I saw a clouded sulfur butterfly (Colias philodice) on an aster recently. It moved from flower to flower but was willing to sit still long enough for a couple of photos. I like the color combination.
Painted turtles are still lazing in the sun along the Ashuelot River. Soon they will burrow into the mud on the river bottom. As the water cools their internal temperature will drop to nearly match the water temperature and their metabolism will slow. They will take up enough oxygen to stay alive through their skin and hibernate until the weather warms in spring.
The American dagger moth caterpillar (Acronicta americana) feeds on the leaves of deciduous trees like birch, elm, ash, hickory, maple, and oak. This one had someplace to be and was moving about as fast as I’ve ever seen a caterpillar move. It had a black head but it wouldn’t let me get a shot of it. American dagger moth caterpillars aren’t poisonous but some people do get a rash when they handle them.
A coworker found a moose antler in the woods and I asked if I could get a photo of it for those who have never seen one. This was from a young moose and wasn’t that big, but some can get very big indeed. One recent trophy moose had antlers that spanned over 6 feet (75 5/8 inches) from tip to tip. Shed antlers aren’t a common site in these woods even though moose wander through every town in the region. Since they are relatively rare large moose antlers can be valuable when found in good condition. The trick is to find them before the mice, birds, coyotes and other critters chew them up.
Fall always seems to start at the forest floor and slowly work its way up to the trees. At present it has reached the understory, as this Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) shows. I grew up with this plant; my mother loved it so much that she planted it to grow up the side of the porch. I watched it turn red each fall when I was a boy and now I look for it every year at this time.
Burning bushes (Euonymus alatus) are also showing signs of fall, with more pink leaves coming every day. This shrub is much loved for its fall color but it is extremely invasive so its sale and cultivation are banned in New Hampshire. Our native highbush blueberry bushes (Vaccinium corymbosum) are quite colorful in the fall and are good alternatives for burning bush. Plant breeders have developed cultivars that are even more colorful than the natives. The American cranberry bush (Viburnum opulus var. americanum) is another native shrub that breeders have been working on and some cultivars display amazing color.
They may be invasive but it’s hard to deny the beauty of burning bushes. Along the Ashuelot River in Swanzey there is a narrow strip of woodland where nearly the entire understory is made up of hundreds of these shrubs. It’s a great example of how invasive plants choke out the natives and create a monoculture. I’m not happy about the monoculture but when all of these shrubs turn the color of the leaves shown in the photo it’s an astoundingly beautiful sight. Though I can understand and even agree with every argument that says they should be destroyed, I have to admit that I’d be sorry to see them go.
Birch trees are among the first to turn in the fall but these examples are still showing more green than gold. We’ve had a very dry summer and I’m curious to see what the colors will be like this year; muted or more intense? So far the shrub colors don’t seem to be affected.
Bear’s head or lion’s mane mushroom (Hericlum americanum) is a beautiful toothed fungus that looks like a fungal waterfall. Soft spines hang from branches that reach out from a thick central stalk. As it ages it will change from white to cream to brown. I didn’t think I was going to see one this year but I found this naval orange size example growing from the cut end of a felled tree just yesterday. I took its photo with my cellphone because that’s all I had with me. I haven’t had much luck taking close-ups with that phone so I was surprised when I saw that this shot was useable.
I think this white coral fungus might be cockscomb or crested coral (Clavulina coralloides.) Crested corals have branches that end in sharp tips which often turn brown. I don’t see these as often as I do other types of coral fungi. They are supposed to like growing under conifers and that’s just where I found it.
Golden pholiota (Pholiota limonella) mushrooms grew on a beech log. The gilled, lemon yellow caps with reddish scales are slimy to the touch on these inedible mushrooms. An oak kindly dropped an acorn beside them for me so I could give you a sense of their size.
Pear shaped puffballs (Lycoperdon pyriforme) grow in clusters on stumps and logs but these examples were growing on a rotted part of a living, standing tree. That’s not good and the tree will eventually have to go. Their common name comes from their upside down pear shape which can’t really be seen in this photo. As they age pores open in the top of each one so its spores can be released.
