Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Heritage in Historic Homes of Jericho Vermont: Barney Hotel/Beach House

      

     I found some information on the Barney Hotel/Beach House in the deed when looking up some information at the town hall several years ago.  Before that, it had just been an interesting old picture or two, but the description of what was in the hotel seemed to bring it a bit more to life, and then later finding all of the tidbits in the two local newspapers fleshed it out a bit more. 

     Putting it all together makes you think that in its day it must have been to the village something like what JCAT is today, a place where area folks could gather for some good food and companionship.  Your blog seems like a good means to pass on this information to a whole group that today don't realize that the hotel even existed.

~ Gary Irish


The History of the Barney Hotel / Beach House 

By Gary Irish

Edited by Bernie Paquette, Maeve Kim

Historic photos used with permission from Gary Irish


     The old hotel was located on the north side of the corner of Main and Church Streets, what is today Route 15 beside the present location of Joe’s Snack Bar.  It was built by Truman Barney sometime before 1817 and was one of Jericho’s most famous landmarks in the early days.  Before the railroad, the arrival of the stagecoach was a noteworthy event, as it also brought the news.  The hotel was sold by Martin Chittenden to Truman Barney’s son Martin Barney on July 8, 1829.  This deed mentions the property extended on the “north to the fence which divides the tavern stand from the brickyard”.  Nothing is known about this brickyard, but likely it is where brick for some of Jericho Corners’ early brick houses was made. 



This shows the building when it was the Barney Hotel.  The photographer would have been standing about what today would be in Lee River Road at the intersection of Plains Road, so you can see the little park that is still there, where the war memorial is now located.

     The hotel, at that time known as the Barney Hotel, was operated by Martin and his brothers Lucius, Albert, and Solomon Barney over the years, but most notably by Martin and his wife Maria (Young) Barney, who operated it as a tavern and hotel as well as a livery stable from 1852 to 1870.  It was noted that Mr. Barney was a genial landlord and Mrs. Barney was a woman of great executive ability that made it possible to run a successful business.  In 1880 the hotel was sold to local businessman Ferdinand Beach and became known as the Beach House.  He hired a succession of managers for the hotel:  Clarence Percival in 1880, F.D. Gilson in 1884, in 1886 Edgar Blakey and H.S. Manley in 1888. 



 My guess is that this is a few years later when it had become the Beach House.  If you notice in the first picture, there is an enclosure above the porch, which is now gone in this picture, and it appears to be an entirely new porch.  The building on the right is the end of the post office block.

     In 1889, the hotel was sold to J.H. May.  Mr. May seems to have been a wheeler-dealer, dabbling in any number of enterprises, but particularly interested in horses and wagons.  The hotel appears to have been just one of his interests, and perhaps his main interest in it was the attached livery stable, as an ad in the March 13, 1889, Chittenden Reporter stated “Beach House Jericho Vt. J.H. May, proprietor.  A good livery in connection with the house.  Also dealer in horses, carriages, and wagons.”  

     In an ad on August 24, 1892, Chittenden Reporter stated:  “Closing out sale.  The hotel at Jericho Corners known as the Beach House must be sold within the next three months.  $1500 cash down and easy payments for the balance.  J.H. May, Underhill, Vt. July 18, 1892” At that time, Z.F. Hapgood was the hotel manager.

     In April 1893 May was advertising that he was selling carriages, wagons, and harnesses of all kinds in Underhill.  On October 25, he advertised an auction at his residence in Underhill where he was selling 13 horses and colts, 33 wagons, and 25 sets of harnesses, as well as furniture and farming tools.  And he also advertised that he was selling off a lot of wagons and harnesses at 52 Merchant Street in Burlington.  He further announced that he was moving to Jericho on November 1st.

     Meanwhile, in November 1893, a local news item mentioned that "The name of our hotel has been changed from Beach House to Hotel Jericho."

     Apparently, he was unable to sell it, as another ad in July 1894 said that “J.H. May advertises his hotel for sale” and records seem to show that Mr. May sold the hotel to E.H. Smith of Burlington in September 1894, with Mr. Smith to take possession on October 1st.   On September 15, Mr. May held an auction at the Hotel Jericho stables (he was also an auctioneer), where he was selling horses, wagons, sleighs, harnesses, and robes.  But two curious news items appeared in the Green Mountain Press – on October 23, 1894 “J.H. May will close his hotel November 1st unless the charge now in court is not pressed” and on November 6 “The hotel has been closed and the sign taken down.”

