Prickly issues

Posted on July 23, 2009

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Bull thistleThis bull thistle is an apt symbol for contentious Township meetings.  It’s shaped like a bullhorn, full of ouch, yet beautiful—not unlike democracy in action. (Someone said Democracy is a terrible system but the best one we’ve invented so far.) 

As I waded through wet bull thistles taking pictures, I discovered a little drama at the heart of the flower, and decided that had metaphorical possibilities, too.  Herewith, the Spider and the Fly, in which the Spider captures a Fly larger than itself and drags it off for no doubt nefarious purposes.

Bull thistle hunting ground

Bull thistle spider and fly

Make of that what you will.  We’re headed for a run of bull thistle meetings in the Township, with fusses over phragmites eradication, over implementing the recommendations of the 2008 EMS Committee, over noise control . . . . That’s a lot of fusses, and we don’t want to start any new ones today.  Let’s just wade into the first one.

Next Wednesday, July 29, at 6:00 pm at the Township Hall, the Board of Trustees will hold a special meeting to mull over whether to amend the phragmites eradication ordinance it adopted in June.  Volunteers led by Tom Pierson have tentatively identified 70 patches of invasive phragmites along the Torch Lake Township bayshore.  This past Tuesday the Board opened bids for the first treatment to eradicate those patches.  The proposals were complex, and quotes ranged from $2,900-$9,600. 

Talking the whole thing over with George Parker, I was surprised to learn that a number of phragmites patches have been identified along my usual beach route. I knew about only one.  I went looking, and have decided that I need to learn more about the whole thing.  Someone is misidentifying the stuff, and I wouldn’t be at all surprised if that would be me. 

Is it or isn't it phragmites? Inquiring terriers want to know.

Is it or isn't it phragmites? Inquiring terriers want to know.

I’m going to ask Tom Pierson for a little guided tour of my favorite access spots.  Meanwhile these are some of the places I’ve been looking for information:

Other Torch Lake Views posts about phragmites: