Solar
power will bring flowers -- and kill weeds
source:Vic
Leipzig and Lou Murray LATIMES 2003.8.7
The Friends of Shipley
Nature Center plan to transform a one-acre field filled with
deadly poison hemlock into a meadow blooming with beautiful wildflowers.
By next spring, a portion of Shipley Nature Center will be covered
with nearly 30 different kinds of California native wildflowers
and bunch grasses, and a low spot will become a type of freshwater
wetland known as a vernal pool.
Several hurdles stood in the way of this grand plan. Finding funding
was the first concern. Fortunately, the Southern California Wetlands
Recovery Project awarded the Friends of the Shipley Nature Center
a $15,000 grant to remove nonnative
weeds and plant native vegetation on two acres at the south
end of Blackbird Pond. The project also includes funds for construction
of the vernal pool.
A major challenge was eliminating the poison hemlock. Last winter,
the meadow was filled with the fern-like foliage of poison hemlock.
Lacy white flowers waved with every passing breeze. It looked pretty
to the untrained eye, but poison hemlock is highly invasive, and
every part of the plant is deadly.
Volunteers and workers from the Orange County Conservation Corps
cut back the hemlock with machetes in the early spring. This technique
wasn't very effective. The hemlock grew back so thick that it looked
like it had never been cut. By early June, the hemlock was 7 feet
tall. It had hidden most of the little oak and sycamore trees planted
by children last fall. Volunteers couldn't find the trees to water
them.
Then the hemlock began to set seed. Hemlock is an annual. If the
stalks could be cut and removed before the seeds dropped, the wildflower
project would have a much higher chance of success because there
would be fewer weed seeds in the meadow. The stalks had become too
thick, however, to hack with machetes.
Poison hemlock covered an estimated six acres throughout the nature
center and was setting seed faster than the Orange County Conservation
Corps workers could cut it. The solution was a professional-grade,
metal-bladed, rotary brush cutter called a weed whacker. This tool
is the big brother of a string trimmer. A discount from Anchor Tool
brought the price down to a range the Friends could almost, but
not quite, afford. The Huntington Beach Tree Society saved the day
by putting up half the purchase price. They will use the cutter
to clear brush in the Urban Forest in another area of Central Park.
The Friends' priority was to clear the one-acre meadow. The rest
of the nature center would have to wait. Day after day, the Corps
cut the hemlock, raked it up and loaded it into dumpsters generously
provided by Rainbow Disposal.
When the Corps knocked off at the end of the day, Vic would strap
on the whacker and cut. I used a McLeod combination hoe/rake to
clear. After weeks of work, the meadow was cleared, not only of
hemlock, but of castor bean and giant reed, two other noxious plants.
We removed about six tons of hemlock before the seeds dropped.
The next task was to use the power of the sun to kill weed seeds
in the meadow. Hemlock seeds can live in the soil for three years,
so seeds from previous years' crops were undoubtedly still there.
On the advice of landscape architect Guy Stivers, the volunteers
decided to use the sun's energy to kill weed seeds before sowing
the meadow with expensive wildflower seeds. The process sounds simple,
but it is a tremendous amount of work.
The Corps crew supervisor, Benito Ramirez, and the crew leader,
Edwin Coreas, had used solar sterilization of the soil at previous
job sites. They spread roll after roll of plastic sheeting over
the cleared meadow. They filled sandbags provided by Public Works
with dirt to hold down the edges of the plastic. They carefully
cut the plastic away from the newly planted trees to protect their
roots. When the sun beats down on that plastic, the soil under it
gets hot enough to kill. After a month, between 80% and 100% of
the weed seeds under the plastic should be dead.
We were curious just how hot that soil was getting, so we stuck
a thermometer underneath the plastic sheeting. Early in the morning,
shortly after the shadows had moved off the plastic, the soil surface
temperature was 90 degrees. The air temperature was a comfortable
68. By 9 am, the temperature under the plastic had risen to 115
degrees, and by afternoon, the soil was cooking at 160 degrees.
A few weeks of that should be enough to kill almost anything.
In late August, the crew will pull up the plastic and reuse it
in another part of the nature center to kill hemlock there. Any
remaining hemlock stubble will be removed from the meadow, and the
ground will be contoured. The area that is to become the vernal
pool will get a layer of clay added to it to hold rainwater. Such
a lined vernal pool will hold water for about three to four months.
As the water in the vernal pool evaporates, a ring of flowers blooms
at the ever-shrinking edge of the pool.
The Friends of the Shipley Nature Center seem to have cleared all
the hurdles on this project. It's going to be a beautiful and weed-free
show in the meadow this spring, brought to you by the labor of many
people. And by the power of the sun.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at vicleipzig@aol.com.
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