Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Maps II


 
Maps  II
2015

I started watching and studying this place, which I named Cottonwood Pond, back in early 2013, to see if a real pond would form, and how it would form. The most interesting aspect of this has been watching the various changes that have occurred there, some unpredicted, and trying to determine how they came about.

I first did a blog entry called “Maps” in April of 2014 as a way to give the reader (and maybe also myself) more perspective on what I'd been talking about for over a year. So much has happened since that time – so many changes. In March of this year, I wrote an entry called “Vocabulary”, since new spots had developed at Cottonwood Pond, and some of the old spots I had been referring to had disappeared or changed greatly. It was time to put it all down for the reader – the terms I was using and what they referred to.

Now it is time to do a new entry of maps, because the landscape of Cottonwood Pond looks so different 15 months later. Largely, the area has become “swampier” whenever there has been ample rain. Though this area is part of a long, wide floodplain on either side of the Creek, nestled between the slopes of my woods, over time water has tended to pool more around Cottonwood Pond. Sometimes the water has no boundaries around the Trunk, which can appear as an island in the middle of a big swampy, pond-y place. Water has carved out an area below the trunk (the Cove) where it flows back and forth, and it has carved out a larger space (the Inlet) below an old fallen tree at the edge of the pond (Barkless Log), allowing more water to flow into the pond after heavy rains, and for more to collect in the muddy perimeter.

I am presenting four maps, three of them from different approaches anyone might take to the pond, and another as an overhead, bird's-eye view, for overall context. These are just rough, schematic sketches. They are definitely not to scale.

From my writings and photos throughout my blog, you will have to imagine the filled-in spaces. What looks like a blank space on a map may actually be dense with Jewelweed and other plants in the summer, or may be full of mud or ice in the winter. You will have to imagine frogs, snails, Water Striders and Backswimmers in the water, and the Root Ball Top full of vegetation, with maybe birds landing within, spider webs stretching between rootlets, or a snake coiled at the top. You will have to imagine the sounds around there – birds singing, woodpeckers knocking on trees, sweeps of cicada choruses, and the musical scrapings of katydids after dark. You will have to imagine scores of raccoon footprints in the mud all around, thin lines in the mud left by worms and a thick one left by a snake, and maybe a print of a deer, coyote or opossum.

Water levels can change drastically. On all of the maps, these lines: -------- indicate places where water sometimes extends.

I hope that these maps will help you see Cottonwood Pond more clearly, and will be a good reference when you are reading my descriptions and looking at my photos in various entries before and after this.

Birds-Eye View – an Overall Look at Cottonwood Pond and its Environs:


BBB – Bent Blue Beech – a live young tree that became bent when the Cottonwood fell.
BE – Boxelder sapling
BKL – Barkless Log, including Lower and Upper (the main trunk of this old fallen tree lies across the edge of the pond - after the Root Ball, it divides into two large limbs, one along the ground, the other extending upward)
Cr – Creek
EB – Elderberry shrub group
Isth – Isthmus (after much rain) – where water flows between the main pond and “little pond”.
l.p. - “little pond”
MP #1 and #2 – Mud Piles
P – main Pond
RBB – Root Ball Bottom (the part that was in the ground when the tree was standing)
RBT – Root Ball Top (the part that was  soil level)
S – Seep (water seeps from the corner of the pond down to the creek - where it meets the creek, there is a little bark ledge that was exposed earlier this year.)
SL – Slope
SS – Swampy Spot (the original “swampy place”, before the whole area would flood – it formed at the end of Temporary Creek #1)
T – Trunk of the fallen Cottonwood
TC #1 and #2 – Temporary Creek: #2 became evident early this year and is, so far, more intermittent than Temporary Creek #1 - both form from water that seeps down the slopes.
2TT – the 2 Trunk Tree, which is probably a White Ash. Water sometimes gathers around it.
VRL – Very Rotten Log – extends over the creek, across muddy ground and then under the Barkless Log, after which it gradually disappears into the ground from increased rotting.
YT – Young Tree – sometimes outside the edge of the pond, sometimes growing out of the water.