The wild plums are ripening. I found a thicket of about 3 small trees under some power lines in Swanzey a few years ago and though I’ve taken photos of the flowers I never came back to take any of the fruit until this year. I thought they were American plums (Prunus americana) but I’m not positive about that. They could also be Canada plums (Prunus nigra.) I’m going to have to pay very close attention to the flowers next spring. The fruit is small at about half the size of a hen’s egg but is said to make delicious jelly, whether American or Canadian.
Botanically speaking a whorl is an “arrangement of sepals, petals, leaves, stipules or branches that radiate from a single point and surround or wrap around the stem,” and nothing illustrates this better than Indian cucumber root (Medeola virginiana.) Its leaves wrap around the stem arranged in a single flat plane, so if you saw them from the side theoretically you would see an edge, much like looking at the edge of a dinner plate. If any leaf or leaves in the arrangement are above or below others it’s not a true whorl.
Native little bluestem grass (Schizachyrium scoparium) catches the light and glows in luminous ribbons along the roadsides. This grass is common, growing in every U.S. state except Nevada and Washington. According to the USDA its appearance can vary in height, color, length of leaves, flowering, and clump diameter from location to location. It’s a beautiful little 2-3 foot tall grass that lends a golden richness to life outdoors. After a frost it takes on a reddish purple hue, making it even more beautiful. The world would be a duller place without it.
There is a lot going on in a light catching little bluestem seed head but I won’t try to explain it; I’ll just let you enjoy its unique beauty.
I’ve been walking the banks of the Ashuelot River almost since I learned how to walk and I’ve seen some unusual things over the years, but by far the most unusual thing I’ve seen recently is this statue of the Hindu deity Ganesh that I found on its banks in Swanzey. Ganesh is said to be the lord of success and the remover of obstacles on one’s spiritual path. He is also thought to bring education, knowledge, wisdom and prosperity, so I’m wondering what it is the river is trying to tell me. It seems like whatever it is can only be good.
He who has experienced the mystery of nature is full of life, full of love, full of joy. Radiance emanates from the whole existence itself; it does not know the meaning of holding back. ~ Maitreya Rudrabhayananda
Thanks for coming by.
[…] The first was in September on the banks of the Ashuelot River and this statue looks exactly like that one except that it has a lot more wear. The Ashuelot River doesn’t flow into Wilson Pond so unless […]
I know what you mean about invasive plants. We have a lot of Himalayan balsam along the river here and it’s taking over. The flowers are so lovely though it’s hard to hate it. I wonder who put that statue there?
I’ve seen your balsam on your blog and I agree-it’s got beautiful flowers.
I think that statue just washed up on shore. It was covered with fine silt as if it had been tumbling around in the river.
Lovely photos! I scroll down slowly and really study them carefully when I’m looking at your blog and a few other favorites. Well, you should have seen my face when the “lion’s mane” fungus came slowly into view! I’m thinking, “what the HECK is this” and “it’s one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen”. Thank you for the amazing experience!
You’re welcome and thank you Charlotte. That really is a beautiful mushroom and some will get as big as a grapefruit, so they’re easy to see. I’ve seen them growing on trees 10 feet from the ground but luckily this one was on a log so it was easy to get close to.
I always imagine that I’m seeing sulphurs but I think they’re usually cabbage whites. I wonder which animals eat the wild plums? They’re too big for birds, I would think. Bears, maybe?
The markings on this one seemed to match the clouded sulfur but I’m not great with insects.
I’ve read that just about any animal in the woods including some birds will eat wild plums. Of course many small animals and birds have to wait for them to drop.
Excellent post! It’s still fairly green here in NYC. Many of the trees are already shedding their leaves though likely because of the lack of rain recently. Still, it was nice walking in a park smelling the crushed leaves underfoot! Can’t wait to see the beautiful colors of the trees in New Hampshire.
Thank you Jasmine. I was afraid that our trees would do the same as yours but they’re turning now, and quickly. I should be able to show you some photos of fall colors next week. I love the smell of fallen leaves too. It always takes me back to walking to grade school.