     Whatever the “charge now in court” might have been, it appears that the sale to Mr. Smith did not go through, as on December 18, 1894, it was noted that Mr. May had rented his hotel to William Folsom of Essex for 3 years, and the next week the Green Mountain Press noted that “Wm. Folsom of Essex is now proprietor of the hotel, he having moved in last week.  He has the house well-furnished and will spare no pains for the comfort of his patrons.”  Mr. Folsom apparently continued to operate the hotel for three years, as it was reported in March 1898, just over three years later, that “Wm. Folsom expects to vacate the hotel about the middle of April.  He expects to move onto his farm in Essex.” 

     However, there was an auction on January 30, 1897, where “the hotel and residence were bid off by V.A. Bullard, for Miss Nellie May, who takes the property, subject to encumbrances.”  Perhaps one encumbrance was the lease to Mr. Folsom.  Then on January 18, 1899, Mr. May bought the hotel once more, from Nellie & Joel D. Remington.  He then turned around and sold it to Olive Folsom on February 18, 1899, for $4000.  A few years ago, I was looking up something in the Jericho land records and came across the deed when the hotel was sold to Mrs. Folsom.  Besides the usual "the property is bounded on the west by..." sort of description, it also included the following:

     "Included one coal stove, and pipe, 6 dining room chairs, one extension table, one [unreadable] , 18 oyster plates, one kitchen range and pipe, one hair covered sofa, one hair covered rocker, 3 wooden bottom chairs in office, 1 large table in kitchen, 2 large tables in cellar, 12 extra chairs, 4 hardwood chamber sets with 2 chairs and rocker, 1 softwood chamber set with 2 chairs and rocker, 5 woven wire springs, 5 wood top mattresses, 16 window shades upstairs, 2 wash bowls and pitchers, 5 chambers, carpets in rooms 3-4-5-6 & 7, hall matting upstairs, hall oil cloth, 12 window shades below, No. 12 street lamp in archway, No. 2 hanging lamp, case and [unclear – maybe ‘chairs’] in hall, 2 bracket hanging lamps, hanging lamps in bar-room, 2 hanging lamps in chandelier in dining room, 2 bracket lamps in kitchen, 2 iron spittoons in office, 1 earthen spittoon in bar-room, 14 small glasses, 6 beer mugs, ½ pint measure and ½ pint tunnel, 1 show case, 1 large cork screw, 2 tobacco cutters, 1 small refrigerator, 1 large Baldwin refrigerator, 1 writing desk, 1 stool in office, 1 mirror, 1 clock, 1 stove and pipe in office, ice in ice house, shelves & counters in grocery store, possession to be given March 1st, 1899.”

     This gives at least a glimpse of what the hotel might have looked like at the time.  And now for a bit of what the times there were like.

From the October 13, 1886 edition of the Chittenden Reporter:

     "The Beach House was the recipient of a surprise party last Friday evening.  About 40 partook of the supper, and some 15 couples enjoyed themselves by a dance in the dining room.  All seemed satisfied with the evening's pleasures."

And from November 3, 1886, Chittenden Reporter:

     "Although the night was not very auspicious for such an entertainment last Wednesday, the music rendered in this village by the Underhill Band was very entertaining, and quite a crowd gathered from far and near to hear them.  For the length of time that they have been in practice, and considering that they have no out-of-town talent to assist them, the boys played well.  

      The proprietors of the Beach House fairly out done [sic] themselves in the way of entertainment, providing a splendid repast not only for the members of the band but also for a large number of invited leading citizens of the village.  A table seating 28 was loaded with good things, in the middle of which was a large cake bearing the inscription 'Underhill Band Boys'.  At the close of the oyster supper, the house furnished cigars for their guests and a pleasant chit-chat followed.  The band furnished music both before and after supper, and at the close of their playing they were presented with a contribution from those present amounting to $13.25." [That would equal somewhere around $375 today.]


The same era as the second photo, just taken in winter.  These three pictures are the only ones known of the hotel.


     Other examples were in March 1896 “a party of eighteen young people from Westford, coming in a four-horse team, had supper at the hotel last night.”  And that December, “After the special Masonic meeting Thursday night to work the first degree, the Masons repaired to the Hotel Jericho, where landlord Folsom had prepared a bountiful supper.”  Also noted at that time was that “Armand Jackson and Miss Emma Davis, who have been working at the hotel, have resigned.  They will be married tomorrow.”  And so the next week “Miss Flynn [was] working at the hotel.”  Again, in November 1897, “Forty-five took supper at the hotel Thursday night.”  Such stories make one think that, in its day, it would have reminded one of JCAT today.

