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Another inspirational instalment, Robert. Thank you. I enjoy your mix of unfamiliar plants, beautiful landscapes and historical/cultural information. Reading your adventures makes me want to return to northern California and spend some time botanising.
Robert,Once more a very engaging trip! You are dissatisfied with 52 species found but how do you count? I mean, do you just count different native plants on that particular trip or all kind of plants?
What kind of animals grazed here before cattle? I have read that the landscape was open and dotted by oak trees when the settlers arrived, but without grazing I would assume that it was all forested with dense woods.
And how have the exotics established there? Are they brought in deliberately to "improve " the food for the cattle? I don't think the soil has been plowed in these places.
I am not astonished that the construction site recover better than the grassland as the exotic plants are (mostly I assume) specialists on open meadows with good soil rather than on the meagre rocky habitats.
The native wildflowers, where they annuals or perennials?
Do you have a map or do you memorize all the routs you take (and plan)?
I have read that acorns were an important resource in the stone age in Europe (including Norway) and that the word "acorn" and "acre" (åker in Norw) are related.Have you tried different kind of acorns?
Thanks for your reply Robert, yes my small garden is a bit my heaven area. I also travel a lot because life is short and there're so many lands to visit on this wonderful planet.... I should add Sierra Nevada in my roads book.
Walnuts are probably a bit more tasty than acorns and there is a very informative chapter in Roger Deakin's book 'Wildwood - A Journey Through Trees' on how they are harvested in Kyrgyzstan. He speaks of families collecting between one and two tons (even up to five tons in a good year!) of nuts, and how increasing population is putting pressure on the stands of trees. A farm down the road from us has a fine avenue of walnuts, but quite a few had to be replanted after the infamous gale of 1987. Squirrel sown seedlings pop up around and about regularly! I've also been reading Oliver Rackham's masterpiece, 'Woodlands', which looks in detail at the history of woodlands in the UK - how they have been used, developed, lost and regained - over millenia. He punctures a lot of misconceptions about the age and structure of woodlands which are obviously quite important in considering how they might be managed and retained in the future. Fortunately fire is not a factor in our environment as it is in California, Australia and the Med., except sometimes deliberately for heathlands, as Trond says.