Like most areas, spring in New York’s Hudson Valley is one
of the most anticipated seasons of the year. Needless to say, residents are
grateful to see the last of the winter snow fade away and see a spike in
temperature, but for those who are fortunate enough to reside in Dutchess and
Putnam Counties, the arrival of spring more importantly means the awakening of
the 6,000 acre “Great Swamp.” What fireworks are to the sky on the 4th
of July, wildflowers are to the Swamp’s forest floors in March, April, and
early May. The rich soil and muck, in addition to plentiful moisture coming
from the many braided streams and rivulets of the lowlands, ensure the most
fertile of conditions for the area’s unusually high biodiversity.
One of the best spots to view the wildflowers, or spring
ephemerals, is along a section of the Appalachian Trail as it passes through
the Great Swamp in Pawling, NY. At this location it’s possible to cross without
becoming wet or inconvenienced, as a lengthy boardwalk spans the route. While
several species can be found growing within the dampest sections, a majority of
the ephemerals are located along the periphery of the Swamp.
The first flower to bloom in the spring is the eastern skunk
cabbage. It’s difficult to spot the flowers as they are surrounded by a
structure that resembles an inverted red cone, which is called a spadix. This
feature hides the true petal-less flowers within, so a glimpse is rarely seen. Undoubtedly,
this is by far the most common and abundant ephemeral. Thousands can often be
seeing popping from the mud at the start of March. On occasion they may even
sprout in the dead of winter—I’ve seen several patches growing in mid-February
during a warm spell.
A trait extremely rare to plants, skunk cabbages exhibit
thermogenesis, meaning that they produce their own heat. This unique trait
comes in handy when they have to melt their way through standing snow that may
still persist at the very beginning of the growing season.
After the last of the winter snow slowly melts and drains
away, leaving the ground soggy and the trail a mess, the graceful hepatica
emerges from the tawny detritus and dabs the first splash of color to the
heretofore bleak landscape. Look for them starting in early to mid-April. The small pink to purple flowers tend to grow
on higher land that is well drained and can be found in small clumps that are
dotted over a wide area of the forest floor. There are two species of hepatica:
blunt-lobed and sharp-lobed. The former is the variety usually seen near the
Great Swamp. Hepatica receives its name from the shape of its leaves that
superficially resemble the lobes of the liver. They used to be collected in
prodigious amounts to be used to cure ailments of its namesake. Current
research has shown that they have little to no medicinal value, however.
One of the next plants to follow is the aptly named Dutchman’s
breeches, which closely resemble an upturned pair of outdated pantaloons. Each
plant can have over half a dozen flowers attached to a single stem that bends
similarly to a candy cane. It’s also vaguely reminiscent of a clothesline with
each flower a pair of pants hanging out to dry. The bright white flowers, with
small yellow patches on the bottom greatly stand out in the dark forest
environs—at twilight they certainly look like eyes or miniature ghosts peering
out on whoever or whatever passes by.
Around the same time Dutchman’s breeches are in bloom, so
too can be found in proud abundance the yellow trout lily. Often situated
directly adjacent to streams, rivers, and other riparian zones, this species is
normally present in the dozens or hundreds. Leaves appear beginning in March, but
will usually not flower until April. It has been surmised that the plant gets
its name from each leaf’s resemblance to the mottling found on the trout that
inhabit the waters this plant grows near.
In mid-April, at the onset of some mildly warm weather, the
forest explodes with color and multiple species can often be found intermixed
with each other, blooming simultaneously, forming vibrant tapestries on the
hills and knolls above the swampy plain. Immediately after crossing the
boardwalk along the Appalachian Trail heading south from Route 22 in Pawling,
the show begins. Red trillium, a large and showy, though rancid smelling
flower, thrives with the trout lilies and the unrolling and sculpture-like
fiddlehead ferns that gracefully rise from the beds of moss.
Sometimes growing on the very borders of the trail is the
pale white, rue anemone, a diminutive and delicate plant that even the
slightest breeze caused by you passing by may result in a few petals carried
away. This usually sprouts near the ubiquitous violets that at this location
are minted in a myriad of sizes and colors, the most common being purple and
white. There are hundreds of violet species in the country, and with many being
nearly identical to one another it’s difficult to tell precisely how many exist
here, but it’s probably at least half
a dozen.
Bloodroot, a true gem of the woods, is as beautiful as it is
rare. It’s a relatively large flower consisting of 8-12 white petals and will
usually only grow adjacent to streams or floodplains. This elusive plant is difficult
to detect due to its short duration, which is extremely brief even for a spring
ephemeral, with flowers only lasting a day or two before wind or rain
disseminates the petals and it is lost until next spring. It receives its unusual
name from the bright red liquid that exudes from the stem and root if broken.
Native Americans and colonists used it as a dye. It stains readily.
South-bounders will notice as the Appalachian Trail starts
to exit the Great Swamp it slowly begins winding up a small rise known as
Corbin Hill, a low peak in the center of the Harlem Valley that from the top
provides exquisite views of the higher Taconic Mountains that surround to the
east and west. The most frequently encountered sights are the farms that have
collected over the years in the sheltered valleys and on some of the fertile
hills. The trail skirts a cow pasture atop Corbin Hill. Along a fence in
scattered clusters are the bluets. This dainty, blue and yellow flower thrives
under the rolling clouds that hang statically overhead on a typical spring day.
