Project Sanctuary Circles

Love Farm's 2023
DNR Wildlife Habitat Grant Proposal

Project Title

Sanctuary Circles - regenerating native ecosystems in Benzie County

Brief Project Summary

Overbrowsing by White Tailed Deer appears to discourage the regeneration of native Michigan ecosystems. Sanctuary Circles are large rings of refuse timber that protect young trees and plants without blocking the movement of deer on the surrounding land. Sanctuary Circles create habitat for many animals and inspire people with a hint of what our forests and fields used to be... and can be again.

Rationale

Provide additional information describing the need for the project, wildlife species impacted, and overall benefits.

“Too many deer also leads to overbrowsing, which numerous studies have shown to be a huge factor in the destruction of natural areas and loss of habitat for other species.”
https://www.wemu.org/issues-of-the-environment/2019-12-25/issues-of-the-environment-exploring-the-management-of-michigans-deer-population

At chronically high densities, deer change plant community structure and composition enough to be considered ‘ecosystem engineers’ or ‘keystone herbivores’ (Alverson et al. 1988; Waller and Alverson 1997; Côté et al. 2004). In many areas, deer population densities greatly exceed ecosystem carrying capacity (Rooney and Waller 2003), causing long-lasting and potentially irreversible legacy effects (Royo et al. 2010b; Nuttle et al. 2011).
https://academic.oup.com/aobpla/article/10/1/plx047/4107548

Located in the highlands above Crystal Lake's north shore, Love Farm is literally where the local environment starts. Springs originating on our property feed two of Benzie County's major watersheds. Love Farm enthusiastically stewards 270 acres of forest, fields and wetlands and is committed to developing, demonstrating and sharing our most effective stewardship practices with the community. We celebrate and thank the DNR for making our farm eligible for the Wildlife Habitat Grant Program.

My name is Dan Kelly, and I took over the family farming operation in 2020. Along with Sarah Alexander, our family and friends, we've shifted the emphasis to permaculture, aligning with our overarching philosophy of wilds resonance. I am also an artist and filmmaker without scientific credentials, but with a strong affinity for science.

It doesn't take a credentialed scientist to understand that forests are in trouble. Toppled trees are scattered like pickup sticks and young trees have a hard time getting started. Our success with Love Farm's produce garden suggests that the soil microbiome could offer a clue, specifically the mycorrhizae. The Sanctuary Circles habitat regeneration proposal includes a significant soil biology support component.

What are Sanctuary Circles? In 2020, we pulled fallen ash trees out of our forest, hired a sawyer and had the logs milled on site. The quality of the lumber was very high. We realized there was a vast resource available in fallen trees and refuse timber. That led to inviting tree companies to use our farm as a timber warehouse. A developer was building a house nearby and taking down massive beeches. We invited him to save money and bring the logs to us. We received over 1000 cubic yards of big logs and branches from that home site alone. The timber piles started attracting small animals and the raptors that eat them. We had created habitat!

The piles also present a formidable obstacle for deer. They are too high and wide for deer to jump over and are too tangled for deer to walkon. Having built a rather expensive and time consuming deer fence around our produce garden the year prior, I started to wonder if there was a way to use refuse timber to exclude deer from over browsed forest. If we stacked timber in a ring, we could keep the deer on the outside. Anything already established or planted within could grow without hungry mega fauna constantly consuming every fresh shoot or leaf.

The primary focus of Sanctuary Circles is to protect existing and newly planted native flora from deer, while increasing opportunities for other animals and making a start at regenerating the ecosystem.

We recognize that the regenerative potential of Sanctuary Circles is likely greater than simply building deer exclosures. The benefits to the ecosystem will be extremely localized if the project does not engage people. Drawing connections between restored and thriving wild ecosystems and human quality of life is possibly the most powerful aspect of Sanctuary Circles.

We will include interpretive signage about why and how the Circles came to be, drawing connections to the natural community and the life support systems of the entire planet, but interpretation is just the start.

In April and May, the Human Nature School will begin their spring session on Love Farm, (https://humannatureschool.org/). This strategic alliance will likely continue into the summer as the Sanctuary Circles project gets underway. We are excited to involve the spring HNS students in the planning and development of this project. There will certainly be plenty of cross pollination.

Year round visitation to Love Farm is steady. Our produce garden provides fresh food in summer and fall, we lease space in our barn to a bi-monthly buying club and our sugar shack is currently selling raw Maple sap.