But besides such pleasant times, there was the following, from the April 9, 1889 edition of the Green Mountain Press:

     Sheriff Reeves arrived in town on the 9:24 mail train this forenoon, having with him a bench warrant from the Chittenden County Court, directing him to take to Burlington J.H. May.  They went down on the following train.  The hotel was searched last Tuesday by Sheriffs Reeves and Galusha, during the absence of the proprietor.  The only find was a jug said to contain cider.

And the next week, the paper reported:

     "At county court last Tuesday, J.H. May was fined $50 and costs."

Although the same paper also noted that "The Beach House passenger conveyance is now at every train."

     July 16, 1889, Green Mountain Press had a story about liquor being stolen in North Williston, and Officer Wheeler of Burlington came to the Beach House in search of it.  "The terrified proprietor had a bottle of liquid in his possession which he did not want the officer to have, and he threw it through the window.  Mr. Wheeler proceeded after it, but before getting it, Mrs. May had emerged from another door and emptied the bottle."

     Another story in the November 26, 1889 paper tells of the hotel being searched again for liquor, with some being found in a closet.  J.H. May was to go on trial the next day, but the December 3rd paper reported that he did not appear at the hearing on the liquor seizure.

An interesting incident was reported in May 1, 1894, Green Mountain Press:

     “About 7:30 o’clock Saturday evening Thomas Casey entered the hotel and called for whiskey, which Mrs. May declined to furnish.  A knockdown followed in which May discharged his revolver, but missed and hit the floor.  May’s son dealt Casey a blow on the head with a poker which left a wound taken for the bullet hole.  Sunday Drs. Nay & Burdick determined no bullet had struck Casey.”

One item in January 20, 1891, Green Mountain Press gives mention of another curious Jericho institution:

     "The supper given by Jericho members of the Iron Hall to the Hall of Winooski Friday evening at the Beach House is pronounced one of the nicest suppers ever given in the village, and Mr. Hapgood, who keeps the house, is to be highly congratulated for his efforts.  There were sixty-two who sat down to table.  The Winooski lodge has invited this one to return the visit next Monday evening."

     The Iron Hall was a fraternal and insurance-based organization, the local branch of which had been formed in Jericho on January 11, 1888, and as part of their one-year anniversary celebration in January 1889, they extended "an earnest invitation...to all, especially the 'skeptical' to be present and learn how the society can give $1000 for $300, and still keep in a thriving financial condition." How they could do this eventually proved to be via a pyramid scheme!  

     But in the meantime, on February 25, 1889 "under the auspices of The Iron Hall, the celebrated dramatical and musical entertainment of the 'Wrens' will be given at Academy Hall...They come highly recommended from many sources...." and in March 1889, they "rented the whole of the second floor of D.E. Rood's harness building as a meeting room.  It will also be used by the ladies branch of that order."  That would be Sisterhood Branch No. 1001, which at that time numbered 17 members. 

      Nationally, the Iron Hall was defunct by about 1892, although an April 16, 1895 article in the Green Mountain Press stated that “the court has decided that all funds of the defunct Iron Hall now in Vermont shall be divided among the members in this state”.   D.E. Rood's harness building was just to the east of the Pierce Block, across the street from the hotel, and was destroyed in the fire that burned the Pierce Block on January 11, 1901.  Academy Hall is what you would know today as the second floor of the present town hall.  But I digress...

     Besides his being in the hotel business, the local paper noted in October 1894 that J.H. May was also fixing over his horse barn into a store, and building a large carriage shed on his property.  By April 1895, he had an ad in the Green Mountain Press for the “Jericho Carriage & Harness Store, J.H. May.”

     In January 1896 it was reported that he had just received a carload of 30 open and top carriages from the H.M. Whitney Co. of Cortland, N.Y. and that he would “sell at auction at his place of business in Jericho, Vt. on Saturday, January 18, 1896, 50 new cutters, work sleds, harnesses, robes, blankets, etc.”  And in the August 25, 1896, Green Mountain Press:  “J.H. & R.H. May started yesterday for Morrisville with a train of wagons.  He will have an auction there Saturday.  Mr. May is known all over northern Vermont as ‘the wagon man’.”



