Wednesday, May 13, 2009
"Til We Meet Again"
Here's a mystery engraving along the Far Mill River off of Mill Street at the old dam near the sign kiosk and bench. XXX may stand for kisses, and "Til We Meet Again" was a very popular song in 1918. No idea what "RE IV" is, perhaps someone's initials.
Update 6/9/2009: A reader reports that a 20-yr-old committed suicide at that spot in 2004 and his friends commissioned the engraving. How sad.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Garlic Mustard Pesto
I decided to give it a whirl, fully expecting it to taste like crap, because stuff they say you can eat from the wild usually does. Dandelion greens, for example, I find simply revolting, but people have been eating them for ages.
This time around, however, I was amazed. The pesto was delicious, assuming you like garlic, especially spread over Triscuits, but like any pesto you can also put it on pasta or whatever. My teenage son and husband liked it. I took it to work and people loved it and wanted to know all about Garlic Mustard and where it can be picked.
I used almost the entire bag of Garlic Mustard in the above photo to make one batch of the recipe, which requires 3 packed cups of Garlic Mustard (it's more than you think) along with walnuts, olive oil, garlic, Parmesan Cheese and Romano Cheese, chopped up in the food processor. There are many Garlic Mustard Pesto recipes on the internet, but here is the one I used. Important tip: The pesto is better after sitting in the frig for a day.
Here's where I got my Garlic Mustard: Birchbank Trail, just in from the parking area on Birchbank Road. In the photo above, all the plants growing right along the trail are Garlic Mustard. Yes, there is an ordinance against picking plants in the open space but trust me, it's more than OK. You will be doing us all a favor by removing this invasive plant and you could be pulling it up for hours at Birchbank and there would still be lots more. In places it is smothering out Dutchman Breeches and Trillium, and that's just not right. And please, bare root the plant, but don't throw the remains on your mulch pile, or it'll take root. There are an infinitive number of other places Garlic Mustard grows (quite possibly in your backyard, for starters), but I don't recommend eating anything right along the roadway due to possible contamination of the soils with heavy metals.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
CT Blue Blazed Trails
There are over 800 miles of official CFPA "Blue-Blazed" trails in Connecticut (sometimes also called "Blue-Dot" trails), shown on this map (click to enlarge). I'm surprised how often people refer to any one of these particular trails as "the blue trail" as if it didn't have a name and was no different than any other local trail. Would you refer to the Appalachian Trail as "the white trail?" These trails date back to the 1920's and 1930's, and many were created by the stimulous package of the 1930's as CCC projects. They tend to be regional trails that span more than one town. In Shelton and Monroe we have the Paugussett Trail (pronounced Pau-GUSS-ett), which originally ran from the Lake Zoar area to Roosevelt Forest in Stratford before it was cut off by the construction of Aspetuck Village and other projects. The Monroe East Village section of the Paugussett was originally part of the Pomperaug Trail, now limited to Southbury (Kettletown State Park) and Oxford.
So next time you're hiking on a blue trail, consider whether the trail is part our state Blue-Blazed system. If you're at Sleeping Giant, that's the Quinnipiac Trail. If you're hiking the trap rock ridges in central Connecticut, chances are you on the Metacomet or Mattabesett Trails. Excellent maps and descriptions of these trails are located in the Connecticut Walk Book (east and west editions) sold by CFPA through bookstores and their website. The trails are maintained by volunteers with CFPA, and when you purchase the books you are helping to support this great organization to maintain the trails.
One last note: More than half of the trail system is on private property with only a handshake agreement from the property owner. It is therefore critical that trail users stay on the trail and respect private property - no bikes, fires, camping, and no geocaches in private areas.
So next time you're hiking on a blue trail, consider whether the trail is part our state Blue-Blazed system. If you're at Sleeping Giant, that's the Quinnipiac Trail. If you're hiking the trap rock ridges in central Connecticut, chances are you on the Metacomet or Mattabesett Trails. Excellent maps and descriptions of these trails are located in the Connecticut Walk Book (east and west editions) sold by CFPA through bookstores and their website. The trails are maintained by volunteers with CFPA, and when you purchase the books you are helping to support this great organization to maintain the trails.
