For six weeks now we’ve had at least one rainy day per week and often two or three. This has amounted to a drought busting 2-3 inches of rain each week and the water table is again where it should be, if not a little high. Unfortunately along with the rain we’ve had cold and until this past week it seemed that it would never warm up, but warm up it has and temps in the 90s are expected for part of next week. Beaver brook seems happier when it’s full. It cheering chuckles and giggles can be heard throughout the forest and it is a welcome companion when I walk along its shores.
The orangey red fertile fronds of cinnamon fern (Osmundastrum cinnamomeum) have appeared. They once reminded someone of sticks of cinnamon, and that’s how this fern comes by its common name.
A closer look shows that this isn’t cinnamon. The fertile fronds are covered with its sporangia, which is where its spores are produced. Each one is hardly bigger than a pin head. Native Americans used this fern medicinally, both externally and internally for joint pain. Many ferns were also woven into mats.
Even the seeds (samaras) of red maple (Acer rubrum) are red, and a beautiful red at that. Squirrels love red maple seeds and that’s probably a good thing because our trees produce many millions of them. A single tree about a foot in diameter was shown to produce nearly a million seeds, and red maple is the most abundant native tree in eastern North America. Native Americans used red maple bark to wash inflamed eyes and as a remedy for hives and muscle aches. The tree’s wood was used for tools and its sap boiled into maple sugar, much like the sap of the sugar maple.
One of the things that determines how many acorns an oak will produce is the weather. Since the male flowers release pollen to the wind in the hopes that it will reach the female flowers, rain can have a big impact because it can wash the pollen out of the air. Since we’ve had a lot of rain this spring it will be interesting to see how many acorns we have this fall. The flowers shown are the male catkins of a red oak (Quercus rubra.)
These are the male pollen bearing cones of the mugo pine (Pinus mugo.) Mugo pine is a native of southwestern and Central Europe which is used as a landscape specimen. Its pollen cones closely resemble those of our eastern white pine (Pinus strobus) When the female flowers are fertilized by this pollen they produce the seed bearing pine cones that we are all familiar with. Here in New Hampshire pine pollen is responsible for turning any horizontal surface, including ponds and vehicles, a dusty green color each spring. It also makes some of us have sneezing fits.
I heard that the new spring fiddleheads of the royal fern (Osmunda regalis var. spectabilis) were purple and, since I’ve never paid attention to them I decided to go and see some. Sure enough they were deep purple. I shouldn’t have been surprised because another name for this fern is flowering fern, because its fertile fronds are purple.
Royal fern is the only fern that grows on every temperate continent except Australia, which makes it one of the most widespread of all living species. They are also thought to be one of the oldest living things, with fossil records of the Osmundaceae family dating back over 300 million years. Individual plants are thought to be able to live 100 years or more. They like wet feet and grow along stream and river banks in low, damp areas.
Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) starts out life in spring with its leaves colored red or bronze and people are often fooled by it at this stage. It is a plant that anyone who spends time in the woods should get to know well, but even then you can still occasionally be caught by it. It doesn’t need to have leaves on it to produce a reaction; I usually end up with a rash on my legs each spring from kneeling on the leafless vines to take photos of spring beauties. Luckily it doesn’t bother me too much but I’ve known people who had to be hospitalized because of it.
This Northern water snake was basking in the sun, which they often do. I’ve seen them about 3 feet long but they can reach about 4 1/2 feet in length. According to Wikipedia they can be brown, gray, reddish, or brownish-black, but the ones I’ve seen have looked black. That could be because they were wet but they also darken with age and become almost black. They aren’t venomous but I’ve heard that they will bite and that their bite can sometimes lead to an infection if it isn’t taken care of. They eat small fish, frogs, worms, leeches, crayfish, salamanders, and even small birds and mammals, like chipmunks. They’re also very fast and hard to get a good photo of.
Early one morning I saw a dragonfly on a building. I knew it was alive because it was moving one of its legs slowly back and forth. It let me get the camera very close and didn’t flinch even when I turned on the camera’s LED light. I haven’t been able to confidently identify it but I thought it might be a Lancet club tail. I hope someone will let me know if I’m wrong.
I’ve never gotten so close to a dragonfly. Odd that it didn’t fly away.