Two views of the Chesmore Block (on left) and the post office block (on right).  In the top photo, you can see that these were actually two separate buildings, although very close together.  It was the right building where J.H. May had his store, as, by that time, E.B. Williams had moved to the store beside the hotel.  These were located where Stan Knapp now lives, his house being the former restaurant building built in the 1930s.




These buildings burned on November 20, 1906, and this is a photo of the aftermath.  You can see the former Woodsmen's Hall, now apartments, in the background, in the intersection of Plains and Lee River Roads.


     In September 1896, Mr. May took over the store known as the Post Office block, formerly occupied by E.B. Williams as a drug store and post office, remodeling the rooms preparatory to putting in a stock of groceries and boots and shoes.  By November, E.H. White had finished painting and was papering May’s new store, and it was reported that it would be very attractive when completed.  By the next March, the store was reported open at last, with a full and complete line of choice family groceries and provisions, and the ad mentioned that Mr. May was still selling carriages, wagons, and harnesses.  In addition, Miss Nellie Dorr of Burlington was dressmaking at J.H. May’s store.

     In 1901, Lafayette Wilbur purchased the northern portion of the hotel property, the area bordering Buel Martin’s home and jewelry store, and built a building for his law office.  He also rented the upstairs to M.E. McMahon for his barbershop (who advertised he was a tonsorial artist and had sharp razors and a light touch, with haircutting a specialty) for a time.  About 1913, this building was purchased by H.T. Chase, who converted it to a general store, which use continues today as Jericho General Store



H.T. Chase's store, what had been built as Lafayette Wilbur's law office.  This is today Mel Mitchell's Jericho General Store.


Jericho lost its landmark on the night of October 8, 1904.  The Burlington Free Press described it as follows:


Big Fire in Jericho

Hotel, Livery Stable and Store-House Burned-Loss Placed At $12,000

     Jericho, Oct. 9 – For the second time within 18 months this village was visited with disastrous fire yesterday.  The only hotel property in town together with livery and mercantile storehouses were burned and a stock of general merchandise practically ruined, involving a conservatively estimated loss of $12,000 and severely crippling the business interests of the village.

     The fire was discovered at about nine o’clock in the attic of the Folsom House, owned and conducted by William Folsom.  It is thought that the origin was in a defective chimney.  At the time of discovery, the fire had spread through the entire attic and this upper story was a mass of flames.  With the inadequate means at hand, attention was immediately turned to saving the surrounding property and the wonder is that the entire village was not wiped out, there being at the time a strong south wind.  A bucket brigade was formed, women passing water in the line from the neighboring mill pond shoulder to shoulder with the men.  

     Just west of the hotel was the general store of E.B. Williams separated only by a driveway from the burning building.  The side of this store was covered with carpeting which was kept saturated with water and here it was that a heroic effort that the fire was stopped in this direction.  The stable immediately in the rear of the hotel was allowed to burn as were the ice house and storehouse of E.B. Williams.  The stock and carriages in the stable and the goods in the store were saved.

     In the second story of the hotel were nine furnished rooms and nothing was saved here.  The personal effects of the proprietor and family were taken out.  Mr. Folsom estimates his loss at $6000 in all.  He had insurance of $2500 on the building and $1000 on the furniture.  He has not yet fully decided but is of the opinion that he will rebuild.  [In fact, he did not rebuild, but moved across the corner to the house at what is now 2 Plains Road, where he continued in the hotel business for a time after the fire.]

     Mr. Williams had a stock of goods valued at about $10,000.  He is at this time confined to his bed by illness and his exact loss cannot be determined.  However, those familiar with his business estimate the amount of damage done in this store at $5,000, all of which is by smoke and water.  It is understood that this loss is covered by insurance in several different companies.

     The building in which the Williams store was located is owned by Mrs. Sarah A. Jackson and she lived in the upper story.  Her goods were nearly all removed with little damage and the building was well insured.



This is the store building that was just to the west of the hotel, separated only by a driveway (as was, in a later time, Joe's Snack Bar, which Joe built in 1950 when his father, Joe, Sr., ran the store).  This store, along with the former drug store just to the west, burned in April 1963.


     When the fire broke out, word was sent to Burlington asking for aid.  A crew immediately left that city with a steamer.  They came by team and made two changes of horses at Essex Junction and at Essex Center, arriving there a little after eleven.  They would have reached here sooner but for the fact that they were stopped at Essex Center by a report that their services were not needed.  Later they were ordered on and arrived here when the fire was under control.  They used a stream for some time in wetting down the ruins and started for home a little after two o’clock.

