TERRE HAUTE —
Birds chirp while water trickles down the side of rocks. Meanwhile, a baby bird calls to its mother for help after it fell out of the nest. While this may seem like the last time you visited a park, it is in fact the setting of many homeowners’ back yards here in the Wabash Valley.
Dozens of people in the Terre Haute city limits, and those who live way out in the country, are committed to making their yard welcoming to wildlife.
One doesn’t have to live out in the country to enjoy nature’s finest. Ellen and Tony Urbanski get their fair share of nature while living in the heart of Terre Haute. When they first bought their house back in 2000, the property was covered in weeds and was robbed of all plants. With a little encouragement and plant starts from their former neighbor, they began giving their yard a makeover. Today, their backyard is where they can get away to relax.
“It is our little piece of woodsieness out here,” Ellen said.
While their yard may be considered the size of a postage stamp to country dwellers, it is home to many types of wildlife. Butting up against their garage is a woodpile, used for lighting up their backyard fireplace. While the logs look stacked nicely, they have also become the home of chipmunks.
“We have lots of little critters; they climb over the wall and aren’t scared,” Ellen said.
Their yard also has an area where bees, butterflies and hummingbirds can fodder for food. On one end is a stack of sticks and various plants providing ground cover for smaller wildlife.
“If the cats are around it gives them a place to find shelter,” Ellen said.
On a visit to their property, a baby bird had fallen out of a nest from a tree that shades part of the Urbanski’s back yard. The baby bird kept calling out, most likely to his mother from above. Without using his hands, Tony nudged the bird back onto the tree. Perhaps the mother was teaching her kids to fend for themselves, because the next day another bird got the boot from the nest. These types of wildlife rescues happen often for the Urbanskis.
“One day I heard a bullfrog in an old drainage pipe. I got a sheet, tied a bunch of knots in it and put it down in the hole with a stick to get him out,” Tony said.
One of their most memorable stories involves an owl. Below the tree where the baby birds fell from is a small koi pond. Last fall Ellen went out back to check on the pond filter and she noticed one of their big koi fish lying outside the pond. A week later 10 of their fish were dead. After looking up into the tree, they saw the culprit — an owl.
“We borrowed our friends’ trail camera to catch him in the act,” Ellen said.
On a different occasion, one of their neighbors kept finding fish tails on their property. Knowing that the Urbanskis have a koi pond, they called them and asked if they were missing any fish. Sure enough, a different owl had helped himself to the Urbanskis’ fish supply.
It is these types of stories that make turning a small back yard into a home for wildlife worthwhile.
Wildlife habitat on a larger scale
In the early ’90s Brenda and Phil Milliren moved out into Vigo County. The property they purchased was home to large fields of grass where horses used to graze and feed. Before they ever finished working on the house they began to plant trees and native plants. Their intention is to re-establish the property, restoring it to how it was 100 to 200 years ago. One of the first things they did was to reduce the size of their lawn to cut back on mowing.
“We have no weeds in our front yard. That is our way of saying we don’t mind them. The weeds make it green and add texture,” Brenda said.
The second step they took was to get involved with the Indiana Native Plant and Wildflower Society. By doing so they were able to be a part of a team that rescued native plants from areas that were set to be bulldozed.
“People go to the nursery to find things to plant around their house, why not plant native? Native plants have lived in this area for millions of years. They are well adapted to growing in this area,” Brenda said.
The native theme carries throughout their back yard. A pathway as wide as a mower is filled with native plants and flowers. The pathway does not appear manicured or planted; it only appears the way nature intended, rough and rugged. The path leads the Millirens into their woods. Sprinkled through the woods are benches.
“While we are sitting on the benches we are looking at wildlife,” Phil said.
An important component to having a wildlife backyard habitat is supplying a place where animals can drink and bathe. Fortunately the Millirens also have a pond in their back yard. The pond is frequently visited by Great Blue Herons, Kingfishers, Wood Ducks, Mallards, Green Back Herons and bats.
While Phil was listing the types of birds he most commonly sees, attention was diverted to a beautiful bird with a red head and a white patch on its backside. It was a pleasant sight to see something different than the normal sparrows and cardinals that visit a regular bird feeder.