Tent caterpillars appear in early spring as buds begin to open. They prefer fruit trees but can also be found on maples, hawthorn and others. Their nests are smaller and more compact than fall webworms and are found in the crotch of branches rather than at the ends. Often the caterpillars can be seen crawling over the outside surface of the nest as these were. They feed in morning and early evening, and on warm nights. They do a lot of damage and can defoliate a tree in no time at all. Though the tree will usually grow new leaves it will have been severely weakened and may not bear fruit. As the larvae feed they will make the silky nest larger to enclose more foliage.
A close up look at the tent caterpillars. They can be seen crawling everywhere at this time of year. Tent caterpillars are an important food source for insects, animals and birds. One bear was found to have eaten about 25,000 of them and more than 60 species of birds will eat them. Frogs, mice, skunks, bats, reptiles and 28 different insects help control the population but nothing can stop them. Scientists have found that a severe outbreak can defoliate tens of thousands of acres of forest.
This robin had a beak full of caterpillars but they weren’t tent caterpillars. He didn’t seem real happy to see me.
Some think that without ants their peony blossoms wouldn’t open, but that’s really just an old wive’s tale. Peony buds have very small glands called extrafloral nectaries along the outside edges of their bud scales. These glands produce a mixture of sugar, water and amino acids, and this is what attracts the ants. To repay the peony for its gift of nectar the ants drive off pests that might harm the buds.
Native Americans held turkeys in such high regard they buried the birds when they died, but the turkey’s value was in its feathers, not its meat. The feathers were used to decorate their ceremonial clothing and as arrow fletching to stabilize arrows. They were also used for winter cloaks because they were lightweight and very warm. A feather from a turkey was powerful medicine thought to symbolize abundance, pride, fertility and wisdom, but the meat was considered starvation food. Early colonials mentioned the small flocks of young turkeys seen near Native villages and how the Natives refused to kill them for food, which they couldn’t understand. Of course Europeans saw little to no value in the feathers.
Why some plants have red or purple leaves in spring isn’t fully understood, but it’s thought that the color helps protect their new, fragile leaves from damaging ultraviolet rays and cold temperatures. It isn’t just trees that use this strategy; many shrubs and plants also have new leaves tinged with red or purple. The rattlesnake weed (Hieracium venosum) in the above photo shows just how purple some new spring leaves can be. Eventually all its leaves will be green but the color won’t disappear entirely; a deep maroon color will be left on their veins, making this a very beautiful plant at any time of year.
The heartwood of oaks and some other tree species have a high tannin content and when iron or steel come into contact with the tannins a chemical reaction takes place. This almost always results in a discoloration of the wood. It is caused by nails, barbed wire, chains, or any one of a hundred other iron or steel objects that can be found in trees. There is even a photo online of a bicycle grown into a tree. This is trouble for loggers, because if the sawmill sees stains like those on the red oak log pictured above they’ll reject the log. Their saw blades are expensive and running them through steel just doesn’t work.
If you happened upon a shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) tree just after bud break it would be easy to believe that you were seeing a tree full of beautiful flowers, but what you saw would be the colorful insides of the newly opened bud scales. What you saw would also be one of the most beautiful things you could find in a New England forest in spring.
The woods were ringed with a color so soft, so subtle that it could scarcely be said to be a color at all. It was more the idea of a color – as if the trees were dreaming green dreams or thinking green thoughts. ~Susanna Clarke
Thanks for Stopping in.
A wide range of life forms here to be sure, each with its own story to tell too.
Thank you Ben. I agree!
I’ve noticed the ants on my peony buds and rub them off if I see them. But you are right, the ants later leave the peony in peace and don’t harm them. Amelia
Thank you Amelia. They actually help the peony by fighting off pests.
I am so pleased your drought is at an end now and the temperatures have improved too! I am impressed by your shot of the dragonfly! I too, think that it was newly emerged – the wings are very shiny, like silver, at this stage. It could also have been cold and sluggish as it was early morning. Your posts are always brimming with interesting facts and thoughts and your photographs are beautiful. I loved the shagbark hickory, the rattlesnake weed, the robin, the red maple seed and the cinnamon fern sporangia!
