|
What
is the Prairie Garden Trust? |
In 1971 Herb and Joan Domke moved to
the land which now forms the basis of the 180-acre Prairie Garden Trust
in central Missouri. As their interest in gardening expanded into an
appreciation of the natural landscape, they began to focus on enhancing
what was there and adding more native plants.
White oak woods were thinned and managed
for long-term growth and visual appeal. Meandering paths drew attention
to the abundant spring wildflowers such as trout lily, Dutchman's breeches,
rue anenome and bird's foot violet.
They dug ponds of varying depths. Lotus,
water lilies, pickerel weed, arrowhead and southern blue flag were given
homes in the mucky bottoms and damp edges, which in turn attracted more
variety of birds, mammals, amphibians and reptiles.
In spite of all these changes, one
habitat remained out of character. Old fescue fields stood as poor reminders
of the native prairies that once enriched a third of Missouri. So in
1986, they began the long effort of converting fescue to a diverse mix
of native grasses and flowers.
Although Herb passed away in 1991,
the board created to manage this irrevocable trust continues the effort.
The primary efforts to date have focused on developing the habitats
(converting fescue to native plantings, creating more savannah-like
borders between the fields and the woods, etc.).
A fire broke out on a bitterly cold
winter night February 2004 at the almost-century old farmhouse of the
PGT and by the next day it was all ashes. Firefighters worked hard to
save the interesting cedar "porch" addition that Herb Domke
built in the 1970s, but smoldering embers reignited and burned that
to the ground a few days later. A new house for Joan Domke/future
visitor center was completed a year later. A 38 x 16 room along
the west side of the building will allow occasional small education/conservation
groups to visit the PGT and have a place to gather with a porch of equal
size along it.
In 1995 the board created a vision
for what we'd like the PGT to be twenty-five years or so in the future:
The Prairie Garden Trust will provide
a relaxed setting in which people can learn about the natural environment
and themselves. It will be a retreat into nature and all its beauty.
To do this, the Trust will develop and host a variety of learning
sessions for scheduled groups and individuals in its "Landscapes
for Learning."
At this time, we're still working on
enhancing these landscapes with more native plantings. In the future,
though, we hope to create the learning programs to meet that long-term
vision.