“The way you reacted to the red headed woodpecker out here, we see that every day, maybe we don’t react the same, but we really enjoy it,” Phil said.
They also have a footpath they created to go through their woods. They use it to exercise their dogs and as a form of entertainment when guests visit.
“The little kids imparticular enjoy it. For them, it is learning and having fun at the same time,” Brenda said.
The Millirens have learned the most about what their woods should look like by seeing how well state parks manage theirs.
“I think people need to get out, go to our state parks in the spring. They are loaded with wildflowers. You have to get a sense of what it can be so that you can go back and make it what it should be,” Brenda said.
While the ’90s have come and gone, the Millirens are still learning about wildlife. Every season brings on something different when they are out and about enjoying their personal backyard habitat.
Wildlife habitat checklist
• Food provided naturally by plants like berries and nectar
• Supplemented food like seed and suet
• Water sources like bird baths and rain gardens
• Ground cover like brush piles and roosting boxes
• Places to raise young like dense shrubs and burrows.
To learn more about how to certify your backyard as a wildlife habitat contact the Dobbs Park Nature Center by calling (812) 877-1095.
Valley Life
Welcoming Wildlife
- Valley Life
-
-
Longtime weatherman Jesse Walker relates well to people of Wabash Valley
While in middle and high school, Jesse Walker developed a strong interest in the weather. He thought about a career at the National Weather Service or at a storm prediction center, but the idea of becoming a television meteorologist never entered his mind.
-
YOUR GREEN VALLEY: Keep your garden — and yourself — safe from lead
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lead poisoning is the No. 1 preventable environmental cause of illness in children.
-
TRIED ‘N’ TRUE: Need something for the kids? Try these Ritzy Cookies
When we have dinners at the church, one of the ladies brings these cookies. Nancy Kahl has been making these for some time now. They are so good. Need something for your kids? Make sure that there isn’t any one who can’t have peanuts. These are so easy and extra good.
-
DNR stocks ponds in Terre Haute with catfish
Fishing opportunities in eight Indiana cities got a boost on Monday as part of an ongoing effort by the Department of Natural Resources to promote angling in urban areas.
-
Katherine Trueblood to celebrate 90th birthday
A card shower is planned to honor Katherine Campbell Trueblood on her 90th birthday.
-
State Park Road Rally coming up June 9-11
Participants will pilot their own vehicles, as their navigator steers them to points of interest and natural wonders during the State Park Road Rally June 9-11, with overnight stays at Canyon Inn in McCormick’s Creek State Park.
-
CANDLES plans film night
CANDLES Holocaust Museum will host a film night at 7 p.m. on Thursday, featuring the documentary “Porraimos: Europe’s Gypsies in the Holocaust” and its director Alexandra Isles, at the museum.
“Porraimos” premiered at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2002. -
Author to lead interpretive writing workshop
An interpretive writing workshop led by Alan Leftridge, Ph.D., author of the textbook “Interpretive Writing,” will be offered from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on June 12 at Fort Harrison State Park in Indianapolis.
-
WEDDING: Published May 19, 2013
Brown-Edwards
Ruth Brown and Josh Edwards were married at 2:30 p.m. on May 11, 2013, in West Terre Haute by the Rev. Paul Shelton. -
Fraud and Scam Awareness Seminar is Tuesday
The Investor Protection Trust estimated that more than 7.3 million seniors (about 20 percent of all Americans 65 and older) have been victimized by a scam. Met Life Inc. estimated the annual loss by victims of elderly scams at $2.9 billion dollars.
-
FAMILY TIES: While searching for my grandfather, I found my mother
I remember the afternoon my mother received the chilling news from her nephew that her oldest sister and brother-in-law had been killed in a car/bus collision.
-
GRAPE SENSE: Same old whites getting you down? Try something different
If the same old Chardonnay, Riesling or Pinot Grigio is getting you down, try something different.
-
TRIED ‘N’ TRUE: A Rhubarb Nut Bread for the season
Last fall we went to the Covered Bridge Festival. Gene loves to go. Anyway, I got to talking to this lady, Treva Smith, at Bridgeton.