Our 1.5 mile perimeter trail is our first visitor amenity and Sanctuary Circles will be an enhancement, an upgrade to the trail. Outdoor arts educators, acting as tour guides would invite visitors to walk the perimeter trail with them and discuss the project and the wilds generally. We've budgeted for two members of Love Farm's staff who are also active as outdoor arts educators to be Sanctuary Circle guides, either scheduled or as needed.

Eventually, Sanctuary Circles could become Love Farm's main attraction, the reason why visitors come to Love Farm. Gwen Frostic Prints, Benzie County's most famous environmental and conservation themed business, was also a 285 acre wild life sanctuary before Gwen's death in 2001. She set an intriguing precedent for the county and the entire state.

Love Farm is determined to help our forests, with or without support from the DNR. This Sanctuary Circle proposal is an elegant synergy of people and resources that does not require permits or even funding, we can start immediately. Love Farm will likely implement some version of Sanctuary Circles regardless of the outcome of this grant application, the idea is just too good to pass up. Certainly, collaborating with the DNR would be amazing. The Department's resources and expertise would amplify our efforts considerably. Getting this grant would also boost our credibility and influence in the community, helping us to spread the stewardship ethic. Either way, writing this grant has been inspiring, and we appreciate the invitation to develop this proposal.

Objectives

Detail specific objectives for the project that help define the products/deliverables below

Interdependent Objectives for Sanctuary Circles
Explore the possibility for regenerating native ecosystems via White Tailed Deer exclusion zones that also...

People

1) maintain an immersive wilderness experience to visitors by fitting into and perhaps even emphasizing nature
2) inspire farm visitors to remember and get connected to the vibrant ecosystem their parents and grandparents enjoyed
3) establish an attraction that brings families into mindful contact with wild forests, fields and wetlands
4) share and encourage creative expression using natural materials. With practice, timber berm construction could evolve into intriguing forms and patterns
5) facilitate self education for all ages, but especially young people, about becoming members of a thriving natural environment

Wildlife

4) create habitat for a wide variety of animals, plants and insects and support a robust soil microbiome,
5) simulate predator pressure by limiting opportunities for deer while increasing opportunities for other wildlife
6) remove a prominent threat to young trees and rare plants within the Circle, increasing biodiversity above and below ground
7) establish long range food sources by planting and protecting indigenous hard and soft mast

Related

8) invigorate hunting culture by recruiting bow hunters to advise on the optimal design and placement of the Sanctuary Circles
9) assist southern Michigan tree species to migrate north, preparing for possible changes in climate

Relevance or Methods

Provide a concise summary of proposed methods to achieve the project objectives. Draw clear connections linking your proposal with the goals, regional priorities, or scoring criteria

A Sanctuary Circle is a berm constructed of refuse timber formed into a ring. The berm is high and thick enough to prevent deer from entering the interior. The inside is planted with native plants and trees. An auto closing gate allows access for people. Three different diameters are considered, 100, 50 and 30 feet.

Maintain an immersive wilderness experience.

The use of refuse timber - branches, root clumps and logs - means the material cost is low. For reference, power plants pay about $30/ton for refuse timber. The low cost is offset somewhat by the need for heavy equipment to move it around. What makes refuse timber most attractive is that it meets our goal of maintaining an immersive wilderness experience because timber comes from the forest and so will not be out of place there. Certainly encountering a 30 foot diameter ring of timber in the forest might be sublime, but likely not jarring or discordant in the way that finding a metal or plastic fence might feel.

A Sanctuary Circle in the middle of a field would be a different experience altogether. On a clear day, flat fields reveal even distant details. From far away, a Sanctuary Circle might appear to be a rustic fort or even a primitive walled village. A rolling field might provide hills to obscure or hide the Circle.

Establish an attraction, encouraging creative expression.

Placing a Circle prominently in a flat field would meet two other goals, establishing an attraction and sharing creative expression. The sight of a distant fort or village would be a powerful draw for children, who would want to go out there and see what it was. Upon arriving, signage and age appropriate interpretation would enhance their discovery. A pile of smaller branches outside the structure would invite kids to build their own mini Sanctuary Circles. The construction of the berm itself could facilitate safe climbing play.

As we work with refuse timber, virtuosity would eventually emerge, abstract sculpture on a grand scale. Andrew Goldsworthy's subtle work with materials from nature connected millions of people to their own nature.

Inspires farm visitors to remember.

