The opportunity to preserve a nearly 100
acre stand of oaks in McHenry County is rare and the potential to study their
ecosystem components in such a large block equally unusual.
However, as of July 15, 2013 one of
these stands is now protected and will be known for perpetuity as The McHenry
Community Research Forest. This project was made possible through a creative
partnership forged between The Land Conservancy of McHenry County, a private
landowner, the McHenry County Conservation District, and a grant from Illinois
Clean Energy Community Foundation.
The Community Research Forest, located
in unincorporated Harvard, IL is the assemblage of three parcels of land
totaling approximately 93 acres. Two of the parcels (about 53 acres) were
purchased outright by the Conservation District funded in large part by a grant
from the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation. Also included is a 40 acre
conservation easement donated to TLC by Al Van Maren, a private landowner.
The Community Research Forest is a
complex array of wooded natural communities dominated by white, red, black,
scarlet and bur oaks intermixed with both young and mature 200-300 year old
trees, including co–dominant species of bitternut hickory and black cherry.
The McHenry County Community Research
Forest will provide an area for researchers, private land owners, college and
high school classes, stewards, artists and others interested in the long term
survival and viability of oaks in McHenry County and the region to study these
ecosystems. It is to be a living laboratory dedicated to the future of McHenry
County’s most ancient and venerable natural communities and is expected to draw
attention from future research grant projects, universities and other partners
that have a vested interest in the future of oak ecosystems in the region.
Integration into and use of the site
by programs of TLC and the Conservation District will begin as early as this
fall. The site will become an outdoor classroom available for TLC’s Oak Keepers
and Project Quercus programs and as a field site for the Conservation
District’s use in the People and Nature Program. It is envisioned to be
accessible to the public on a regular basis, but not in the conventional sense
of recreational trails. Rather its purpose is to provide a readily available
site for ongoing educational programs and yearly hands-on seminars conducted in
the field.
In the coming months, a written
management plan for the site, including a research prospectus will be
established. In addition a full natural resources assessment will be completed
on the flora, natural communities, avian, herpetological and mammal components
of the site. Necessary improvements made for general public access is expected
by January 2015 when the site will be open for hikes through the woods.
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