Showing posts with label solomons seal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solomons seal. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

great things from small packages

I'm fascinated by beech buds, particularly the terminal ones - the ones at the ends of the branch - because just the one bud really packs a punch. This one has at least five leaves coming out of it, in their special accordionated formation.



Once again, for I am a fool, I headed out with only the phone, so... well, it wasn't sunny, that's my excuse. This here is a RED BANEBERRY which as you can see, I'm excited about.



This one roadside is positively littered, littered I tell you, with both solomon's seal and false solomon's seal. Here's the former.



Those little dangly flowers slay me.

Not til I got this next one up on the computer did I see ALL THE SPORES.



Those little dots. They're spores. Or something like that. I have to study up on fern reproduction, it's complicated.

Here's a false solomon's seal flower whose privacy I invaded.



New life, new life everywhere. Makes me happy.


Sunday, May 7, 2017

the nature of the void.

Kev and I went out for a walk this morning. I say "morning", even though it was really early afternoon; such are the wonders of being able to sleep in of a Sunday morn. I foolishly didn't bring either the Mighty Lumix or the Nikon, but being me, I dawdled here and there, snapping crappy close-ups with my phone. And all this rubbed off on the dear boy, because he was looking attentively all around him, and spotted a couple of jack-in-the-pulpits for me.


Not even opened up! Way to go, Kev-o. Later on in our walk, we were headed toward the beaver pond for a status update, and I found my own jack - like the one of the other day, close to the bottom of the driveway.


Each and every one of these is a thrill. 

AND, Solomon's seal abounds as well, along the way to the pond.



She's filling up nicely! 



Hours later, while Kev was off to softball (a double-header, no less) I headed out again, and again, didn't think to bring the 'real' cameras. After all, it was past 6 pm, the light wasn't that great, and "what is there to see?"

Silly me.

I found a mess of teeny Golden Alexanders on the north side of the field on the way out to the road. 

Oh, for the Nikon's zoom lens...


And some type of fern encased in... foam wrapping.


or at least that what it looked like to me.


By now I was pretty close to the pussy willows near the mailbox, I wonder what they're up to...


busy, busy, busy...



Next, I bring you - drum roll please - my oldest white baneberry friend. I've known this guy for like, six or seven years now. Kevin spotted it first, on our walk together earlier, but the best picture of the several I took was from my solo walk:  heaven forfend I arrange pictures out of order. It would violate the... journalistic integrity of this project.


Check out the way the flower buds look like they're being clasped by a hand...I guess that's a leaf, wrapped around them. "Journalistic integrity" indeed... I suspect you need actual readers for your writing to count as anything vaguely journalistic, and I'm pretty sure I'm typing merrily into a void. Who has the time/patience to read this? 

"If a tree falls in the forest, and nobody hears it, does it make a sound?" comes to mind.

Where was I? Oh. Flowers and whatnot. We're just inundated with trillium. Trillia?


This one was up in the mystery woodland. It pleases me to find 'em under the trees, regardless of whether anyone is there to see them. 

The saxifrage, on the other hand, I knew to expect. I promised The Void that I'd get to this with the Nikon: first sunny day! First sunny day!


Blurry because they're friggin' TINY.


I leave off with a magnolia queen upon her throne. 


Thursday, June 6, 2013

mutant jack-in-the-pulpits and whatnot

So apparently there is something in the water down here in tropical Connecticut that makes for absolutely mutant plant growth. I should back up a bit. A few weeks ago, I went for a walk, cranky as can be, looking for a bit of grace and redemption. Nature was happy to oblige, as she generally is. Poison ivy positively infests the roadsides around here, and where I was walking was no exception.

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Flowering poison ivy, dripping from a roadside maple tree.

So there I was, grumpy me, thinking nasty thoughts about all the poison ivy. I had my eyes trained on the side of the road, hoping to see something interesting. Suddenly, I spotted a 3-leaved plant that I knew was NOT poison ivy. It was a jack-in-the-pulpit. Jacks are comparatively rare on our Vermont property – last year, we had a handful of them, and I kept pretty close track of ‘em. None of them produced berries: they all got rained out in a single storm and were destroyed in mid-June. So I was psyched to see this:

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Hello!

Whereupon, I was seeing them EVERYWHERE. There must have been a hundred jacks inside a quarter mile. I’m not even kidding. This was on May 21st. The flowers are pretty much toast by now – they range from fading...

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...to kinda rotting-looking...

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...to magic green berries!

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Those will eventually turn scarlet.

 

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Each of these leaves is 10 inches long.

And they’re HUGE! The plants are HUGE! The wildflower guide says they get up to three feet high, and yeah, this appears to be the case. Our Vermont jacks were tiny compared to these monsters.

Also seen today...

Wild rose:

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A neighbor’s collection of rhododendrons, maybe 12 feet high, practically vibrating with bees:

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A possibly-syrphid-fly on jewelweed.