Planting the interior with native plants and keeping them safe could eventually enable the ecosystem within the Circle to regenerate. In 5-10 years, young oak tops would be peeking over the Circles and the flora within would be diverse and synergizing. Those born after 2023 will be able to experience the vibrant ecosystem which was taken for granted by their parents 50 years ago, and eventually, as regeneration continues, those young adults will be able to experience the ecosystem their grand parents and great grand parents knew. Perhaps there is an epigenetic memory of that past vibrancy within every person whose ancestors loved the forest and fresh water. Sanctuary Circles are a way to reinforce that memory, to be sure kids born this year will remember the thriving wilderness they grew up with, guarded at first by piles of timber and then later, in their 20s and 30s, everywhere.

Creates habitat.

Love Farm has about 40 tons of refuse timber stockpiled for various projects including dimensional milling, fence posts, chainsaw sculptures, signage, hugel mounds, biochar production, woodchip mulch and firewood. These massive piles have provided habitat for mice, rabbit, skunk, opossum and raccoon. Several species of hawks have appeared to hunt the timber piles. There was plenty of animal diversity around our barns and garden before the piles, afterwards the populations and variety exploded.

Within the Circles, native plantings will not have to contend with deer. Mice and rodents might be a problem. When planting the interior we will wrap the base of the young trees. Our experience with the timber piles and hawks suggests that the Circles will likely catch the eye of both hawks and owls who will keep the predation pressure high.

The benefit to specific species will depend on where Sanctuary Circles are located. After the locations ware identified, we'll be able to define a specific roster of species.

Simulates predator pressure by limiting opportunities for deer while increasing opportunities for other wildlife.

Sanctuary Circles disadvantage deer by removing food from their range while giving other animals the advantage of more habitat and opportunity. This could be likened to a deer specific predator. Aside from disease and hunger, human hunters and cars are primarily the only deer killers, coyotes notwithstanding. Building Sanctuary Circles is easier than reintroducing wolves, for now.

Removes a prominent threat to young trees and rare plants.

The 30 and 50 foot diameter Sanctuary Circles have 700 sq ft (0.016 acres) and 3000 sq ft (0.046 acres) of interior planting area. This is equivalent to the footprint of a cabin and a modest 2 story home. An almost insignificant space compared with a 270 acre farm, or 71,199 acres of nearby Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. Three white oaks fully matured would be quite crowded in a 30 foot Circle.

What good are 3 oaks? Maybe not much, all alone. When growing with a variety of smaller plants that otherwise would be eaten by deer, the soil microbiome will be more diverse. Different plants release different carbon exudates into the soil, which feed different microbes and have different effects on soil particles. Biodiversity above and below ground is generally thought to be an indicator of ecosystem health.

Establish long range food sources by planting and protecting indigenous hard and soft mast.

Now imagine our 3 oaks in 20 years. Powered by a diverse microbiome, our oaks might be more resistant to pests and disease. Their acorns might be more numerous than oaks within the deer range, and those acorns might have higher nutrient density, with increased viability for sprouting new oaks. Perhaps the diverse microbiome will creep out under the timber berm and enliven the ecosystem around the Circle. Maybe 3 oaks growing in a biodiverse .016 acre can benefit an entire acre. We'll just have to plant them in a Sanctuary Circle and see.

Invigorate hunting culture by recruiting bow hunters.

In theory, hunting fosters an appreciation for the wilds and can control the deer population. Love Farm leases our land exclusively to bow hunters. Guns are great, but we don't want any more lead on the land, (see Budget Narrative, scraping). We have an ongoing relationship with the owner and staff of our region's premier bow hunting retail store, and will leverage their expertise in the design and location of Sanctuary Circles, exploring how the Circles could enhance the bow hunting experience.

Assist southern Michigan tree species to migrate north.

Madeline Baroli, founder of the Assisted Tree Range Expansion Project (ATREP) will advise on planting southern Michigan trees in preparation for possible changes in climate here. She suggests that Shagbark Hickory could be interplanted with White Oak. Other ATREP species are tulip tree, sassafras, black tupelo, hackberry, and swamp white oak.

Products Deliverables

Describe and quantify the project deliverables relevant to the overall goals of the WHGP

The plans we have align broadly with the Michigan DNR goal of protecting, managing, and enhancing lands for sustainable wildlife populations and wildlife compatible recreation, as well as more specifically with regional priorities outlined in the Wildlife Action Plan and Wildlife Division Strategic Plan.

