The Coverts Project-Taking Up The Cause Of Conservation Begins In Your Own Backyard
The Coverts Projectâ
Taking Up The Cause Of Conservation Begins In Your Own Backyard
By Kendra Bobowick
It is in the lichen covering stepping-stones hidden beside a stream. It is in the trickling water soaking the soil, and the four sturdy back feet of an inchworm eating the edges of a viburnum leaf â bit by bit. Unable to hide and unable to sidestep harm, the forest sits and waits.
Roads cross through it, neighborhoods bloom, towns flourish and backyards encroach on the stateâs woodlands â also bit by bit.
After a deep breath, resident Charles Kilson said, âDevelopment. Weâre losing woods and habitats.â As of May 1, Mr Kilson and Robert Taylor have joined those in town who have become Coverts Project Cooperators after completing a forest and wildlife conservation course. (A covert is a thicket providing shelter and cover for wildlife.)
Can they help protect the grasping roots of native pines and maples, gnarled understory limbs of laurels, and the light touch of trillium lining the footpaths of Connecticutâs woodlands? They are going to try. âThe goal of the project is to establish stewardship for our land and make resources available to people,â Mr Kilson explained. Anyone with land they wish to manage for forestry can contact a coordinator. âWe set them up with the right contacts to help them with the habitat,â he said. As an example, he continued, âIf they want to improve it for the songbirds, we have that information.â The project promotes wildlife and forest resources.
Sponsored by the University of Connecticut Cooperative Extension System, Connecticut Forest and Park Association, and the stateâs Department of Environmental Protection, the Coverts Project Cooperators are available, free of charge, to help landowners to improve and enjoy their woodland.
Forester Stephen Broderick points to daunting odds. Roughly 80 percent of forestland in the state belongs to private owners, including land trusts and sportsmanâs clubs. The Coverts Project is an outreach to those people, he explained. âWe educate people on how to be good stewards. The Coverts Project is designed to create a corps of volunteer land owners.â
What do property owners need to know? âTwo things,â said Mr Broderick. âFirst, no two landowners are the same as far as goals and interests. Some people like to cut firewood and some enjoy the beauty and privacy â all legitimate [uses]. We advise people to think about why we own our land and what are the benefits.â Second, he urges, âGain knowledge of your habitat. What kind of forest do you have and who is available for you to ask questions?â The coverts cooperators, for one, are ready with answers and resources. The local peer-to-peer focus is what makes the Coverts Project work, he said.
Peer-To-Peer: The Cooperators
Describing Deputy Director of Land Use Rob Sibley perfectly, Mr Broderick had noted, âCoverts cooperators love their land, they love the outdoors, they have good stewardship ethics, they love doing things for the community and are willing to invest effort, time, and energy in their towns.â Although the deputy director took the course eight years ago, he was quick with praise.
âIt was a wonderful experience,â he said. Mr Sibley â among the townâs intense environmental advocates and conservationists â welcomes the idea of a community taking care of wildlife. âItâs close to my heart,â he said. âItâs one of those courses that began to look outside the box working with wildlife and resource management.â Academics, science, and what Mr Sibley refers to as âthe intangiblesâ are all pieces of the good stewardship puzzle. â[The Coverts Project] took the people in the field and the people in academics and tried to marry the two.â The project ârallies the troopsâ for land management, he said. âBut tools donât mean anything without helping people change things,â he said. The Coverts Project brought people together âto try to affect change locally,â he said.
The larger picture is more than backyard management, or protecting a breeding habitat for one species, for example. Preservation is not static. âWe look at nature and want to capture it and say, âThis is how it is and should always be,â but itâs constantly changing,â he explained. âYou have to maintain the changes to the rocks, the soil, air, water, and the living things that interact.â Consider the meadow, pond, or forest: âWhat if you cut down a tree, how often do you cut the meadow?â he prompts. If you remove a plant, was it something that should have been there or was it invasive? Learn the answers.
He also turns an eye toward areas in decline. âHow do we manage them? Thatâs the flavor of the decade,â Mr Sibley said. With a nod toward the stewardship and conscientious management of the various acres owned by the Newtown Forest Association (NFA), Ms Sibley said, âThey have it in spades.â The Parks and Recreation Department and Assistant Director of Parks Carl Samuelson also work closely with Mr Sibley to best maintain open spaces, including meadows at Orchard Hill preserve, for example.
