Arlington’s Ballston Wetland Opens

No beavers, but green and speckled frogs plus trash seen

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Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

Someone wrote “Bring Beavers Back” at the beginning of the pathway after the park had only been open a few days.


ARL 10/04/23 4864.jpg (maybe zoom in on frogs?)

Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

Six green and speckled frogs sat, not on a log, but on a specially designed sunning platform. 


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Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

One of the plaques designed to show visitors what they might see in the park includes educational information on how the park is helping water quality and why “only rain goes in the storm drain.”


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Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

A barrier at the north end of the wetland keeps trash from continuing down the flow of Lubber Run. 


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Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

A pair of ducks is happy to paddle along the grassy wetland park.


Arlington’s Ballston Wetland Opens

No beavers, but green and speckled frogs plus trash seen


And remember, please don't smoke in our parks.”


By Eden Brown

The Connection


There was something endearing about the Ballston Pond when the beavers arrived there to set up a lodge and play havoc with the drainage system. For some residents, it was a sign of enduring nature in an increasingly built up town. One hopes the wildlife the beavers generated — egrets, muskrats, and herons — will be back even if the beaver baffles put in place by the creators of the new Ballston Wetland Park will almost certainly guarantee the beavers won’t be. 

The Ballston Wetland Park, which opened Tuesday, Sept. 26 with a ribbon cutting by County Board Chair Dorsey, expands control systems and capacity for what was known as Ballston Pond, originally built in 1980 to hold storm runoff from the newly built I-66. The tiny park is now cleared of sediment that had built up in the pond, and is capable of taking excess rainwater from 450 surrounding acres. The retrofitted wetland system improves stormwater flow and filtering, as well as capturing trash, while also serving as a wildlife refuge for some, if not all, urban critters. 

Lubber Run flows through the wetland on its way to Four Mile Run. The park expands the county’s ability to meet state Chesapeake Bay Watershed regulations: native plants have replaced invasives, at least for a while, and there is a short metal walkway with signs indicating what might be seen in the park. Wildlife, including the beavers, were encouraged to leave the area when it was drained for the $4 million project. One wonders what became of the beavers. 

One of the plaques designed to show visitors what they might see in the park includes educational information on how the park is helping water quality and why “only rain goes in the storm drain.”
 

Although the idea of a “pastoral commons within an urban village setting” sounds good, the park was a bit of a disappointment to one visitor who had hoped to see beavers, and get a little peace and quiet. It was 4 p.m. and the sun was reflecting off the water, making it almost impossible to see what was going on in the wetland, except for the sparkling plastic water bottles and trash that had accumulated, as designed, at the north end of the wetland. The overwhelming noise of Route 66 traffic thrashing its way west, even on a Sunday afternoon, detracted from the wetlands scene, a dab of impressionist green in an abstract cityscape of traffic. It didn’t help that a smoker left a pack of Kool cigarettes under one of the benches as they finished smoking, and another visitor tossed his plastic beverage cup right into the storm drain along the adjacent road. It would seem more people need to read the helpful advice on the newly installed visitor plaques: “Only rain goes in the storm drain.” 

The park’s website adds:Learn Park Rules and Regulations. And remember, please don't smoke in our parks.”

If you go, free parking does not exist along the park or nearby, it is best reached on foot or bike. See: https://www.arlingtonva.us/Government/Departments/Parks-Recreation/Locations/Parks/Ballston-Wetland-Park