Such wonderful shots and descriptions! I know the burning bush is invasive but I’m with you – it would be sad to see it eradicated as the lush colors always remind me that Fall is right around the corner.
Thank you Martha. Yes, I can’t think of a more well known harbinger of fall than burning bush.
It’s good to see that you are getting some colors already. They are starting here now too.
They’re changing very fast here this year!
That’s quite an impressive collection of beautiful pictures! Enjoyed!
Thank you, I’m glad that you did!
Your fungi are always so much more exciting than ours that I get very envious. Maybe it is just that your photography is better.
I think it’s only because I don’t take many photos of the more common mushrooms. I prefer the odd ones that you don’t see too many of, but I don’t go looking for them. I usually just stumble on to them. The day or two after a rain seems to be best.
Your Clouded Sulfur butterfly looks very much like our Clouded Yellow (Colias croceus) http://butterfly-conservation.org/679-1229/clouded-yellow.html
I find the subtle differences and similarities so interesting – we live thousands of miles apart but there is so much we have in common. Our leaves are changing colour quite quickly now too. The Virginia Creeper shot is lovely. The vines here have all changed colour and are starting to lose their leaves already. The quote you have found is so true!
Thank you Clare. I’ve noticed a lot of similarities too from reading U.K. blogs, but there are differences in lichens and mosses especially. You’ve got some really beautiful examples of both there and I’m always happy to see them.
I’m surprised that your Virginia creepers are so much farther along than hours. Your fall must happen a little earlier than ours.
I thought that quote was true too. Nature lovers are generally happy people!
Leaf-colour change seems to be a little earlier than usual this year. In this part of the country I would expect changes like this to be happening during the second week of October.
So we’re usually a little earlier than you are. They say our peak of color is mid October.
Yes I would agree with that. We sometimes have quite a lot of leaf cover into November. I live in the far Eastern part of the English midlands. Country to the south of us has a later fall and country to the north an earlier one as you’d expect.
Excellent fungi shots. I’ve noticed quite a bit of red on the leaves adjacent to the berries of some Indian cucumber root I’ve seen. Assuming of course that it’s the same plant.
Thanks! I can’t say much about red cucumber root leaves because I have trouble seeing red due to colorblindness, but I do see a lot of them turn yellow. It could be that yellow comes after the red. I’ll have to take some photos of a few plants and see what my color finding software says.
Lovely to see what happening in your neck of the woods!
Thank you Eliza. We’re getting some much needed rain here today and the foliage is turning faster than I’ve ever seen. It’s like someone flipped a switch and almost overnight there was color everywhere.
Yes, we’re about an hour away in MA and it seems the same here.
I’m sure that you must need the rain too then.
Beautiful shots! You and I posted almost identical photos of sulfur butterfly on asters today!
Thanks Sue. I haven’t visited your blog yet this evening but I will be shortly. Great minds really do think alike, apparently!
Loved your Ganesh !! You must have been thrilled – very beatifically auspicious.
Thank you Gata. Actually I knew nothing about Ganesh until I looked him up. When I found him beside the river I knew it was some type of Indian deity but I didn’t know which one until Google helped. Then I was thrilled!
From the recent dinosaur to the Hindu deity Ganesh, you really do find a wide variety of interesting things in the woods of New Hampshire!
For all the time I’ve spent in the woods, and the number of deer that we have in Michigan, I have never found a dropped antler from a deer, so I have some idea how rare it would be to find a moose antler.
I don’t think that I’ve ever seen any of the fungi that you included in this post either. I’ve been looking for some interesting species, but have found very few. But, it’s been very dry here this fall.
Thanks Jerry! I’d forgotten all about that dinosaur but you’re right, I’ve been seeing some strange things out there. I have no idea where they come from but people are obviously visiting the same places I do.
The guy who found that moose antler says he finds them all the time, believe it or not. I’ve seen a couple of old chewed up deer antlers but never a moose.
