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Winter
2001

Restoration
has created new prairie, wetland and savanna communities
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| Kane
County, Illinois |
Campton
Hills Park is a splendid 240-acre parcel in St. Charles
owned get this by the Illinois Department
of Corrections. Why? Because a youth home for male felons
aged 9 to 18 is located here, surrounded by a tall barbed-wire
fence and security system. It has been a correctional facility
of one sort or another since the turn of the century. But
those facilities occupy only a few acres. Visitors turning
onto the road for Campton Hills will see sprawling soccer
and football fields on the left, and then pass the Youth
Home. On the east side (following a veer to the right) is
the first of the restored areas in Campton Hills Park.
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DIRECTIONS
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Heading
northwest on I-90, exit Randall Rd. and go south, through
Elgin to Rte. 64. Head west on 64 for about a mile,
and turn left (south) on Peck Rd. The first intersection
will be Peck and Campton Hills Rd. Go west (right) on
Campton Hills Rd. and take the second entrance to reach
the natural areas. |
The
history of this land is as mixed as the topography. It was
used for farming, mining, trapping, hunting, and dumping.
Some of it is still farmed, but the other activities have
ceased. The St. Charles Park District began renting part
of it more than 15 years ago. At one time there was a proposal
to develop a golf course here. But Carol Stevenson, a local
activist, formed Friends of Campton Hills Park, and they
fought to keep the land open and natural. And they won!
Carol, as volunteer steward, and many volunteers worked
with District Naturalist Mary Ochsenschlager to restore
the landscape, creating prairie, wetland, and savanna communities.
Today,
Campton Hills is a mosaic of restoration, and a veritable
study in biodiversity. In just three miles of trail visitors
can take in a sedge meadow, marshes, fens, savannas and
a dry hill prairie. Acres of aggressive herbs, shrubs and
trees (natives and non-natives) have been assiduously removed.
Successful clearing has given way to a flowering of native
plants and grasses, and a surge of frog and bird life.
The
Carol Stevenson Wetlands (named for their greatest advocate)
contains two fens bordered by a ridge. In summer the fens
hold grass of parnassus, fringed and bottle gentian, flat-topped
aster, and swamp thistle. In the trees and shrubs around
the fen, look for nesting orioles and towhees in the summer
months.
On
the west side is another wetland complex with a fen, sedge
meadow, and two pothole marshes. Look for swamp aster, angelica,
and cardinal flowers, none of them common. A suite of frogs
can be heard in the marshes starting in the spring: gray
tree frogs, spring peepers, and western chorus frogs. Bluebirds
and bobolinks sing out over the meadow. Savannas flank this
area with
walnut, shagbark and bitternut hickories, and bur, white,
and chinquapin oaks.
Perhaps
the prize of the day lies in the southwest corner of the
park: a pristine dry hill prairie. Farmers, diggers, and
dumpers never reached this area. Little bluestem, side oats
grama, northern dropseed, and porcupine grass dominate.
Rare prairie flowers include stiff aster, purple prairie
clover, cream wild indigo, and Hills thistle.
In
the fall, the marsh hopped with blackbirds and kinglets
and a chorus frog (sounding like someone strumming a comb).
The frog was "singing his last swan song," Ochsenschlager
said, "before hes submerged" for the winter.
This
beautiful area needs volunteers. Workdays are the first
Saturday of every month, 9:00 a.m.-noon, all year round.
The next nature walk is scheduled for Saturday, March 31,
2001 from 10:00-11:30 a.m. To sign up for workdays or the
walk, call Mary Ochsenschlager at (630) 513-3338.
Gail Goldberger
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