So, here it is – Cottonwood Pond and its environs. The slopes to the southwest go up to the yard and house. It is this slope that I most often descend to reach the pond. It is from the top edge of this slope that I look down, take the faraway photos, and from where I get my only view of the pond when I  short of time, on crutches, or things are way too slippery.
The slopes to the northeast are roughly in the middle of the woods, though parts of them extend to the other edge, where there is a farm field beyond our border. During heavy rain, water flows, though imperceptibly, down to the bottom of the slope, where it gathers and flows toward Cottonwood Pond as “Temporary Creek”. TC#1 shows signs of becoming permanent.
Between the slope areas is a wide flood plain through which the Creek winds. The floodplain is very thick and rich with plant life during the summer after the slopes have become practically bare (the slopes are very thick with plants all spring.) The Creek tends to be always flowing, though the water can vanish during a very dry summer. It begins somewhere to the southeast, beyond our road. It flows through a culvert under the road and dumps down into our woods, where it flows in a roughly south/southwest direction until it gradually turns roughly west/northwest, and turns westerly well beyond the Cottonwood Pond area.
In the center of the map is the Root Ball, with top and bottom designated. The original, main Pond formed below the bottom, where the Root Ball had lifted out of the mud. On the other side, the Trunk extends above the ground, then up the slope to where it lodged in the fork of a Red Oak tree at the top of the slope.
The place I call “little pond” is much more intermittent than the main pond. It forms, periodically, in the angle between the Trunk and Root Ball Top.


Approaching from the South West:

  
BBB – Bent Blue Beech
BK L – Barkless Log
BL – Bark Ledge – exposed where the Seep meets the Creek
Cr – Creek
CV – Cove (under the Root Ball)
D – the deepest part of the Pond
I – Inlet under the Barkless Log, at the edge of the Pond
Isth – Isthmus (during heavy rains)
l.p. - “little pond” - only visible from this angle when it is swollen from heavy rains
MP #1 and #1 – Mud Piles – formed from mud fallen from the Root Ball, and some soil pushed from the action of water during heavy rains
MS – Maple Sapling at summit of Root Ball (this is where the water snake was seen in May 2014 – see “A Visit to the Pond with Cherie”)
S – Seep
2TT – 2-Trunk-Tree (probably a White Ash)

This is what you see if you come down the slope (from our yard and house) and approach the main Pond. You have to get across the Creek first, of course. If conditions are muddy, I balance along the top of the Very Rotten Log. However, as it gets more rotten (expedited by the great amount of rain we have had this year), this gets chancier.  As you approach the Pond you see the wall of rootlets in back that is the Root Ball Bottom, the Maple Sapling growing from the top (among many other plants), and the little Cove that has formed on the bottom right, where water goes through. You will see the big Mud Pile #1 on the left, covered in plants during the growing season, and the Isthmus between it and the 2-Trunk-Tree (White Ash). You will see the Seep flowing from the left corner down to the Creek, near the Very Rotten Log. You will notice the big space between the water (or mud) and the Barkless Log, which I call the Inlet. You will see the young Bent Blue Beech, with its muscle-like, gray bark, bent toward the Root Ball, and the Young Tree growing at the edge of the Pond. You will see where the Creek flows under the Barkless Log, sometimes with a pool of water to the side.

