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For years, Joshua Harkness and his family had seen American Woodcocks on their farm and forest property in Amenia, NY, but only at the tail-end of winter.
The woodcocks would arrive in March and utilize the family鈥檚 open meadow and grassy areas in an old cow pasture to 鈥渄isplay,鈥 making a spiraling flight up into the sky and dramatically plunging back down in an effort to impress a mate.
But American Woodcocks require dense shrubby areas for nesting, and so Joshua hadn鈥檛 seen them later in the spring... until he made an important change.
For years, Joshua had kept multiflora rose at-bay in the pasture by mowing but began to realize that he was also mowing down native plants. He started mowing selectively and focused on removing invasive shrubs with hand pruners and digging out the roots with a pick mattock, allowing other plants and shrubs to thrive. As a result, the pasture erupted with native willow, winterberry, silky dogwood, and goldenrod.
In June, he saw an American Woodcock utilizing the dense, shrubby willows for nesting.
Studying breeding birds is a primary way that Joshua monitors the health of his family鈥檚 property, which is mostly forested. He begins with the premise that forest-breeding birds don鈥檛 necessarily stay in one place or require one specific type of habitat to thrive.
Unfortunately, our northeastern forests are not as diverse or intact as they once were, and forest-breeding birds are in a state of decline.
Knowing that birds are an indicator species, Joshua is following their songs to make decisions about how he manages his woodlands. Every June, Joshua goes out and counts the birds he hears singing at various points on the property, the same points each year. If the species change, it鈥檚 an indication that something has changed about the surrounding habitat as well.
With Joshua stewarding the land that change is usually intentional, but sometimes nature does the work for him.
One year a storm blew a number of trees down and Joshua decided to leave them on the ground (similar to the patch cut shown above, which is actually meant to mimic a storm). The branching treetops created a natural barrier where they lay, protecting young sugar maple saplings from browsing deer. Joshua identified Eastern Towhees along with an increase in Veeries nesting in the thicker understory the following spring.
Ultimately, Joshua aims to make his family鈥檚 farm a more dynamic, complex environment that supports birds, botanical plants, and even bears 鈥 a few of which he has seen utilizing those downed ees for foraging insects!