Promoting mast-producing trees is listed as a regional and program priority for Northwest lower Michigan in the Wildlife Action Plan. Sanctuary Circles will be planted with a diversity of both hard and soft-mast producing tree and shrub species. Enhancement of local populations of white oak, and the establishment of shagbark hickory, in particular, are both aspects of this project that are focused on addressing two concerning trends in our local forest ecosystems that have negative implications for game species: the struggle with white oak regeneration and general lack of a young cohort, and the decline of American beech on our landscape, which implies the continual loss of beech nuts as a key food source (a functional niche which shagbark hickory may provide some promise of filling, and is a scientifically-backed management action included in the US Forest Service Northern Research Station Menu of Climate Change Adaptation Actions for Terrestrial Wildlife Management). Ultimately, the planned activities have been developed through careful consideration of the broader regional forest health and management context, with the intention of supporting forest resilience and thus, wildlife, far into the future.

As we discussed in our rationale, the integration of wildlife-focused stewardship at Love Farm will also generally align with key social and cultural objectives that are included in the Wildlife Division Strategic Action Plan, especially: “collaborate with urban and suburban communities to address human-wildlife interactions while fostering appreciation and tolerance for wildlife,” “design and implement innovative education and outreach strategies,” and “diversify opportunities for people to engage in wildlife-compatible recreation, including hunting and trapping, on public and private lands.

These objectives are inherent in current Love Farm projects, amplified by tapping into both the extensive community around Love Farm, and by connecting with local non-profit organizations that engage the community (and especially youth) such as Cognition Science and Discovery Center, Salix Community Forestry Collective, SEEDS and Crosshatch.

We also lease land to local bow hunters and plan on creating opportunities for them to share their skills with other members of the community.

All of the planned activities are fantastic demonstrations for discussing the intersection of forest health, wildlife, and human-interaction with the landscape. Both Maddy, Sarah and Taylor, who will be directly engaged with implementing these activities, have extensive experience with education and children. Sarah has hosted three “Curiosity Fairs” in the summer of 2022 and is working on Frolic Field Days at Love Farm for 2023. Sarah and Taylor also host a day of Outdoor Arts every week for children under 9 years. Maddy is a certified Project Learning Tree and Project Wild educator.

The Human Nature School has extensive experience with outdoor education for kids, HNS has leased Love Farm for their spring session through April and May. We look forward to a continuing our collaboration with HNS into the summer and engaging their students in Sanctuary Circles restoration.

Workplan

Provide a tentative schedule for the completion of the project, separated into six-month periods, and describe the work planned in each six-month period of the anticipated project. This information will be used to evaluate grant progress and to evaluate payment requests if the project is approved for funding. Projects should be completed within the published grant timeframe.

May 2023 – October 2023
contracts
bookkeeping and reporting setup
press releases
receive plants and trees and establish in nursery
review Sanctuary Circle locations - benefits and challenges
locate first Sanctuary Circle
signage
prepare site
construction begins
more public outreach, invitation to tour, tour schedules
construction of berm nearing completion
ceremony with elders, public
planting
set up trail cams
monitor trail cams
locate second Sanctuary Circle
signage
prepare site
transport timber
construction begins
planting (re-evaluate, wait until spring?)
set up trail cams
monitor trail cams
reports

November 2023 – April 2024
curate/maintain trails to Sanctuary Circles
add timber to berms if needed
monitor trail cams
Bow season deer
Bow season turkey
complete planting / replant if needed
trees and tubes in concentric circles around Sanctuary Circle
reports
check on timber berms stability, reinforce, adjust
tours resume
inventory survivors and document
measure height and girth of all trees

May 2024 – October 2024
what have we learned
tours continue
signage revised and updated based on public observation and direct feedback
overall success report
1) biodiversity
2) regeneration
3) soil tests
4) spin off benefits

Budget Narrative

Provide brief explanation to support the expenses of the project.

Love Farm has a roster of active projects, so we based the Sanctuary Circles (SC) budget around the constraints of our current schedule. Timber berm construction requires the backhoe loader and Dan Kelly, the primary operator. The proposal allocates 550 hours on the backhoe, 20-25 hours a week. Based on this constraint, in 5-7 months 440 feet of timber berm could be constructed. This does not include installation of gates, plantings, signage, etc.

Backhoe costs were calculated for SCs with an inner diameters of 100, 50 and 30 feet. The outer circumference of these SCs would be 402, 245 and 182 feet respectively. With 440 feet of berm available, we could build a single 100 foot SC or two smaller SCs, one 50 and one 30 feet. We are proposing to deploy the two smaller Sanctuary Circles and regenerate two different ecosystems, the field and the forest.

Kelly has over 300 hours of accident free backhoe loader experience. Operator certification would likely increase efficiency and safety. 4 days of backhoe loader training has been budgeted for, including travel expense to Detroit and lodging.