     A great deal of bravery and persistence was exhibited by those who fought the flames and it is little short of a miracle that the fire was contained to comparatively narrow bounds.  Several times the roofs of surrounding dwellings caught but men were always on hand with buckets of water and hand extinguishers.

     The fire, which occurred here one year and a half ago, was just across the road at the south of today’s conflagration [as noted above, that fire actually happened on January 11, 1901, over three and one-half years before].  The property loss at that time was about twice the amount lost today and the two fires practically wipe out the business section of the village.  It is a severe blow from which the village will not soon recover.”



This is the Pierce Block, built-in 1881 by W.N. Pierce from Jericho Center.  It later became the Home Market and burned on January 11, 1901.  This was across the street from the hotel, approximately where Mane Street Stylists are located today.  On the left of the picture, you can see part of Rood's harness shop, the upstairs of which the Iron Hall rented as their meeting rooms.  On the right is part of Joseph Bissonette's tin shop.




This is an interesting picture, in that it was taken between January 11, 1901, when the Home Market building burned (you can see the foundation of that in the photo), and October 8, 1904, when the hotel burned, as you can see a bit of the hotel on the right.  The photographer would have been standing in what would now be the middle of Route 15 in front of the Jericho General Store, looking down the hill.  

And on the left of the picture, you can see part of the house at 2 Plains Road, which is where the Folsoms moved after the hotel fire, and where they continued to operate a hotel for a time.  As was noted in the Free Press article about the fire, "The personal effects of the proprietor and family were taken out."   There was a rumor that the fire might not have been accidental, as it seemed very convenient that the Folsoms did not lose any of their personal effects, but that may well have been just gossip.




This was an apartment building that stood approximately where the Home Market building had been, perhaps just a bit west of it.  There is the rumor that this was the former woolen mill, and later Bissonette's tin shop, that had stood beside the river, and it was thought that it had been moved up the road just a bit at some point and converted into apartments.  But that has never been verified.

     The hotel lot stood empty after the fire, and was sold by Mrs. Olive Folsom, then of Sheffield, Vt., to E.B. Williams in 1911, and was purchased along with the Williams store by George Woodruff in 1927.  In 1929, the State of Vermont removed the covered bridge across Brown’s River and built the current bridge.  In the process of doing this, they straightened the curve of the road, which meant that they had to remove the blacksmith shop at the west end of the bridge operated by Jed Varney.  So Mr. Varney purchased the hotel lot from Mr. Woodruff and built a new building there.  Part of it housed a new blacksmith shop, but as a concession to the changing times, part of it was also used for automobile repairs. 

 

This is the apartment building currently on the site of the burned building in the previous photo, built after the former building burned in 1985.



Jed Varney's new blacksmith shop and automobile garage, built-in 1929.  You can see the store in the right background, and the location of Joe's Snack Bar would be just out of the photo on the left.



The same building as the prior photo, but after it had been converted to apartments.  This burned in 1968.  Again,  you can see Mel's store in the extreme right of the picture.


     This building was purchased by the Brown’s River Study Club in 1945.  They used part of it for the club meeting rooms, part to house the Brown’s River Library, which they had founded in 1937, and the remainder of the building became the community building.  However, by 1950, the upkeep of the building had become too much for the club, and the building was sold to VFW Post No. 7962, with the stipulation that the library could remain in one room.  The VFW did much work on the building, including laying a hardwood floor in the downstairs area, and many functions were held here.  

     Among other things, the hall was rented to local organizations many times to serve dinners for a large attendance.  But as happened earlier with the Brown’s River Study Club, the VFW found by 1958 that, with their membership dwindling, they were also unable to continue operation of the hall, and at that time it was sold and converted to apartments.  The building was destroyed by fire in 1968 and was replaced with the current apartment building.



The same spot as the two photos above and the first and third photos, as it appears today.   Mel's store is in the right background. 

     I do have a bit more information about the Home Market and the Chesmore and post office blocks, should you ever want that (for example, it appears that Mrs. Sarah Jackson, mentioned in the Free Press article as living above the store, moved to an apartment above the post office, and was living there when that building burned.  Talk about bad luck!

Gary
==============================================

There is Heritage in the Historic Homes of Jericho. There are stories (oral and written) that make up the history of this land (even before it became Jericho). Shall we explore together? 