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Solomon’s seal!

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(“!” because I’ve seldom seen this on our place in Vermont – we had a single one along the shared driveway, and it got taken out in an Unfortunate Road Regrading Incident.)

...not to be confused with false solomon’s seal:

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Here’s the same exact shot, focused differently.

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“Art”.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

trillium seeds, jack-in-the-pulpit seeds, and man bumpers

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Time for some Queen Anne’s Lace! (Daucus carota) See the little going-to-be-purple flower in the center? I’ll zoom in:
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This one’s going to be fun.
Just-like-that, our milkweed flowers are opening up.
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Yes, this plant is kinda lying down. I might have hurt it when I was rescuing the hillside from the bur cucumber the other day. I hope it’s OK…
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I like this flower idea. Are the pink bits that are dipping toward the center, stamens? … OOOH, I just stumbled onto a website that explains how the milkweed flower works. It’s complicated. To sum up: the flower is “bisexual”, in that the anthers (the end bits of the stamens - think boy bits) and the stigma (think girl) are actually fused together. Those pointy pink things are called “horns”. And the way pollination happens…let’s just say that the milkweed flower is a death trap for smaller insects. Literally. Gulp. Let’s move on.
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The wild roses are pregnant. That brown thing sticking up? That’s the stigma. At the bottom of it is the ovary, which as you can see is swollen up with developing rose goodness. The brown wormy things are the drying up stamens. Roses: so romantical.
As usual, we’re on our way to the mailbox here. On the way, I ran into our neighbor. By this point, I was drawing near some excitement I forgot to share with you yesterday – some caterpillar action amongst the False Solomon Seal berries (aren’t you thrilled? You will be.) I described this to Sean. He looked at me somewhat skeptically. Undeterred, I went over to the berries in question and got this picture right away:
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This is a half-inch long creature having a meal. I showed it to him. He was duly impressed. A few minutes later, on my way back, I came across two others, a different kind, with spots:
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You can see the chunk that’s already been eaten out of the right-most berry. It’s a good thing the False Solomon Seal plants crank out so many berries, given how tasty they apparently are. They’re not fully ripe yet – by the end of summer, they’ll be bright red – so it’s not like the larvae will be pooping out viable seeds. I said larvae: because naturally, doesn’t that look like a caterpillar? No, sports fans, that’s a sawfly larva. (Good lord, the people at bugguide.net are incredible.)
But in the meantime, Sean and I got into a conversation with his brother-in-law. We admired the latter’s truck. Check out these man-bumpers. They’re pipes:
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We alternated discussing man- truck things, like the advisability of having doors:
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…and flowers.
They were pretty excited to hear that there are a lot of jack-in-the-pulpits around this year. They each remembered encountering them as kids, and being aware that they are rare and protected. It became apparent that one reason they hadn’t noticed any recently is because their brains, upon seeing the three leaves of the flower, automatically figured it was poison ivy.
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An understandable confusion, no? I’m pretty sure these are first-year jack-in-the-pulpits. Just guessing.
I pointed to where, just a few feet away from where we were standing, there were three jacks. We went over for a look-see. I found one whose flower pretty had much rotted off a couple of weeks ago.  It was still lying there. I figured, it’s rotted off, it’s fair game for dissection.
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Aw, man, it WAS fertilized. I wonder if the seeds can still develop, without access to living tissue connecting them to rest of the plant…?
Unlike the False Solomon Seal, the blue cohosh around here hasn’t been as successful. The places where you’d expect to see berries have never had berries – those gaps are not because somebody ate them. They never developed.
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I bushwacked up the hill to get back to the house. The light was pretty dim, and my trusty point-and-shoot had some trouble getting focused close-ups, so apologies, but it’s worth it:
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…this is a trillium seed! Ain’t it grand?
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Here’s a not-false Solomon’s Seal. I can’t find the one along the driveway that I chronicled all along earlier in the spring. Gulp.
But a fine day, overall.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

june is busting out all over and bonus dragonfly

Let’s start with Pieris bush – the one whose flowers looked like spider-filled barnacles. The berries are just popping.
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A few days ago - May 28.
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Today
Similar story for the Solomon’s Seal.
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And now, for the Siberian Irises:
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Black raspberry canes, the bane of my existence, are flowering. Which means that as usual, I’ll forgive vast swathes of them, since I do tend to forage in the yard at the end of summer…
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“pick me! pick me!” (dogwood.)
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And this is why I can’t find any of the trillium to show you how their seeds are shaping up. It’s just a jungle out there. Front and center: blue cohosh.
In the meantime, over by the gardenshed, the rhododendron is exploding.
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As well as a third azalea, to go with the red and the coral azalea.
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This modest-looking dragonfly was hanging out on our front steps. Based on bugguide.net, I’m going with Chalk-fronted Corporal - Ladona julia