Browsed by
Tag: cranberries

When Plants Bite Back – Spoon-leaved Sundew

When Plants Bite Back – Spoon-leaved Sundew

This weekend I spent some time in an abandoned cranberry bog – although it has not been actively cultivated for years, it still produces a decent amount of cranberries. With no one to weed the bog, however, the plant diversity has increased substantially. There are now sapling trees (e.g., gray birch, pitch pine), ladies’ tresses orchids (Spiranthes sp.), and a variety of aster and goldenrod species. With all this additional growth, and without a functional water control system, rather than…

Read More Read More

Cranberries: History and Picking

Cranberries: History and Picking

Thousands of years ago, the receding glaciers left a series of kettle hole ponds filled with sand, clay and other debris across South Shore of Massachusetts, Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket, creating the perfect habitat for cranberries.   Wampanoag’s took advantage of these wild plants, harvesting wild cranberries, long before the first European settlers ever arrived. When the English arrived, they were unsurprised to find the cranberry growing here, as they were already familiar with European varieties of cranberries. They…

Read More Read More