âThe birds and wildlife and meadows must interact properly or they wonât survive,â Mr Sibley said. Although hikers stepping through the paths along meadows stretching across Orchard Hill may not realize the amount of thought that went into a simple looking swath cut into the taller grass, âWe use management tools constantly in town,â Mr Sibley said.
He talked about âintangiblesâ also. Do home and property owners understand their property? âI hear their questions and I give them references,â he said. For management purposes, he stressed, âThe most important thing to recognize is that there is no cookie-cutter approach.â Every area is unique. âItâs not until you walk the property that you have an idea of how to manage it.â
Course by course, Mr Broderick educates the covert cooperators, and one by one the cooperators return to their towns and become another resource for landowners.
âThe environmental thing is biting me,â said Mr Kilson. âIâm in the woods all the time.â A lifelong Schaghticoke Tribal Nation member, he heads the tribeâs environmental committee and recently completed the coverts course â three-and-a-half days of instruction at the Goodwin Forest Conservation Education Center in Hampton â and is ready to give back to the tribe, he said, and talk about conservation and wildlife.
âI have a couple of goals â one of the most important is the wildlife habitat restoration,â he said. The reservation lost much of its habitat to fire damage. Afraid that he will ânever get it back,â he said, âIâve seen changes in the habitat there. The trees are still dying.â He blames the prolonged aftermath still attacking root systems on a November 2001 fire. Since the Coverts Project training, he has learned how to âimprove and restore the habitat on the reservation.â
 With one hand he takes hold of the Coverts Projectâs knowledge, and with the other he is reaching for grant funds. He is behind a grant application seeking funds from a General Electric settlement for environmental and public safety projects at the tribeâs reservation on the Housatonic River.
The electric company signed a settlement in 2000 with the US Environmental Protection Agency and the states of Connecticut and Massachusetts to clean up toxic PCBs â polychlorinated biphenyls â from its Pittsfield, Mass., plant and two miles of the river downstream.
Bob Eckenrode, recently appointed as the new Newtown Forest Association president, took the intensive covert course 12 years ago. With his knowledge, he feels âbeholden to share.â Admitting he was âall fired upâ after taking the course, he nearly approached one of Newtownâs farmers, thinking he could offer suggestions to a multiacre landowner. Before he got to the farm, however, his mood cooled when he realized that owner Stephen Paproski had been farming in town for many years. How would he have received Mr Eckenrode?
The forest association president never found out. He headed for home instead, and thought to use his own property as an example. With his focus on indigenous species, he said, âI used my property as a demonstration of landscaping with native [species].â Outreach could be as small as communicating with a neighbor, or sharing techniques for stewardship. Using Greenleaf Farms Preserve as an example, he notes that the property nestled over watercourses that had been mowed and used for horse grazing. Mr Eckenrode said that the forest association members are trying to restore it to a natural songbird habitat. He learned what he uses in the coverts program.
âThere is a seasonal mowing plan now to help the nesting birds,â he said. âWildlife can thrive. Itâs a wonderful example of good stewardship.â Overall the property now offers public access to trails, improved wildlife potential, more diverse habitat, a healthier forest environment, and recreation for visitors.
He has learned simply to lead by example. Forest associations, land preserves, and farms aside, every property owner has the opportunity to make the most of his or her land. Anyone who landscapes, who enjoys wildlife or gardening might listen in. Mr Eckenrode said to assess the habitat; assess what is growing naturally. âThere is a reason itâs growing there,â he said. Look at the yard. âThere are usually several [native species] existing already.â Most common are sweet pepper bushes, maple leaf viburnum, and silky dogwoods. âThe bonus of landscaping with natives is theyâre acclimatedâ¦â
Do you have water on your property? Look for amphibians. âTheyâre a clear sign that things are balanced,â Mr Eckenrode said. âItâs my reality that you shouldnât have to go to a museum to see a turtle.â Bolster your outdoor environment, he suggests. âContact a local nursery. Look for bird- and insect-friendly native plants.â
Looking back, Mr Eckenrode offered a comparison. âA rock makes waves in waterâ¦all the way back to [Stephen Paproski]â Rather than speaking with the farmer as he had first considered, Mr Eckenrode said again, âI started with my own property and radiated out.â From his home to the forest association properties, his ripple effect eventually encompassed his original goal. âMr Paproski asked, âWould you talk to me about my property?ââ Today, 12 years later, Mr Paproski is also a forest association supporter.