-
ENGAGEMENT: Published May 12, 2013
Stoelting-Steele
-
Friends of Library plans annual book sale
The Friends of the Vigo County Public Library is planning its annual book sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and from 1 to 4 p.m. May 19 in the Main Library Lower Level Meeting Rooms A, B, C and D.
-
Woman’s Press Club celebrates 100 years
On Feb. 18, 1913, a group of 13 female journalists and activists met for lunch at the Tea Room in L. S. Ayres Department Store in downtown Indianapolis to found the Woman’s Press Club of Indianapolis.
-
Children’s Museum to host orientation for summer volunteers
Those who are looking for a way to give back to the community and have fun at the same time are invited to attend a volunteer orientation session at the Terre Haute Children’s Museum from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
-
Walk for greyhound rescue
A family pet walk fundraiser open to all breeds is set for at 2 p.m. May 19 at Buggs Temple on the Canal Walk in Indianapolis.
-
‘Food Safety: From Garden Gates to Dinner Plates’ workshop coming up in June
There is a new law on the books in Illinois called the Cottage Food Operation Act of 2011. This new law allows for the preparation and sale of certain low-risk foods in the private home without the expense of a commercially certified kitchen and for the sale of said foods at a farmers market.
-
Scams are brown bag focus
The Vigo County Public Library’s next brown bag event, “Don’t Be a Victim!” featuring Amy Wardlow, is set for 12:10 p.m. Thursday at the main branch.
-
Countryside, Kalorama gardens celebrating opening weekend
Countryside Gardens, owned by Terry and Jennie O’Rourke, and Kalorama Gardens, owned by Steve and Linda Gard, opened for the season this weekend. Both gardens are in Marshall, Ill. Opening days continue from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today.
-
Saturday seminar to bring nationally known genealogists to Ivy Tech
The Wabash Valley Genealogy Society is offering the public a unique opportunity to learn more about the new techniques and methods now available for individuals interested in doing genealogical research on the Internet.
-
Evening Thyme Garden Club to host garden fair at Clark County Fairgrounds
The Evening Thyme Garden Club will present the 15th annual garden fair from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m Saturday at Clark County Fairgrounds in Marshall, Ill., with free parking and admission.
-
Student mentoring program offers one-on-one technology instruction
The Connecting Generations Mentoring Program can help those who would like one-on-one instruction on how to use the Internet or other technology.
-
CULINARY COURSES: Clabber Girl Classroom Kitchen provides variety of cooking courses for the Valley
There are a few taste-bud-tantalizing-perks for having America’s leading baking powder producer in your backyard. For nearly 120 years, Clabber Girl has been a staple in Terre Haute. In 1899, Hulman and Company began offering up what was to become one of the oldest brands in the country, Clabber baking powder. In 1923, the company changed the baking powder brand name to Clabber Girl.
-
CHRIS DAVIES: Keep sodium levels in mind when sweating buckets
Salt, or sodium, is vital to life. Too much or too little sodium can cause all kinds of problems in your body. How much sodium do we need if we are exercising consistently?
-
YOUR GREEN VALLEY: Union Hospital creates community garden
Union Hospital will be opening a community garden on its campus in mid-May. Before they embarked on such a challenge, they looked to their neighbor Indiana State University for advice.
-
TRIED ‘N’ TRUE: Try this when you’ve got to avoid salt
I have a good friend in an assisted living complex. She went to her doctor last winter and he told her she had to leave off the salt. My mother used this when dad couldn’t have any salt.
I like to keep this on hand. In summer when it’s real hot I keep in refrigerator. Keep in an air tight container. -
NEWSMAKER: May 5, 2013
Carolyn Whitcomb Jeffries was installed as president of the State Huguenot Society of Indiana on April 21 at Meridian Hills Country Club of Indianapolis.
-
ANNIVERSARY: Published May 5, 2013
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Abel
Larry and Rose Abel will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary.
The couple will have a reception in June. - More Valley Life Headlines
-




