In the company of trees

How do you identify a tree, especially when it is at the height of winter’s dormancy? Evergreen trees are a simpler test of identification skill since they are piney green all year round. But there aren’t a lot of native evergreen trees in Northwest Ohio. Eastern Red Cedar is tolerant of Putnam County’s clay soils. They used to only be found in ditches and swales, a bane to landscaping. Now you can find them in farm agency sales and greenhouses as they are recognized for their hardiness and value to wildlife. Delicate, soft-voiced Cedar Waxwings feed on berries in their shelter, camouflaging these masked mobsters who can take down a Blue Jay in seconds.

So we know what evergreen conifers, and invasive, pervasive Amur Honeysuckle look like in winter. But do we recognize native deciduous trees during the cold, leafless months? On Monday, February 16, we invited people to consider the different textures, colors, and patterns of Putnam County’s native hardwoods at the Putnam County Educational Service Center. Through funding from the Ohio Arts Council and with a small forest of boxes filled with shed* Hickory, Ash, Black Cherry, Boxelder, Sycamore, and other woody coats, registrants created bark masks on President’s Day.

*When collecting tree bark, do not pull bark from a live tree. You’ll hurt the tree itself. And when you lift bark that a tree has shed, look closely to make sure that you aren’t disturbing something that is trying to survive winter in its shelter.

Summer is here and so is our newsletter

Download your copy of The Quarry Farm Newsletter/Summer 2025. Our first event onsite is an herb kokedama workshop. There are four herb kokedama growing on the porch of Steve’s kitchen–they are a fresh, cool, environmentally-friendly cultural experience. And registration is now open for The Quarry Farm 2025 5K, which we have moved up to September 13. This is a major fundraiser for us. With traditional funding—grants, corporate sponsorships—fewer and farther between with ongoing unrest, we need your support more than ever. Thank you.

And because an 11″ x 17″, two-sided newsletter will only allow for a small selection of the photos that are captured on The Quarry Farm from season to season, here are a few Spring snapshots that didn’t fit on the pages.

Leaves of Glory

What an incredible morning of artistic demonstration we experience with the 2021 Putnam County Educational Service Center Migrant Education Program students and their teachers. Last night’s storms provided oak, black walnut, silver maple, sycamore, and hackberry leaves. Board Member Rita supplied leaves from her garden and woods. The kids supplied the talent. The sky kept try just long enough for them to put that talent to glorious use.