CT Landowner Converts Mowed Field, Other Habitat Into Haven for Birds

Native plants line the side of a pond.

Thalia first began by managing her property for monarch butterflies and birds, 鈥渢he easy way.鈥

鈥淚"m not from this part of the country so I had to do some basic research about uncovering and encouraging native shrubs like huckleberry, summersweet, and flowers. Then the next season I put in a wider assortment of trees like hawthorne, red cedar, and basswood (in addition to the maples and oaks and hickory already present), and turned a grassy, lawn-like area into a meadow,鈥 she describes.

Thalia lives in what she calls an 鈥渆x-urb, a mildly rural and woodland area.鈥 At first she wondered, 鈥淲hat can I really do? But then I realized I can do so much -- even just planting more of the right shrubs, making sure there鈥檚 berries all year long, a mix of tree species鈥nd within a year, I saw more birds. And that confirmed the value to continue on.鈥

Thalia鈥檚 ~40 acre property is composed of wonderfully diverse habitat, including wetland, pond, forest, and a river running through. Around five acres being managed are co-owned as part of a supportive HOA, and that is where much of the original work took place.

鈥淥ther neighbors would stop and ask what鈥檚 going on because most people here primarily have lawns and that's what they were used to seeing. Now they鈥檝e watched as the field鈥攚hich was mowed for years鈥攂ecame a stretch of lush meadow/shrub environment, filled with bayberry, viburnum, magnolia, and other native plants. We also curated the river banks with alder, red-twig dogwood, elderberry, and wildflowers like joe-pye weed, milkweeds, and many goldenrods.鈥

After she and her husband completed an incredible amount of work on their own, Thalia began researching how to improve the pond and wetland environments, which led her to the forests surrounding them. She applied for, and was admitted into, the administered by The Last Green Valley, in which 约炮视频 is a partner. 

The program connected her with an 约炮视频 bird biologist and a licensed forester. The forester conducted a habitat assessment, or survey of current songbird and forest habitat conditions on the property, and will suggest management options which could create quality habitat for forest-dependent birds.

鈥淭hrough the program, I learned our forests are not diverse enough in age, species, even size of trees and shrubs, and they are not being managed enough for birds. Birds are my 鈥榯hing鈥 and it鈥檚 amazed me to learn about their intertwining habitat needs, based on their activities in the forest, and how that interacts with the wetlands and the pond.鈥

Now, with habitat recommendations coming this fall, Thalia is 鈥渕otivated to steward what I can, even on this relatively small patch and puddle. Every year that the birds migrate through, or nest and forage in changing conditions, I realize how crucial it is to create resilience, preserve undeveloped woodlands and wetlands, and give birds what they need throughout their lifecycles.鈥

The hardest parts so far, she says, have been 鈥済etting rid of the invasives that crowd out host and food-bearing flowers, shrubs, and trees.鈥 But she has already seen 鈥渁n enormous payoff鈥 in the form of new birds on the property鈥攆rom 鈥渨arblers to Eastern Kingbirds, wood ducks, thrushes, kingfishers, more owls, and just this week I saw a sandpiper!鈥

The real proof of the value of planting for wildlife, she says, "is that the feeders are not the focal point anymore -- even the hummingbirds prefer to drink from all the flowering shrubs!"