2020: Lafayette Park Ferns – Of Fiddleheads and Rabbit Holes

We live in a neighborhood steeped in its own history. The times change fast, but it’s comforting to consider the constants around us, and Lafayette Park holds a big bouquet of them. 

Walking around the grotto, with its pond, bridge and drusy rock accents, one’s eye is drawn to the profusion of another relic from the past – the lovely ferns. These guys are survivors, for sure. They’re adept at adapting, and can be found in deep shade, poor soil and even high in the canopy of rain forests. Some have been unchanged, right down to the chromosomal level, over 160 million years. You know just what you have with a fossil fern.

Despite its many other issues, this spring brought perfect weather for ferns. A walk through the grotto offers a glorious, primal feel, perfect for kids, and there’s a lot in there to learn from just the fern.

If you ever want to begin a discussion of birds and bees, don’t start with ferns; they don’t produce flowers or seeds at all. They reproduce through spores found on the underside of the fronds (check it out, they’re easily visible). The life cycle of a fern reproducing through sporation involves interaction between two different plants only every other generation. They can propagate asexually through rhizomes, which are outgrowths from the lower stems that form new roots and shoots, making them easy to divide and replant. Or sometimes via platelets that form on the fronds like baby ferns, which drop to the soil, then fern for themselves. You almost need a scorecard to follow the options, but they make the fern a champion “switch hitter.” 

Here, following a shady wet spring, the Lafayette Park grotto fern beds:

Ferns are individually delicate, but you wouldn’t want to accuse the New Zealand All-Blacks, arguably the world’s best known rugby team, of choosing a wimpy design with their fern logo:

And another thing to consider is infinity – always a deep subject. There is a thing in math called the Mandelbrot set, that characterizes fractal geometry. That is the nature of a simple pattern in nature to be repeated over and over, smaller and smaller. It’s easier to show than describe, so please check out this brief demonstration of a fern fractal-ing:

Fractals are a rabbit hole of nature, and one can get lost in contemplating a fern. That might explain why the Victorian era British were obsessed with ferns – they appear on canvas, paper, pottery, wood, and sculpture of that period. The condition was called pteridomania. Just at random, here’s an antique cast iron bench design:

The craze crossed the Atlantic a century later, when, in the 1970s, fern bars became a thing. A more tasteful example is the McCarren Hotel’s restaurant in New York City, still at it today:

I prefer my ferns, like fractals, in a garden somewhere. The one Michael Bushur and his co-volunteers tend in the park grotto are spectacular right now. Free to see! Send the Lafayette Square Conservancy a donation (http://lafayettepark.org/donate/ ) and we’ll work to expand the joy of strolling through nature’s marvels. 

Thanks to research sources, including:

Always there, and a miracle of its time; Wikipedia, at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fern

The boggling world of fern reproduction is nicely covered in “The Method of Reproduction in Ferns; SFGate Home Guides; Victoria Lee Blackstone at https://homeguides.sfgate.com/method-reproduction-ferns-74716.html

Fascinating fractals are worth sharing. A good resource is The Conversation, a blog dealing with big things, well studied and presented. Their take on fractals, via a feature called “Explainer” is at https://theconversation.com/explainer-what-are-fractals-10865

Author: Mike

Background in biology but fixated on history, with volunteer stints at MO Historical Society and MO State Archives. Also runs the Lafayette Square Archives at lafayettesquare.org/archives. Always curious about what lies beneath the surface of St Louis history.

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