Sunday, July 31, 2011

milkweed pods, strange black-eyed susans, spider eyes…

My dearest readers, have I really neglected you since Thursday? ‘Tis true. Where are my manners? What have I been doing? Ummmmmm….I’ve been enjoying life! I seem to be doing OK with the plantar fasciitis so far, via a ton of stretching/strengthening exercises and a teensy six mile run yesterday. And I’ve added to the blueberry stash: we’re up to 30 pounds of blueberries in the freezer. That was my original goal, but now I think we might…just…need…more.
Onwards to the flower report. The milkweed pods are growing by leaps and bounds.
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Let’s review: just three days ago, this pod was the same size as my nail.
That one milkweed on our neighbor’s property is also taking off, pod-wise.
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I was asked by a fellow blogger who does amazing macro shots of wildflowers whether I knew if that crazy tubular-petaled black-eyed susan is a cultivar, or a different species altogether. I have no idea, but here’s some more data to feed into the hopper:
Crazy tubular – this is over at my dad’s house:
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Let’s compare this to a lone hybrid mutant out in back of the pole barn
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Some of its petals are that tubular, and some are regular.
Another thing I’ve been noticing about black-eyed susans: they are commonly hosts to tiny white spiders, perhaps more than one kind. Some seem to have markings, while others are straight-up white:
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Others seem yellow, or maybe it’s just because this one is lurking at the base of the yellow petals:
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Yellow or white, check out her fierce little eyes!
Nothing says “back off!” quite like a thistle:
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Goldenrod: distilled sunshine.
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Congress of aliens? Or merely Queen Anne’s Lace?
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Incipient Deliciousness: the first of the purple-flowering raspberries has ripened.
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While others are still doing the “fertilize me, fertilize me!” dance.
An unexpected invasion of hostas on the hillside bordering the driveway. I guess they’re not content being confined right up next to the front of the house.
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Somebody’s been eating the ripe berries of the wild sarsaparilla (Aralia nudicaulis, and previously erroneously identified as ginseng or as red baneberry.)

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Speaking of blue berries, the blue cohosh leaves are beginning to fade, but the berries…
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…are not yet blue.
Some lovely peach lilies along the side of the driveway are taking over from the long-gone siberian irises and spiderwort:P1120974
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2 comments:

  1. No way to that shot of the Queen Anne's lace. Wowser. You know I was told once to always carry a pocket magnifying glass when out and about looking at plants, and now I think I'm gonna do it if it means seeing something spectacular like that.

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  2. Grin! Thanks! Yeah, what did I do for fun before I had this camera? I can't remember.

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