It’s a scene resembling that of one found in Montana, Big-Sky Country. Bluets
love the sun, but can occasionally also be found deep in the forest where ample
light makes it to the understory. Each plant is about the size of a fist and
contains over a dozen flowers on thin, wiry stalks.
In the woods, before making it to the open summit the cheery
shadbushes are in full bloom with their long, flowing white flowers. The
flowering of these modestly sized trees are an indicator of when the estuarine
shad begin making their yearly spawning run up the Hudson. They are in full bloom from late April until the first
weeks of May.
The willow with its golden, pollen-laced catkins can be seen
growing along the streams that flow through the swamp. Many are rooted only
feet from the boardwalk, affording excellent close-up views of the catkins which
bring to mind a bushy squirrel’s tail. Willows are diecious, meaning they’re
either male or female, unlike most plants which contain both genders’
reproductive organs. Only the males will put on a show with their pollen.
Female catkins are more mundane and don’t easily stand out, being nearly
completely green. A few large willows, several feet in diameter, just to the
south of the boardwalk have been girdled round by beavers. The beavers’ dam
runs parallel to the boardwalk, at times almost close enough to touch; a
mound-shaped lodge resides just beyond in the shallow pond they have created.
On a bright, clear day when the sun is directly overhead the water in this
portion of the swamp becomes perfectly transparent, allowing you to peer down to the bottom of the numerous
pools and get a glimpse of the Great Swamp’s aquatic environs, spotting sunfish
and minnows darting away from your shadow along the mud and grass lined
bottom. The thick mud substrate has a
clay-like consistency perfect for preserving footprints, which enables one to
easily track the beavers’ movements in the shallower areas.
As one travels the trail on the western edge of the Swamp
it’s hard to miss the stone wall bordering a slight bank that descends to a
patch of skunk cabbages. This crumbling and moss covered ruin serves as a
reminder that even this wild and biologically diverse segment of land was once
inhabited by man on a level much greater than the humble footpath that now
traverses it. If you veer off the trail 20 or 30 feet and take a closer look at
the wall it will be undoubtedly apparent that you’re standing in an abandoned dirt
road that is slowly, yet steadily succumbing to the forces of nature, evinced
by its subsidence that has loosened the compacted soil enough to be repopulated
by plant life. This old woods road has numerous trees—both saplings and
adolescents— that are popping up haphazardly in all quadrants, and apart from a
shaky levelness bordered by the cut banks that it passes through in various
portions, it would be difficult to establish its existence. It is here in the
muck just below the road and stone wall that the swamp marigolds thrive and
brighten up the gloomy surroundings.
Growing beneath the large, sheet-like leaves of the
innumerable skunk cabbages, swamp marigolds openly revel, bringing mirth to an
otherwise reserved landscape. It’s no wonder why this impressive species was
bestowed with the title of mari-gold—it’s
as if someone tossed handfuls of gold coins here and there onto the cold mud.
When even the most minor of sunlight strikes these flowers they light up and
shine like the stars in the sky. I know of no other spring ephemeral in the
swamp itself that can catch the eye as this one does.
Just beyond the marsh marigolds, 10-20 feet deeper in the
swamp, in a select few locations, hundreds of miniscule violets, so small they
could be called dwarfs, burst out from the soggy and rotting logs that are
half buried in the water and muck. The
only neighbors these plants have on their slowly sinking islands are the beds
of moss which they grow from, parts of which reach nearly the height the
violets stand at. The light purple mixed with the lime-green mats make you feel
as if you’re in a tropical oasis, buried in the deepest portion of some remote
Amazonian jungle. Not until you look round at the various northern birches and
hemlocks do you return to your senses.
Another plant which may be found hovering around the
confines of the swamp is the elegant and diecious Jack-in-the-pulpit.
Resembling an old-fashioned preacher’s pulpit, this species is somewhat similar
to the skunk cabbages in that the flowers are hidden from sight. They reside within
a long, cylindrical structure known as a spadix, or the “Jack” that is
sheltered under a curled overhanging leaf. This leaf is quite beautiful—decorated
with numerous vertical bands, green and white as the plant first blooms, keeping
the green, but the white often transitioning into a deep purple as the spring
progresses. As previously stated, plants are either male or female—males
usually having a single leaf stalk, females two. Jack-in-the-pulpits also
have the unique ability to change gender from one year to another depending on
environmental conditions and the availability of resources.
As early spring advances towards mid-season, the flat
uplands are populated with minor dashes of dwarf ginseng and starflower, two
white ephemerals slowly being buried beneath the rapidly expanding vegetation
of the understory. By May the air is already noticeably sweetened with the aroma
of the hay-scented fern, which grows in grand profusion on the many undulating
knolls that comprise the steeper land within the Appalachian Trail’s buffer
zone. As these glades become filled with ferns and morph into distinct monocultures
the first wave of the spring ephemerals has subsided and second lesser round
begins, filling the continually darkening woods with red columbine, forget-me-not
that matches the sky, the graceful pink lady-slippers, white carpets of Canada
mayflower, and the topaz-like flowers of the wild Indian strawberry, among many
others. Not until July commences will the last of the ephemerals have blossomed,
giving way to the green blush of summer.
This article is currently slated for publication in the 2014 May-June issue of A.T. Journeys.
This article is currently slated for publication in the 2014 May-June issue of A.T. Journeys.