Love Farm has two Dewalt electric chainsaws with 16” bars. A third larger Dewalt electric Chainsaw will make trimming of large timbers faster and more efficient.

Construction will be more involved than simply piling up timber. Regardless of signage or the admonitions of tour guides, kids will climb the berms. As safety and longevity of the structures are top priorities, careful attention will be given to how the timber is layered up and woven together. Large logs would be placed on the bottom and smaller logs and branches above, for example. The round trip travel time from source pile to berm was estimated at 14 minutes to give the backhoe/loader operator time to deconstruct and sort through the source pile and then place the selected timbers where they should go on the SC.

We imagine that this process could eventually evolve into a sort of hydraulic assisted sculpting. The potential artistic value of this project has not been included in the budget, that evaluation will be up to posterity.

The first SC will likely be created on the West Farm field, (see map A, location 1 or 2) where timber is already stockpiled. The exact location will be determined by the land owner in consultation with our expert advisors, Madeline Baroli and Gauthier's Archery. The location of the SC must balance three objectives; 1) maximize chances for long term success of ecosystem regeneration with consideration of possible changes in climate, 2) maintain/enable a profound wilds experience for visitors and, 3) optimize bow hunting opportunities and safety.

The fields of Love Farm were cherry and apple orchards until the 1970s, and like most legacy orchard operations in Northern Michigan, the soil is contaminated with lead and arsenic. The contaminated soil layer around the perimeter (about 6-8 inches) will be scraped off, mounded nearby and planted with sandy soil wildflower seed mix. Scraping the soil at the SC location also removes the quack grass and it's rhizome mat, so there will be no competition for the reintroduced native grasses.

The gate and gate tunnel configuration to be determined in consultation with timber frame advisor Mike Murphy emphasizing safety and longevity.

The timber berm is constructed including the gate assembly until only a 10 feet section remains open. The interior quack grass is scraped, moved out of the circle, added to the other soil mound and planted. A mycorrhizal innoculated biochar slurry is applied to the exposed sand interior followed by native grass and wild flower seed and other appropriate field species, specifics to be determined by project personnel /experts including Baroli. The final 10 feet section of timber berm is added completing the circle.

As work begins, Outdoor Arts Educators Taylor Zick and Sarah Alexander will be available to introduce the SC to visitors and conduct tours of the work in progress. Scheduled and as needed tour opportunities could increase as the project progresses. Project details and tour hours will be publicized via press releases, local ads, and updates to the Love Farm web presence.

The second 30 foot SC will be either be located in a flat partially wooded field (see map A location 3) or in the forest under a large opening in the canopy, (see map A location 4). Both of these sites are close to seasonal / gravel roads, so timber could be dropped close to each site. To minimize damage to the forest, transport of the refuse timber through the forest to the site may require the use of draft horses and wagon. Patrick Kenny, an experienced driver is available. His quote was reduced based on available fallen timber near both sites. If the route to the site can utilize existing trails or old logging roads, a small farm tractor and trailer will be utilized.

Site selection will again balance the three objectives described above. Location 3 will have soil tested and if contamination is found the site will be scraped as described above. Otherwise, invasive species will be removed by hand and the berm built as described above.

A mix of white oak and shagbark hickory along with a wide variety of other plants native to Northern Michigan forests will be planted within the SC. 100 of same species of trees will also be planted outside the SC and protected with tree tubes, using the same soil microbiome enhancement used within the SC. The outside trees will be planted in concentric circles away from the SC, to see how the biodiversity / regeneration within the SC effects trees outside. Informal observations of inside and outside trees will be taken, such as height and girth of trunk upon planting, and then repeated annually, but the full citizen science opportunity is not covered by this DNR grant. Love Farm may seek funding elsewhere to expand the scope of research. For example, trail cams could be deployed to document any colonization of the berms by wildlife.

The duration of the project will hinge on the optimal time for planting the various grasses, furbs, hard and soft mast within the Sanctuary Circles. A SC completed in the fall may have to lay empty or be planted with a winter terminated cover crop until the following spring.

Our volunteer pool is significant. Sarah Alexander and Dan Kelly's extended family is very enthusiastic about Love Farm and have donated 100s of hours to planning, building garden beds, weeding, harvesting and planting trees. Sarah and Dan have been “paying forward” into a diverse community of friends and allies with weekly health education gatherings since 2020. Love Farm hosts an organic bulk food buying club in our barn with ~20 member families. We did not have time to solicit volunteer letters from every individual in this large group but we will be documenting their support on the project web page, http://love.farm/sanctuary.

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