. I think it says "arms" not "army" - something about jumping with arms outstretched or over. It drives me nuts that there is an apostrophe in Mine's.

Date: 2012-03-19 02:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deathling.livejournal.com
That's my kind of walk. We actually have a park down here that served as a military training ground at one point in time and for some reason or another there actually were land mines found on the premises. As such, all visitors must sign a waiver before entering the preserve.

Date: 2012-03-19 02:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pagawne.livejournal.com
Lovely photos. Nice to see a dead coyote, the only good kind.

Date: 2012-03-19 02:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
Strong words. Sheep rancher?

response

Date: 2012-03-29 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laura liptak-labriola (from livejournal.com)
I always wonder what place that statement really comes from...I've seen it said about many living things, including people. )=

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