The Raleigh Naturalist

June 18, 2009

News, Notes and Another Promise

The Natural View

The Natural View

Why I have posted just once a month for 3 months:

Best reason – my new column on nature and environment at Raleigh Public Record.

Very good one: I have been documenting The Bain Project, posting like a madman at Raleigh Rambles.  The Bain Water Treatment Plant has plenty of relevance for Raleigh Nature, as it used nature’s own filtering process – gradations of rock and sand – to clean water drawn from Lakes Raleigh, Johnson, Benson, and Wheeler.  It and the more ancient pumping  station which served as the city’s first water facility sit beside Walnut Creek (more about Walnut Creek below).  Just behind the Bain facility is a wonderful greenway deck that traverses wetlands strewn with swamp mallow,  huge white blooms that startle in a sea of southern green.

Raleigh Naturalist at Bain

Raleigh Naturalist presents at Bain

 Good news: I have more time now, being a teacher, and I also hope to bring Raleigh Nature readers some neat photos from our anniversary weekend in Charleston and our upcoming trip to Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island.  My promise is at the end of the post.

Walnut Creek greenway at Rose Lane

Walnut Creek greenway at Rose Lane

Lots of happenings around the greenways.  The section that follows Walnut Creek  parallel to Poole Road got flooded Tuesday June 16, along with Rose Lane and other roads near the creek.  The NandO story about the flooding was being followed up the next day by Josh Shaffer, who I met walking Rose Lane when I went to photograph the high water on the greenway. He was hoping to chat with some of the folks who are stranded by high water once every year or so at this dead-end extension of Rose Lane across the creek. I remember quite well my teenage years when Rose Lane dead-ended into a meadow well short of the creek, because we used to drive down there to park in what seemed like deep country in the sixties. Whoever decided to build houses past a perennial wetland with no outlet is the real problem, but the curent residents are facing the consequences.   Josh covers lots of interesting stuff for Nando, from Legos to beloved beer slingers to taking small children to play in cemeteries.  His recent story on kayaking Crabtree Creek   really struck a chord, with its realistic description of the grit, mud and smells encountered on the creek, but I prefer the much quieter section of Crabtree above Lassiter Mill for canoe jaunts.  Getting back to poor Walnut Creek, the heavy rains that caused flooding also sent 15,000 gallons of untreated sewage into the creek upstream in Cary, but the Nando story said no fish kills had been reported.

sliders at Yates Mill_1_1

Newsflash from NandO:  the 4 inches or so of rain also did damage at Yates Mill Pond, pictured above, which has temporarily closed the millsite and trails. Repairs are expected soon.

Lonnie Poole golf course_1_1  The new Lonnie Poole Golf Course around Lake Raleigh is mostly finished and expected to open in July. I posted dismal views and comments about this project in February 08, but when I stopped by recently I felt a little better.  There are lots of wooded buffers, especially next to Walnut Creek, and I must admit the course is looking pretty.

Raleigh skyline from Poole Golf Course

Raleigh skyline from Poole Golf Course

The Fletcher Park water garden is being fine tuned.  Apparently the water level, though quite low down in the retention ponds, was too high for some of the plantings, so a crew came in and extended a kind of penisula of land into the lowest pool, as you can see below.  The crew that explained this to me were taking survey sightings to appraise the work that had been done.  Many of the original plantings had been shifted to higher ground.

new Fletcher peninsula_1_1

The ponds still look pretty muddy to me, but I know time will do wonders. They had an opinion on one item that had been bugging me since the NandO article – springs.  There are no active springs in Fletcher Park, just surface water from the neighborhoods and seep from the ball fields.  Fletcher Park’s lilies are in full bloom!

Fletcher lilies_1_1

There!  All the nature news fit to post.  I can’t promise any certain frequency of posts, but I promise to stay totally committed to getting fresh postings up about nature and wildlife inside or near the beltline.  See you on the greenways!

