November 2019

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With November nearing halfway over winter has come and snow is here to stay. My place has had a dramatic shift in only the past few days. As before the snow had come my site was the location from reprieve from the busy college life and was a place to escape from my responsibilities. It now has become the passage to fun and friends as we walk through my site in order to get to the golf course were we have gone skiing the past few days on the new snow and will continue to visit through the rest of the year to continue to ski. This change for my site is exciting and I am looking forward to more of my fiends visiting it as we continue to ski more throughout the winter.

My space is apart of the greater area of Burlington and is just one of the many hundreds of small clusters of forest that are scattered around suburban and urban areas in the North East. The specialness that I feel for this spot juxtaposed with its relative commonness has made me reflect more on how much I value time in nature and outdoors.

Throughout the time my site has probably been visited by thousands of people over many generations. Knowing that so many people must have been in the same place that I have been visiting for the past semester brings me joy that I can be apart of the history of this wonderful site. Perhaps one day another NR001 student will visit this site in order to blog about it.

Over the past week, I have journeyed to my spot a number of times and observed quite a few species. Some of them include Vulpes vulpes, Acer saccharinum, Betula papyrifera, Acer platanoides, Acer saccharum, and Tamias striatus.

  1. In my small spot, there are a plethora of species that inhabit this oasis of forest on the outskirts of the UVM Campus. Unfortunately, the foxes and chipmunks I was not able to photograph, as I was returning from practice and only saw quick flashes of them in the woods. But, there is clearly a community of animals that call this area home. The other species that mainly populated this site were trees that are common to wild areas in Vermont. The reason that these trees were characteristic of this site was that this site is a microcosm for Vermont wildlife in an urban environment. Maple trees and Birches are quite common in wild Vermont but with much of Burlington being urbanized and many spaces in the surrounding area having been cleared for agriculture; these species are a reminder of what Vermont truly is.
  2. Throughout the past weeks, the vegetation has begun preparing for the winter with most of the trees shedding their leaves and going dormant for the cold months ahead. Overall, not much has changed but I look forward to observing this space as it begins to grow again in the spring.
  3. Due to the heavy rains over Halloween, the ravens in my site became much deeper and spaces that had been bone dry before had transformed in major creeks. This site sits at the basin of the Redstone apartments and is in the direct line of any runoff that would come from that area. As more precipitation comes throughout the remainder of the fall I expect my site to only become increasingly saturated.
  4. Drawing a map of my place and thinking about the geographic location of my place made me think more about how the location of this space has shaped the topography of the land. Due to the number of paved surfaces that site above my site, it makes sense that the place would have high rates of water as it is the first non-permeable surface for the majority of Redstone campus and is at a much lower elevation than the majority of the campus.
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