After 22 years of planning, three environmental engineering firms, numerous design drafts, and more than 60 public meetings, it’s hard to believe that the Huntley Meadows Wetland Restoration Project is just days from completion. As Fairfax County Park Authority staff struggle with the challenges of directing contractors, managing finances, unpredictable weather and inevitable construction delays, the park’s wildlife have decided to ignore all these silly human issues and literally dive into the project.
First, a little context
Raising and then managing the wetland’s water levels in order to maintain a hemi-marsh full of biodiversity is the project’s primary goal. The wetland has been slowly, steadily losing depth for several decades because of silt and cattail spread. It lost almost a foot of depth since the 1980s. That’s one-third of its water, since it was never more than about three feet deep.
The restoration design has three main aspects — creating an earthen dam with a vinyl center to regain that lost foot of depth, installing pipes to create seasonally fluctuating water levels (essential for maintaining a healthy hemi-marsh), and excavating several deeper pools to create refuge for wetland wildlife during summer droughts and winter freezes. As an added plus, the project doubles the wetland’s boundaries, seasonally flooding surrounding forest to create additional swampland and vernal pools. Combined, those events restore a paradise for wildlife and wildlife watchers.
At least that was the idea. But would it work? Would 22 years of planning pay off? Would park wildlife agree with and adopt the design, or would we end up with a beautiful but empty wetland as animals high-tailed it for other parks not full of excavating bulldozers, 20-person construction crews and enough silt-fence to surround a small country? I’ve been telling people that three years was a good amount of time to wait until we saw real results. It turned out all the wetland needed was seven days of rain.
Seven days, not three years
Remember back in mid-October when it rained non-stop for a week? Well, the construction was far from complete, but the dam and pipes were finished. So we were able to raise the water level back to its 1986 levels plus an additional 10 inches. Wetland boundaries expanded, areas were submerged that had been dry for 30 years, and then we waited, watched, and listened. As park staff struggled with submerged trails and a small section of boardwalk that flirted with the idea of floating away, wildlife chose to ignore these mundane issues and had a ball.
Huntley’s resource manager, Dave Lawlor, and I were walking the trails to determine which sections to raise when we heard what sounded like the roar of a low plane moving towards us over the flooded wetland. The roar got louder, Dave and I had to shout to hear ourselves, but when we looked around — no plane in sight. Then we realized the deafening sound moving like a wave across the wetland was the largest chorus of southern leopard frogs we’d ever heard. One male frog starts to croak, cackle and gargle, his neighbor feels competitive and tries to outdo him, his neighbor does the same, and in seconds the sound wave rolls across 40 acres of wetland, echoing into the surrounding forest. The extreme volume was due to the increased wetland footprint. This was the largest the wetland had been in over 30 years, creating an enormous stage for one of Northern Virginia’s least common frogs and one of the species we had hoped to help with this project. “Build it and they will come” and sing.

Southern leopard frogs, one of the least common frog species in Northern Virginia, are already benefitting from the expanded wetland.
The return of the birds
Wonderfully, and thankfully for an anxiously waiting park manager, southern leopard frogs were not the only wildlife that adopted and utilized the restored wetland. One morning as I joined Charles Smith, FCPA’s lead naturalist and resource protection manager, to inspect the project, we heard a warbled, bouncy bird call coming from the edge of a recently excavated habitat pool. “Purple finch? Goldfinch? No, I think it’s a winter wren!” A tiny, mouse-like bird that flits down from New England to spend its winters hiding in the moist thickets of the mid-Atlantic had its head thrown back and was singing its heart out from a wildlife brush shelter constructed only days before.
Unfortunately, a few hundred trees had to come down in order to create the new dam, pipes and pools. Our goal was to use all of those trees on-site as habitat enhancements (brush shelters, sunning logs for turtles, underwater breeding habitat for crayfish, etc.), and winter wrens were one of the species we were hoping to attract.
That same morning we heard several belted kingfishers throwing their rattling cries across the wetland, diving for fishy snacks in the newly excavated pools, and over the last few weeks numerous ducks have appeared to feed, court and mate in the expanded wetland. Northern shovelers, northern pintails, green-winged teal, and American black ducks are just a few of the winter waterfowl species now in the wetland, visiting from their summer homes in Canada and our upper Midwest.
None of the species I’ve mentioned so far, from frogs to ducks, are new to Huntley, but their numbers appear to have increased this fall/winter because of the larger wetland and historic water depth. Our goal was never to attract new species, but rather to return the marshland wildlife back to their 1980s numbers, and to convince rails, bitterns and grebes to nest here again as they did several decades ago. Will king rails and pied-billed grebes build nests and give birth again to new generations next spring and summer? We’ll see or, more accurately, we’ll listen.
Mike Rollband, president and owner of Wetland Studies and Solutions Inc., discusses the wetland restoration project.
Author Kevin Munroe is the site manager at Huntley Meadows Park. See more photos of the project on Flickr.
I have the privilege of leading the Huntley Monday Morning bird walk. The Monday Morning bunch have ben watching this project from its inception, and we are very pleased at the increase in bird activity that it seems to have fostered. We are eagerly waiting for the vegetation to return to the construction areas to soften the present sort of industrial appearance that we now see. This has been a well planned and well executed project. Congratulations!
Harry Glasgow
Congratulations Harry! I know that Huntley is near and dear to you and it warms my heart that all of your hard work has paid off. Miss you, FCPA and my job with IMA! Please pass along my congratulations to Kevin.
An exciting development in restoring natural environments. The restoration, maintenance, and extension of the cultural resources of Fairfax County is a high priority matter for the thousands of users of our parks.
Thanks to everyone involved in bringing this project to fruition. Huntley Meadows is a true jewel and this project will ensure its survival and enhancement. I should add, as a Monday Morning regular, that the project has been much less intrusive than anticipated. This speaks well to the careful planning and execution of the project.
Stuart Davis
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I remember visiting Huntely Meadows several years ago and dismayed to see how dry it had become. I learned about the renovation project and had hopes it would work. I visited Huntley Meadows recently on a sunny weekend day and was amazed at the difference! It was awesome!!! So gorgeous!!! There were many other visitors enjoying the park that day, too. I am so glad this project worked and, as a nearby Fairfax County resident, really appreciate this park and the hard work of everyone involved to restore it. Also, as being newly retired, I look forward to more frequent visits to Huntley Meadows, especially this spring. My deepest thanks to everyone who have worked so hard to make this park one of the most special places in all of Fairfax County and Virgina!
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