Please consider helping us open the door to this land we now call Jericho, to explore the history of the land and the people who have lived here!

PS Though we have titled this project as Historic Homes in Jericho, we are open to posting photos and stories about any home, and any structure of any age, and land and families thereupon that folks care to submit.

Please contact Bernie Paquette or Maeve Kim if you wish to submit a story, long or short about your Jericho house/home, land, and folks who live there now or in the past.


Emailed Feedback from readers: 
Thanks for the great photos and history of Jericho Corners. I enjoyed it a lot. Terrible that fire did so much damage. Cheers, Julia


My Daughter and I spent the better part of this morning enjoying you postings. I noticed you mentioned Mr. Percival, Who possibly the could be a past owner of the house I currently reside in. Is there anyone who might have the history Plains Road? I would love to see it. 
Reader unknown

Resonse from Gary Irish to reader unknown, 

I am not sure where the Percival reference was, as at a quick glance, I did not find it.  But to answer their question, on page 597 in the town history it says that Timothy Percival lived on what was later known as the Brigham farm on "Jericho Plains", so that well may be what they are looking for.  Below is the link to it:

https://archive.org/details/historyofjericho01jeri/page/n707/mode/2up?view=theater

There were a lot of Percivals who lived in town, and this pretty much gives all of their history.  There is a brief mention of them in volume 2 of the history as well, mainly Fred, who, if memory serves me correctly, lived in what is now the Methodist parsonage beside the Jericho town hall.  I think he is the one that I have heard tell was nearly blind, but had a system set up whereby he could mow the Congregational Church lawn, being guided by a string.

With all of the unknown and no reply in their e-mail, I will let you pass this on to them.  If they have any further questions that I might help with, feel free to pass on my e-mail to them.

Gary

Monday, April 26, 2021

Observe and know Life in your yard

 

Can you imagine how tall we must seem
 to a creature as small as an ant? 

How threatening are our movements 
to a beetle scurrying as best it can, across our path?

Ever wonder how a dragonfly can catch insects in mid-flight? They have been clocked at 35 miles an hour. The Hawk moth comes in second at 33.7 miles an hour. 

What colors of the world do other animals detect
(different from what we see)?
 Some more, some less; octopi and squid detect blue only,
while bees detect ultraviolet, blue, and yellow, jumping spiders
 ultraviolet and green.

Here today, gone tomorrow. Mayflies' lifespan is 24 hours. Yet some insect species are known to live 50 years.

Insects have been around for a while. A Lepidoptera fossil is estimated to be 190 million years old. 

How many insect species reside in or visit your backyard? I have recorded over 300 in our Jericho, VT backyard.

How different are insects from us?  Insects experience something like pain and even feel 
persistent pain after an injuryLike us, insects have muscles, nerves, brains, hearts, and other organs. 

Insect species are as diverse as perhaps any life we know, 
yet how many of them are we even aware of?

Insects contribute to vital ecological functions; they pollinate plants, provide pest control, decomposition services, and nitrogen volatilization (so plants can use the nitrogen). They maintain and support wildlife species (think birds, fish, bears, and many others). 

Perhaps we might observe and learn a bit about these fascinating and critical to our existence, creatures. They are in large part living right under our feet and nose and flying about us in our yards. 

Why not get to know some of the many life forms that do so much for us, and are in many ways like us. Respect and protect insects; our lives are dependent on their success. 

Further Reading: Insect Apocalypse? What is Really Happening; Why it Matters and How We All Can Help.  Or view on Youtube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7wt2QvuVww

This week the Bumblebee queens are bearing the cold and gathering food for the upcoming brood. 

Tri-colored Bumble Bee

Yellow-banded Bumble Bee


Perplexing Bumble Bee

Brown-belted Bumble Bee

Id pending

The more we know about the life around us, the more we will appreciate the services they provide, and the almost incomprehensible beauty of sight and behavior that life exhibits. 

Bernie

Observing life in nature.

Connecting native habitat, wildlife, and community.

 Emailed Comments:

Thanks for posting your blog on Front Porch Forum. I love seeing what you see and know. The bees are really beautiful.

Ann

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Mow Less: From Lawns to Wildlife Habitat

             

                     Lawns - Desert Dunes or Native Eco Systems            

                               Celebrating Earth Day and wildlife 

                

Is a Sahara-type landscape (shifting, sultry, savorless) what you see when you look at your monoculture lawn? That is what it looks like and how it functions for our pollinators and other native wildlife. 