December 29, 2007

The Walnut Creek Greenway

Filed under: Greenways & Parks, Nature Lore, Southeast Raleigh — Tags: , , , , — raleighnaturalist @ 11:28 pm

State Street Greenway Violets

   From the southern edge of the Carnage Middle School campus, or across from the old water station on Wilmington Street you can access a string of highly varied greenway segments that soon will connect Centennial Campus and the Walnut Creek amphitheatre complex.  Due south of downtown, this stretch witnesses the joining of Rocky Branch with Walnut Creek just east of Wilmington, as well as the final taming and flattening of the Walnut Creek watershed as it approaches the Neuse.  Lots of marshy wetlands, including one right behind Womens’ Prison where a greenway viewing deck offers red-shouldered blackbirds, hawks and (after the drought) some unusual wetland plant species.

December 28, 2007

Raleigh Swamp – Great Nature AT the Beltline

    Raleigh Swamp is the local nickname for this expanse off Raleigh Boulevard. A massive boardwalk with gazebo connects Buckeye Trail with Capital Boulevard.  There are almost always blue herons and/or hawks, dozens of various turtle species, the occasional thirsty deer, and the best chance I know to actually see beavers during the day.  Raleigh Boulevard has become their permanent no-maintenence dam, but their two houses – one on the west bank near the railroad and one right beside the boardwalk – have been badly exposed by the drought.  We will return here often.

Raleigh Swamp Photo Tour

Google map of area linked below:

View Larger Map

December 27, 2007

Six Forks starts my Straight Streets

Filed under: Geographic Areas, Nature Lore, North Raleigh, Straight Streets — Tags: , , — raleighnaturalist @ 5:01 pm
 Straight Streets is a category for posts that sketch toward an essay (as do most posts on this blog) about Raleigh streets that can tell a story in their sequence.  Martin Street, Hammond/Person/Atlantic, and Hillsborough Street are all obvious candidates.  What follows below will activate the category for now, but I will return to Six Forks again, I’m sure.

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Longbranch to Falls: Six Forks Low to High 

   Six Forks dead ends right into Crabtree Creek on the south, and dead-ends right into Fall Lake northward. Along the way it takes you from Crabtree’s muddiest, most ditch-like stretch to a state park.  Above is the best spot on the tour – an upper tributary of Shelley lake just off Six Forks at the northern top of the greenway (aside from 2 isolated sections at Lake Lynn and Durant Park).  Below is a fairly ironic juxtaposition (a theme of this blog) – the back of the Longbranch saloon, edged by the greenway.

greenway-at-back-of-langbranch_1_1.jpg 

From a parking spot at the plumbing supply at Atlantic Avenue and Hodges Road, you can hop on to the greenway, or you can stop at the southern dead-end and check out the dried-up wetland parallel to Atlantic.  The map below shows the area – don’t forget to try the satellite view! Also, an image of the southern dead-end is below that.

Map of Briggs Hardware:919-832-2025 2533 Atlantic Ave Raleigh, NC 27604, US

This end of Six Forks boasts a Bojangles, Briggs, and a townhouse development that began the process of replacing an old creekside farm with development. The doomed wooded hillsides are currently used by guerilla mountain bikers for amazing and terrifying structures (more on that another post- the site is edged by the greenway). Just behind Briggs you can check out a nice outcrop of Raleigh gneiss.  As you start driving north on Six Forks, you pass through Raleigh’s second-most famous floodplain – the old K-Mart used to flood every ten years or so, and the car dealerships still move their entire stock uphill after threatening rains.  With the super Kroger’s on your left, you cross Big Branch just before it joins Crabtree behind Southern States.  Upstream of this spot, Big Branch carves away the southernmost “North Hill” with a vengeance, creating a soil profile that represents thousands of years of accretion.

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At the top of the hill is the beltline crossing and North Hills, including Mr. Kane’s new project.  You have left central Raleigh (and the floodplain) and entered former farmlands.  The soil is clay, the houses used to be exclusive, but have been superceded to the north and west, and are fairly diverse in value and inhabitants. Small parks dot the neighborhoods, and traffic is horrible on weekdays. Beyond North Hills, you are in the heart of Raleigh’s steady northward population shift.  There are some atrocities and some gems (again, we will return to this Straight Street soon). For now we will end with a treat just north of 540 – an old-fashioned country gas-n-deli with 200 kinds of wine and live bait!  A reason to love living in Raleigh, indeed.  Six Forks used to go right up to Creedmoor, but now dead-ends into the Falls Lake State Park administrative facility.  We will come back to this complex sequence soon.

a photo tour of Six Forks Road

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