The Louisiana iris Conservation Initiative (LICI), of which I am a member of the board of directors and a volunteer, managed to get 6,000 wild Iris giganticaerulea (a species of Louisiana iris) planted in refuges and nature preserves between last year’s bloom and February of this year. We needed to utilize local volunteers for this effort because COVID-19 pandemic prevented out-of-state college students from coming in to help. Before the pandemic our marsh restoration projects allowed the college students to fly into Louisiana from across the country in organized trips to accrue service credit hours by volunteering for local projects.
Another challenge we had in meeting our iris planting goal was due to our taking on a major tree-replanting project at a US Fish & Wildlife Service refuge. The refuge is also home to one of our largest iris restoration projects. The tree-planting project not only diverted our attention from rescuing and planting irises, but took up huge blocks of our volunteers’ time. However, a big positive was that we played a key role in reforesting an important area of the refuge after our volunteers killed off thousands of Chinese tallow trees. The tallow tree is an invasive tree species that out-competes native trees and crowds out the Louisiana irises.
What also added to the difficulty of matching the 8,000 Louisiana irises we rescued and planted in the 2020-2021 season was the fact our area was hit by very powerful Hurricane Ida on August 29, 2021. We ended up spending a lot of volunteer hours helping to get many of the refuges' boardwalks back in shape after they were damaged by the hurricane. The good news is that the irises at only one of our projects were significantly set back by the hurricane. The rest recovered in time for this spring’s iris bloom.
Since late January the college student groups have begun to return. We have already completed our first iris rescue and have two groups coming at the end of June that we hope will fill up the remaining containers at our iris holding area with irises for this fall and winter's plantings. We've had many new sites request irises and we still want to add more to our existing projects, so we have set a goal to get at least 8,000 irises rescued and planted during the 2022-2023 iris rescue and planting season.
For the rest of this blog posting, I’m just going to let pictures tell the story of the blooming irises at area refuge boardwalks and hiking trails during this spring’s bloom. Most of these sites were the locations of our iris restoration projects.
Enjoy!
You can email Gary Salathe at: licisaveirises@gmail.com
Although LICI “is a bare-bones deal”, as Gary likes to say, he is quick to add that they can always use donations to their cause. They have a “Donate” button at the top of their website home page here. They are currently raising money for maintenance and supplies at the LICI iris holding area.