So why do so many of us find lawns, and the idea of monoculture lawns which come with the cost of labor and money, that contribute (through mowing) to noise and air pollution, ground and water pollution, and loss of life (from the use of pesticides, insecticides, fertilizers), desirable?


An article in the Green Energy Times (Lawn Transformation: Out with the Old, in with the New) reports that "In Vermont, the median yard space is 73,979 square feet, which is the largest yard space within the United States..." The report goes on to suggest that perhaps it is time to create new traditions with how we use our green space to reflect the values of today.


Do we not have anything better to do with our weekends than to tend to a plant that needs constant attention and care year after year? 


How did we become enamored (marked by foolish or unreasoning fondness) of monoculture nonnative lawns? Why did we become enamored with an imported ‘product’, and an imported idea, a sales pitch for sod which unlike good investments is a forever labor and money-hungry well that gives little to nothing in return, and for which we seldom utilize its minimum offering; when we could instead learn to love native grasses and native flowering plants that do not need anywhere near as much care, and money, and provide a much greater aesthetic, are more diverse to look at, and feeds the ecosystem of life? 


To answer those questions, let's first look at the dictionary definitions of Paradigm.  


Paradigm: A typical example or pattern of something; 


a worldview underlying theories and methodology of a particular scientific subject:               the discovery of universal gravitation became the paradigm of successful science. 

  • a model: there is a new paradigm for cars coming soon in the world
  • a standard, perspective, a way of looking at something.

When you change paradigms, you’re changing how you look at something


A person’s paradigm is how they see the world based on all the information they have gathered and the beliefs that they possess. Paradigms help us to understand our world. 


Changing our personal paradigms requires a shift in how we see the world.  


Changing our personal paradigms can open up personal growth, new and better opportunities. Changing our personal paradigms takes time and effort. 


My hypothesis is,  put simply without going into the long history of how we became subservient to the ‘idea’ that golf course-like lawns were the model to aim work for, is that we were sold the idea through advertising, snobbery, and a bit of hoodwink.


Like many fashions of the day, once the model was established, glorified, and sold to the general public, it became the de facto along with the 1950 era American dream of a small house with a white picketed fence.  And like our small house, lawns have grown in size considerably, such that it is not uncommon to see a single-family home surrounded by enough treeless, shrub-less lawn to nearly allow for an official NFL football game to being played upon. Never mind the tractor size lawnmower required to mow this super-sized seldom walked or played upon the surface. Our yardstick for living up to the Joneses utilizes blades of grass for hash marks.  


And heaven forbid anything else interferes with our nondescript homogenous castle moat. One sign of a yellow-flowered dandelion might lower our social stratification.  Though for a child, a handful of dandelions picked and bundled in their small hands and held up to mom cannot help but propagate a smile and create social status no uniform lawn could ever do. 


Speaking of children, what effect are we imposing on them by applying insecticides, fungicides, herbicides (biologically active compounds), and chemical fertilizers on our lawns, that are harmful to pollinators, and other beneficial insects, fungi, and other life forms? 


Might we change our aesthetic paradigm? The new beautiful (lawn) can be less work, less expensive, less harmful for humans and other forms of life, more diverse, more appealing to the eye, less homogeneous. For those competitive folks perhaps you can use native plant diversity for your lawn yardstick hash marks to measure up to or set a new high bar mark for the Joneses. 


Once native shrubs, perennials, and trees are established in the right places (accounting for soil type and wetness, sunlight duration) we can reduce lawn care (time and money) to little more than an afterthought. 


We can traverse upon pathways (think the Secret Garden story) amongst plants and insects that have co-evolved over thousands of years in the location of our homes; plants of various heights, shapes, colors,  and fragrances along with butterflies, native bees, a multitude of pollinators all supporting a web of life and offering a new set of neighbors to become acquainted with and enjoy their company. 




By replacing most of the sterile moat of nonnative single-species grass with masses of flowering plants that provide continuous blooming throughout the season, offering forage and host sources for insects and other wildlife, we gain free time to utilize our backyards and to see life flourishing in a biological balance of beauty


Think of those small tender hands bundling flowers for mom nearly every week. Think of those inquisitive eyes searching for and finding new life forms of intriguing shapes, colors, and behavior foraging and creating homes in the native plants in your backyard. Think about how you are helping shape a new generation’s paradigm - in how they see the world and the interconnectedness in nature. 