Approaching from the North West: a side view including the main Pond and “little pond”:


 BBB – Bent Blue Beech
BE – Boxelder sapling
BK L – Barkless Log (main trunk and upper limb seen here)
CV – Cove (opening under the Root Ball)
D – deepest parts of main Pond and “little pond”
I – Inlet under the Barkless Log at the edge of the main Pond
Isth – Isthmus (during heavy rains)
l.p. - “little pond”
MP #1 and #2 – Mud Piles – formed from mud fallen from Root Ball, and sediment pushed by water during heavy rains
MS – Maple Sapling at summit of Root Ball
RBB – Root Ball Bottom
RBT – Root Ball Top
S – Seep (from corner of main Pond to Creek)
T – Trunk of the fallen Cottonwood tree
2TT – 2-Trunk-Tree (probably White Ash)
VRL – Very Rotten Log
YT – Young Tree at edge of main Pond

This is what you see if you move to the edge of the Root Ball on the North West side. You can see both sides of the Root Ball, also seeing the differences between them. You are also able to see both the main Pond and “little pond”. If there has been heavy rain, you would have to be here wearing tall rubber boots, as this whole area gets very soggy.
Some wildlife, such as Coyotes, like to skirt the pond area around this way, when things are not soggy. Raccoons, however, will go almost anywhere.
The Cove has opened up under the Root Ball. From this angle, you can barely see it on the Root Ball Bottom side. The other side of the Cove is not visible from here, as it is blocked from view by the Trunk.
From this direction you can also clearly see the Inlet between the water surface and the Barkless Log, sometimes with sunlight shining through. You can also see the dramatic, graceful arc of the Bent Blue Beech over the far end of the main Pond.

Approaching from the South East, on the other side of Cottonwood Pond:


 BBB – Bent Blue Beech
BK L – L, U – Barkless Log – the main log, plus the Lower and Upper limbs
Cr – Creek
D – deepest part of the main Pond
I – Inlet – water flows into the Pond, under the Barkless Log
l.p. - “little pond” - not visible from this direction, but on the map for reference
MP #2 – Mud Pile #2 – in the angle between the Root Ball Bottom and the Barkless Log – formed by mud dropping from the Root Ball, but also from the action of water pushing sediment and collecting.
MS – Maple Sapling on the summit of the Root Ball
RBB – Root Ball Bottom – originally underground
RBT – Root Ball Top – originally at soil level
S – Seep – barely visible from this view
SS – Swampy Spot (the original swampy place)
T – Trunk of the fallen Cottonwood Tree
2TT – 2-Trunk Tree – a little visible from this angle – at the other edge of the Root Ball
VRL – Very Rotten Log (disappears into soil beyond Barkless Log)
YT – Young Tree growing at edge of main Pond

From this approach , the opposite of the previous one, you can see a very different view. During heavy rains, water comes down the slopes to the east/southeast and collects in the Swampy Spot, in which grow the Mystery Plants. Water then spreads out to go beneath the Barkless Log (Lower) and the Trunk, sometimes also spreading into the area beyond and meeting up with “little pond.” It also flows to the left, eventually flowing through the Inlet into the main Pond. Needless to say, this is another very soggy area where one needs tall rubber boots to explore.
The deepest part of the main Pond is near, so even during dry periods you can peek over the Barkless Log and look into the water, even if it is just a big puddle at the time. You can also get another view of various frogs in the summer, which like to poke their heads out of the water or slip into the Cove to hide in the dark, among rootlets.
You are much closer to the Bent Blue Beech and the Young Tree, where you can observe their green leaves in the summer, their colorful leaves in the fall, and their seeds and flowers, as well as the difference in bark texture.
If you can step over the Lower limb of the Barkless Log and under the Upper (sometimes I have to cross further to the right), you can go peek at the Root Ball Top side of the Cove (and maybe startle some frogs that thought they were hiding from you.) That space is wedged in between the Trunk, Root Ball Top and Barkless Log, so some creative bending is required.

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Well, I hope this has brought Cottonwood Pond to life for you even more than usual. This entry can be used as a reference when you are reading another and wonder what in the world I am referring to. So, use your imagination to fill in the spaces while reading my blog and looking at my photos of Cottonwood Pond throughout the seasons.















1 comment:

  1. I love maps. My garden doesn't change so dramatically. I have made a map from time to time.

    ReplyDelete