One last note: More than half of the trail system is on private property with only a handshake agreement from the property owner. It is therefore critical that trail users stay on the trail and respect private property - no bikes, fires, camping, and no geocaches in private areas.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
New Trail Companion
Sorry, I can't help it, I've just got to show you my new puppy and future trail partner. Here's Biscuit, a fox terrior bred to hunt down vermin to the death, next to my daughter's psycho guinea pig "Cookie", who I prefer to call "Miss Piggy". Our other guinea pig is much more sane and rightfully too afraid to go near the puppy (she would run away in panic, inviting a brisk chase). But Miss Piggy is far too grumpy and bossy to be intimidated. Instead, she turns to face the puppy and expresses her annoyance with a throaty sound reminisent of Marge Simpson.
Obviously I won't let Biscuit use the guinea pig as a chew toy, so with a measure of frustration she begins copying Miss Piggy by eating whatever Miss Piggy is eating, usually lettuce or grass. Then she eats the piggy's poo. Ewe. I going to make a long-shot attempt and teaching her to help me find letterboxes, in which case she'll be my box terrior ;-)
Obviously I won't let Biscuit use the guinea pig as a chew toy, so with a measure of frustration she begins copying Miss Piggy by eating whatever Miss Piggy is eating, usually lettuce or grass. Then she eats the piggy's poo. Ewe. I going to make a long-shot attempt and teaching her to help me find letterboxes, in which case she'll be my box terrior ;-)
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Industrial Turkey
Welcome to Connecticut. Wasn't it just 15 or 20 years ago that wild turkey were a real novelty and everyone was excited to see them? Now look at them, they're all over. Even in this industrial yard in Norwalk. This time of year I see them nearly every morning at Wells Hollow Farm on Bridgeport Avenue.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Rec Path Rock Stash
The rock you will be looking for is the one in my previous post about the Stb rock formation near Old Mine Park in Trumbull (see photo above). One side is coated with Pyrite, also called Fool's Gold. It came from the nearby corporate park in the 1990's when they were blasting during construction. You'll know you have the right rock if you look closely and see the word "Trumbull" on one side and a "T" on a white spot on the other.
Clues to the Rock Stash - Letterbox
Shelton Lakes Recreation Path and "Bridge-to-Bridge" route.
White vacant house at corner of Nell's Rock Road and Shelton Avenue, owned by the City.
Closest parking is at the white house, which leaves you 400 feet of walking.
The yellow-blazed path, south
Turning into the woods.
A long rock wall, 400 feet.
It ends.
Another begins.
Four steps along the new.
Resting at the "table."
Before you sit down to admire my rock,
Look under the table
And find my black box
Note: You can log your letterbox find at http://www.atlasquest.com/
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Stb Rock Outcrops
A few weeks ago I was wondering about the unusual rocks along a stretch of the Paugussett Trail in Monroe, even before I read the CFPA trail description that identified an old silver mine in that very spot. I took a look at the USGS bedrock geology map (click to enlarge) and learned there is a rock formation called the Straits Schist Basal Member, abbreviated Stb on the map and shown in orange. The Stb formation is defined as a gray schist with amphibolite, marble and quartzite and is known for containing metals.This is the same formation that pops up at Old Mine Park in Trumbull, location of a former Tungsten Mine. Back in the 1990's they were blasting nearby to build a corporate park and rock hounds were going in on the weekends to see what they could salvage of the metal-bearing rock (I collected a crate of rocks myself and will be using one for my first rock stash).
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Charles Island, Milford
What a blast we had walking the gravel bar out to Charles Island in Milford today. We timed it just right, arriving just as the pathway became exposed by the receding tide (an hour and 15 minutes before low tide). People get stranded out there all the time so it's important to arrive as the tide is still going out. 
The interior of the island is closed from May to September for nesting herons and egrets, although at low tide you can still do a nice loop along the shore of the island, as we did today. I picked up a nice rock for some "rock stashing" I plan on doing soon.
We were looking for our typical forms of "treasure" out there (which we found). We also saw lots of deer, brant, distinctive green serpentine boulders, and some interesting old fieldstone ruins. There are tales of buried treasure (Captain Kidd) and ghosts. In fact, we ran into an interesting fellow out there who told me all about the phenomena he has seen on the island.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Bobby Returns
The bobcat at the end of English Lane in Shelton returned today, and this time Bridget Kelly was able to grab a better camera. What a beautiful creature!
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