Mount Airy Clay Breakers Tour Jug Bay

Jug Bay, Upper Marlboro, MD, June 15, 2011: Mount Airy Clay Breakers Garden Club and guests took an ecological tour of Jug Bay at Patuxent River Park. The group observed the effects of global warming, the efforts at restoring the marsh and river banks, and wildlife along the river banks and also learned of the history of human habitation along the river.

















LinkOsprey now thrive along the Patuxent. This nest is observed around the clock by a solar powered camera:
The park maintains a webcam of another osprey nest:
Video streaming by UstreamIf you click on this photo to enlarge it, you can see that the osprey is carrying a freshly caught fish:
Looking north toward Mount Calvert (c. 1780):
By killing off thousands of resident Canada geese and fencing the others away from the shore line, Patuxent River Park has been able to re-establish wild along the river banks. Here a team of three young women head out to fence a section of shoreline:
Red-winged Blackbirds are frequent in the marsh:
Here a Marsh Wren emerges from his nest built on a cattail:
The circle in the middle of the river was where the Chesapeake Beach Railway bridge turned to permit river traffic; from 1900 to 1935 this railway took Washingtonians to and from the Chesapeake Beach resorts.
This Great Blue Heron was more interested in fishing than worried about a boatload of eco-tourists:
A beaver used this duck blind as the local of his lodge:
Disembarking; our photographer was the last one aboard:











Bee balm:

and thread leaved tickseed:









Butterflies on milkweed and on swamp milkweed:








After the boat trip, some of us enjoyed a guided tour of the Patuxent Rural Life Museums. Our first stop was Duckett Cabin (c. 1880), which is a one room tenant farmer's cabin with a loft.
We all went inside the cabin and left by the back door:








The loft was one room up a steep stairs; left is lit by the camera; right is the floorboards without extra light:








This Sears, Roebuck and Company 1923 Simplex Section House was originally purchased for $443 and had three rooms with no plumbing and no electricity.
A bedroom and a kitchen are side by side behind the front parlor:










There was also a blacksmith's shop, a farrier and tack shop, a general museum with various 19th century items and a tobacco farming museum. In the 18th and 19th century, tobacco was packed in hogshead barrel for shipment overseas. Below left is a tobacco press (c. 1900). The barrels were rolled down rolling roads to the river landings where they were loaded aboard ships. Later, tobacco was piled atop a basket and held together with a second basket on top (right):









On our way out, we took a side trip to Mount Calvert, where the plantation house is being stabilized and there are ongoing archeological digs. Inside is a very good museum on the history of the site.
There have been over 6,000 years of human habitation at this site. The area was first deeded to Phillip Calvert, the 5th Proprietary Governor of Maryland. The colonial government established a town here in the late 17th century. The town was renamed Charles Town when it became county seat of the newly formed Prince George's County. When the county seat was moved upriver to Upper Marlboro, the town declined and eventually became a tobacco plantation.








This is the view of Jug Bay looking south from Mount Calvert:
Along Mount Calvert Road, there were alpaca farms:










--Photos by Bill Dean

THE GARDEN POST Summer 2011

Garden Post Summer 2011

Annual Presidents' Meeting at Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens

June 11, 2011: The annual Presidents' Meeting was held at Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens, a national park devoted to water lilies and lotus and containing the last remaining tidal marsh in the District of Columbia. The meeting was held in the classroom at the visitors' center. After a brief meeting most of the participants took a tour of the park guided by Park Ranger Kathleen Bucco. [Click on photos for larger views.]

Eastland Gardens Flower Club provided this bouquet for the continental breakfast buffet:

District I Director David Healy presided:










Julie Harrison, president of Mount Airy Clay Breakers Garden Club, gave the nomination committee report; this hydrangea arrangement was provided by Christine Hambach:







NCAGC President Vickie Godwin announced her President's Project--five new rain gardens at the U.S. National Arboretum, and promoted her 2012 fundraising trip to France; NCAGC 2d Vice President Evalee Ciuca reported on her plans as NCAGC Awards Chairman:














In one of her last acts as NCAGC awards chairman, NCAGC 1st Vice President Babs McClendon (left) presented three National Garden Club awards to Betsy Reid, president of Fergie's Gardeners:
National awards were also received by New Carrollton Garden Club and Woodmoor Garden Club. Babs also discussed her new efforts as the NCAGC membership chairman.

Lorraine Leonard discussed volunteer opportunities at Arbor House Gift Shop at the U.S. National Arboretum (left) and Mary Beth Cecil discussed Arbor House trunk shows at garden club meetings:











Each club president reported on the community project(s) of his/her club. From left: Sherrell Goggin, Burtonsville Garden Club; Michael Giese, Cheverly Garden Club; Vira Sisolak, Capitol Hill Garden Club:









Elise Gillette, vice president of The Gardeners of the Junior League of Washington, D.C.; Christine Hambach, Goddard Garden Club; Charmane Truesdell, Montpelier Garden Club:









Mary Bartman, New Carrollton Garden Club; Lydia Barbour, Tanta-Cove Garden Club; and Connie Dalpra, Woodbury Garden Club:

















Turtles eat water lily roots except for the native white water lilies; and lotus overwhelm their water lily cousins:
The native hardy white lily and the Helen Fowler pink lily developed by the founder, Walter B. Shaw:









The lotus will be in full bloom come July:









Dragonflies:









Bee on pickerel weed (left); beetles on the native Rosa carolina:









Moth (left); frog on lily pad:














Purple loosestrife:
A buttonbush:










The Kenilworth Marsh contains potential foodstuffs for a global warmed world:
Bucco relates the tale of the lodge (right) of the lazy beaver:









--photos by Bill Dean