PLENTY FALL 2019 Fall Plenty 2019-web | Page 12

About the time we first hear the robin’s ringing welcome to spring we may listen for the bluebird’s more gentle greeting. No bird’s song is more associ- ated with the return of spring than the bluebird’s: nor is there a bird’s note more expressive of the passing season than the bluebird’s autumn call of far-away, far-away. - Frank M. Chapman , Birdlife, 1897 tion of specifically designed blue- bird houses with holes no larger than 1-½” could effectively mitigate these issues. Dr. Zeleny had begun a movement that joined efforts in Canada and spread to Mexico to support bluebirds through educa- tion, placement and monitoring of bluebird boxes and trails. Across the country, from small land-own- ing private citizens, to huge public parks, people began building and installing these special boxes, with great success. State and local parks joined in the effort as well, creating bluebird box trails in many parks, including Black Hill Regional Park, Seneca Creek State Park, and the Wood- stock Equestrian Park on Route 28. But though the parks’ efforts helped, they faced a troubling threat of vandals and foot-traffic issues. In fact, in 2010 at a park near Gaithersburg, vandals de- stroyed the nest boxes, killed 12 plenty I autumn harvest 2019 hatchlings, and smashed eggs of several nest boxes. So the Parks service began looking to places where foot traffic and habitat destruction were less of an issue and the vulnerable birds could be better protected. Enter the Ag Reserve! The Ag- ricultural Reserve is ideal for blue- birds, because they are not city birds, nor are they deep woods dwellers. They prefer open spaces and mowed grass, scattered trees and grasslands. In short, they need an agricultural setting. And since the Ag Reserve is com- prised mainly of private farms, any birdhouses installed here would less likely be vandalized. But Anne was already on this task! Since the 70’s she has been installing bluebird boxes in many parts of the Agricultural Reserve. She placed them throughout her family’s farm on Peach Tree Road. She hung them up along Harris Road in Barnesville. She built them along the road in the Potomac Hunt Club. She put them wherever she could. And the bluebirds came! Before long, she was on the board and later president of the North American Bluebird Soci- ety (NABS), supporting the effort locally. Even now, she and her friends, Linda Pepe, most recent past president of the Maryland Bluebird Society Stan Fisher, and his wife Beth have been working with the Global Ecology Magnet Program at Poolesville High School for the past six years educating the next generation about the plight of these sweet birds. They have been teaching the students about blue- bird trails and maintenance, and all of the trails they study and monitor are within the Ag Reserve.