It hasn’t been a great year for fungi here because of the dryness, so I know how you feel. I’m seeing just a tiny amount of what I usually see and the squirrels usually get to them before I do.
Reblogged this on Dawn of Divine Rays and commented:
Thank you very much, Allen. Lovely photos and narration. Looks like we’ll be growing some American Cranberries soon. Sending bright Reiki blessings your way. Namaste
You’re welcome and thank you Agnes. I’m not sure if you mean the shrub or the actual American cranberries, but true cranberries like very wet soil. The shrub is called a cranberry but is really a viburnum, and is very easy to grow. It has great fall color and interesting berries that the birds love.
Thank you, Allen. We should be looking for viburnum shrubs then .. ‘cos it’s usually very dry around here. The elderberries don’t do very well here and part of the branches are dying all the time .. now it’s just one or two branches left. Happy Wednesday.
If you ask for a cranberry viburnum a good nursery should easily know what you want. Elderberries grow naturally along the shores of ponds and rivers and they like moist soil as well. They won’t stand much dryness. Happy Wednesday to you as well!
Okie dokie, Allen. Thank you for all the gardening tips and info. Namaste
So many fascinating things in this post! I have 2 burning bushes at my house and their fall colors are spectacular. Great Ganesh find!
Thank you Paula. I like the color of burning bushes too. You’d better hang on to your two because you can’t buy them anymore.
Ganesh was a real surprise!
What a lovely set! (And I’m a tad envious of the moose antler sighting.) We might add that everything’s looking quite different today, with the gray accompanying heavy rain.
On a jaunt to Vermont last weekend, we were surprised by the amount of fall color that appeared in just two days.
By the way, I’m glad to see you recording the purples in the foliage. One must be vigilant to notice its presence.
Thank you Jnana. The person who found that moose antler says he sees them all the time. We must travel in different circles because I never see them.
We’ve also had heavy rain today but it’s welcome because we’ve been in a drought for most of the summer. This should get some mushrooms growing and green the grass back up.
The same is happening with the fall colors here. I’m really surprised how fast they’re changing!
There aren’t many plants that go to purple in the fall but I always try to find those that do. Maple leaf viburnum is one of the best for that color.
More stunning beauty. Thank you. 🙂
You’re welcome Ben!
This year I ordered beach plums from the NH State Forest Division, I can’t wait until they are big enough to produce fruit. I’ve always been fascinated by Ganesh. Perhaps the river is thanking you for sharing your knowledge and educating those of us who follow your blog regularly. And maybe sharing your wisdom will lead you to prosperity. Just my thoughts.
Thanks Laura. I used to prune a plum tree for some people in Keene who didn’t eat the plums, so I used to eat a few while I was pruning. They were delicious and I think you’ll find that it was worth the wait with your trees.
I hadn’t ever heard of Ganesh before I found that statue, so it was interesting reading about him. I don’t know about wisdom but I do enjoy telling people about the things they can see in the woods. Ganesh was a real surprise though! I like the idea of the river putting it there for me to find. The river and I have been friends for a long time.
What a wonderful, eclectic collection of images. You opened the posting with a spectacular butterfly shot and followed with lots of cool shots. I have never seen a moose in person, so really liked the shot of the antler. I enjoy seeing how the seasons change in various locations and you’ve captured some signs of those changes–I can’t wait for more. I’m intrigued by the statue you saw. I am sure there is a story about how and why it is there on the river.
Thanks Mike. I thought people might like to see that moose antler. I would have been happier if it was still attached to the moose but you can’t have everything.
In just the few days it has taken to put this post together the leaves have gone through a lot of changes so there will be more color to come.
The statue was covered with a thin film of river silt so I think it spent time in the river before washing up on the shore in Swanzey. It was an odd thing to see.
All the things that you photograph are interesting but I particularly enjoyed the little Hindu deity, I wonder how it got there.
That’s a good question Susan. There is a small Indian community in Swanzey but the statue was covered in river silt, suggesting it spent some time in the river and came from somewhere else. It was lying on a rock when I saw it.