Dunes or Native Eco Systems? What is your lawn model, landscape paradigm today? What will it be tomorrow? Based on what we know today from science, about the earth, what standards for life and lawns will you adhere to? Will you opt for biodiversity and ecosytem function in your yard by reducing lawn size and planting more native plants? 
 


Supersized alien monotone colored and shaped dependent paradigm or unique, local, colorful, family-oriented plants that provide a true sense of place. Your yard is your palette. Will it be a landscape of sterile grass like the shifting, sultry, savorless sand of the Sahara, or a new garden of Eden, a secret garden for your family to enjoy?  Will you be one of the leaders in the forefront of the “new beautiful” model of front and backyards? (”New Beautiful” horticulture coined by John Hayden).  


Might we celebrate our homestead and fight insect decline with Pollinator Victory Gardens? Pollinators and many other life forms are awaiting the invite to your yard.  




Bring Nature Home again for personal growth and better opportunities for us all. 

"If half of American lawns were replaced with native plants, we would create the equivalent of a 20 million-acre national park, bigger than Yellowstone or 100 times bigger than Shenandoah National Park." ~Doug Tallamy


"Urban ecologists Susannah Lerman and Joan Milam at the University of Massachusetts Amherst performed an urban-suburban lawn study in Springfield, Massachusetts in 2014. They found that mowing at no lower than 3 inches, changing the mowing interval from once a week to every two weeks, and leaving lawns untreated with herbicides provided a diversity of “spontaneous” flowers, such as dandelions and clover, that offer nectar and pollen to bees and other pollinators. One of the main findings from Lerman and Milam is that “when lawns are not intensively managed, lawn flowers can serve as wildlife habitat and contribute to networks of urban green spaces.” (UMass Amherst Research Next). 


A federal study found that raising mowing height to at least 2.5 inches, mowing only every 2-3 weeks, and minimizing pesticide use can increase flower abundance by 70-300 percent (US Forest Service, 2015). Doing so also supports ground-nesting bees by reducing compaction." (From Great Barrington, Mass. Pollinator Action Plan).


Oh dear, dear sweet backyard. How I have neglected you. Starved you of your native diet, allowing mostly barren grass to grow upon your tired soils. I have rarely visited you except to drive an ear-splitting gas spewing mower about your back. 


AH, but now the virus has cornered me. With a shortened leash I have little choice but to visit, to wander, to explore my own small but always welcoming backyard. 


I now have time and interest to plant native plants especially those that sustain the food web by feeding essential caterpillars and other insects. I am thrilled to help sustain nature's functional ecosystem that supports all life – right here at home. I can be part of small efforts by lots of people to help our soil and ecosystems recover. 


I now have less lawn and more native habitat, less yard work, more yard life observations, and enjoyment. 


Now every day I follow the paths (the only areas I mow now) and find more butterflies, dragonflies, beetles, pollinating flies,  predatory, and other beneficial insects, all in my once overlooked backyard.


She welcomes me home, and wonders where I have been all this time.



Related posts:

The American Obsession with Lawns by Scientific American

Meet the Ecologist Who Wants You to Unleash the Wild on Your Backyard

Favorite flower of children

Creating Pollinator Gardens - Let's Go Native

Create a Backyard Sanctuary for Pollinators, and other insects, birds, wildlife.

List of 1,458 Vermont Native Plants, their attributes, and the insects they attract. 

Grass of the Homeland

Green Curb - Jericho public Greenbelt Planting project.

Yellow rose of Vermont (dandelion) 

Wildflower Meadows (Dr. Cathy Neal at the UNH extension service)

Site preparation for wildflower meadows (Prairie Nursery)

Lawns for Life

Insect Apocalypse? What Is Really Happening; Why it Matters; and How We All Can Help. (Youtube video, Xerces Society) or read the written article here


Recommended nursery

River Berry Farm (Jane Sorenson)


Recommended related videos:

Doug Tallamy - Nature's Best Hope

The pollinator Victory Garden website with short videos.

Farming on the Wild Side, John Hayden


Recommended reading: 

The Pollinator Victory Garden, Kim Eierman, 2020 Quatro publishing

Creating Pollinator Habitat by Jane Sorenson

Douglas Tallamy, Bringing Nature Home, 2009, Timber Press.

Farming on the Wild Side, Nancy Hayden, John Hayden, 2019 Chelsea Publishing