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Sunday, September 22, 2013

A Glorious Morning


What a beautiful morning. 
About 7:00, the clouds diffused the early
 morning  sun giving everything a pink hue.



Even this weathered pole had a soft, warm glow. 



Jewelweed, browneyed Susans, phlox, asters and goldenrod.
Disorganized and weedy, a chaos of color, yet delightfully
 pretty in the early morning's light. The butterflies
 gracefully drifted about this buffet of  flowers, while
 hummingbirds performed aerial combat overhead
 for the rights to the nectar plants.


This feels just like the mood set in  a 
famous poem by Robert Browning:

Morning's at seven;
The hillside's dew-pearled;
The lark's on the wing;
The snail's on the thorn;
God's in his heaven--
All's right with the world!

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Just Flying By

A Magnolia Warbler in the birch tree.

In May, while I was fixing dinner, I saw a pretty, little, yellow and black bird looking back at me through the kitchen window. I grabbed my camera and took a few pictures.




I had no idea about the species of this bird because I am a neophyte in birding. This visitor wasn't hard to identify with the yellow stomach and distinctive head coloration and eye band.





I learned that my new friend was a Magnolia Warbler, a wayfarer on the way to Canada and the summer breeding grounds. Although it was new to me, the bird is considered one of the most common of the warblers.



The Magnolia Warbler was given this name because the first specimen was collected among the magnolia trees in Mississippi around 1800. An insect eater, the female will lay three to five green or white eggs with brown markings.


I finally decided that this was possibly a female beyond her second calendar year. I used an interesting website for identification that was created by the McGill Bird Observatory, a project of the Migration Research Foundation in Montreal, Canada.

http://www.migrationresearch.org/mbo/id/mawa.html#asymb


Saturday, June 1, 2013

The Lady Slipper: Spring's Beautiful Maidens






The spring orchids, especially the lady slippers, (Cypripedium acaule) are among the biggest treats in store for the person who ventures into the woods on a May or June day. They have long been the subject of folklore.










A native American chief was going off to war, and to comfort his young daughter, he promised to bring pink moccasins to her when he returned. He was killed, and she then died of grief. The mother fell asleep on the girl's grave, and when she awoke, she saw the pink moccasin flower. Thus she knew that the father and his loving daughter had been reunited.

The scientific name for these delicate and beautiful flowers has an equally interesting origin. "Cypripedium" is the Greek name for the slipper of Venus, the goddess of love. Other common names for it are not so flattering. They include camel's foot, squirrel's foot, steeple cap, whippoorwill shoes, two-lips, and the worst of all, old goose.

The pink one is not found west of the Mississippi River.



The lady slipper will only survive for a year or two if transplanted because it depends on a symbiotic relationship with a the Rizoctonia fungus where it is growing. The rhizomes for it can be as much as three feet long. Also, the flower should never be picked because it will interfere with the plant's life cycle and it's chances for reproducing. It is illegal to pick or dig these plants in several states.

While the average life span of the plant is twenty years, it may take at least five years to go from seed to flowering stage.


Although the lady slipper does not produce nectar, its pollinators are attracted by its color and fragrance. There is speculation that it produces a pheromone scent that attracts the males to mate. Bees enter from the front of the pouch but can't get back out that way so they must exit through a narrow passage. It is here that they get pollen on their back hairs.

The seeds are as tiny as a grain of powder.



The lady slipper was so popular during Victorian times and dug so frequently, that it was thought to be extinct.

The roots have been used for a number of medicinal purposes including pain relief. Native Americans used it to treat toothaches.





There are lots of hairs on this plant to keep it from being eaten. They contain a fatty acid that can cause a rash similar to poison ivy, another good reason not to pick it. This same fatty acid is also poisonous to people and animals.





And this reminds us of a quote by President Theodore Roosevelt.

"Wildflowers should be enjoyed unplucked where they grow"


Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Snow Trillium







With petals peeking from the ground
as if standing on tiny toes,
the snow trillium reaches upward
embracing winter's cold
while warming in a mellow sun.

The first flower of the season,
the hope and promise of regeneration
of a cold and sullen earth
emptied by snow and windswept chill,
now shivering with life's new vibrations.