Thank you Clare. I thought the dragonflies (there were 3) were probably cold that morning too but the person who helped ID it said the same thing about the wings, and also mentioned the way they were folded.
Glad you liked the plants!
I did, very much!
Glad the rain has eased up a bit. I know it certainly made for some long weeks with little outside activity, at least for me. So many things the robin could have been thinking “Let me eat in peace” was probably one of them, but great image. Tent caterpillars drive me nuts!
Thanks Laura. I agree, it wasn’t much fun to work in, that’s for sure.
I’m not real crazy about finding tent caterpillars on my trees. A good forceful spray from a hose does wonders!
Thank you very much for the wonderful photo of the shagbark hickory leaves opening, I missed them this year.
I’m happy for you that the drought has ended, you’re right, creeks are always happier when they’re full, and they pass their joy on to us if we let them.
I didn’t know that there were that many species of birds that ate tent caterpillars, they must not be the bird’s preferred food or you’d see more birds gathering the caterpillars up to take to their young.
You’re welcome Jerry, and thank you. It’s too bad you missed the hickories, but they’ll do it again next spring!
Yes, we didn’t go from drought to flood, but almost.
I didn’t know that there were that many species of birds that ate tent caterpillars either. In fact I always thought they were toxic and birds wouldn’t touch them. I can’t say that I’ve ever seen a bird eat one, but I’m not surprised with my eyesight. I did see several robins feeding fledglings on a lawn last week but I couldn’t tell what they were eating. Whatever it was they were finding them on the lawn.
That shagbark hickory photo is a work of art and should be framed! So many beautiful photos that evoke memories of the east, Allen, including the tent caterpillars. I remember being at girl scout camp and the caterpillars were so numerous one year that the copious frass dropping from the trees got into the pancake batter. Our scout leader had us cook and eat the pancakes anyway. I can’t say they contributed to the flavor any. 🙂
Poison ivy is something I have not seen on our farm out here, fortunately.
Thank you Lavinia. Bud break on the shagbark hickories is a beautiful event that I wait for all winter long.
I think your scout leader should have been fired!
I’m glad you don’t have poison ivy there. It’s everywhere here and thriving.
In a blog crowded with excellent photographs and packed full of interesting information, I enjoyed the tent caterpillars most.
Thank you. You might not want them in your garden though.
I’m loving your blog with its informative content and clear pictures. Id love to know the names of all of the things growing around me (flora and fauna!) and learn timing for herb and tree flowers and fruit, their historic uses, and other stories! Like.. what you’re sharing with us! Thank you so much for putting together this wonderful site.
So much of what you share is resonating with me.. wrt favoring natives while still also appreciating and being curious about colonially introduced plants around us in the wild and the heftier showier plants that come to us from other countries and regions through our garden centers.
One plug for tent caterpillars – sure, spray them with the hose when they are in your landscaped space, but otherwise they are not an enemy to be feared like the terribly invasive non-native gypsy moth, winter moth, browntail… etc etc. As you mentioned, they are natives and play a part in the circle of life as a food source for those birds who have developed a taste for hairy caterpillars (its my understanding that its the hair that limits the number of birds who line up to put these caterpillars on their plates!). So, plant lovers, protect your tree and bush collection of its leaves and fruits of course. But the nature lover part in this set also should know its not a bug to go at war with and to grab sprays for.
You’re welcome, and thank you. Flowers are beautiful no matter where they’re from, so they all find a place here. I find their uses by Native Americans and ancients fascinating, and I guess a lot of others do too.
There is far too much herbicide and pesticide use out there, so you’ll never find recommendations for the use of either here.
Great pictures of the dragonfly!
Thanks! It was like it was glued to that building, but a couple hours later it was gone.
Reblogged this on Dawn of Divine Rays.
Wow! That shagbark hickory photo is a knockout! Several darners on this website resemble the one you photographed. http://onnaturemagazine.com/odonata-guide.html The Lance Tipped Darner in particular looks pretty close.
Thanks very much Pat. I love those shagbark hickory buds!
Someone wrote in and said that the dragonfly was indeed a Lancet club tail, and the reason it didn’t fly away was because its wings were still drying after having emerged from the water. That makes sense because there is a pond just a few yards from the building it was on.
Thanks very much for the link. I’m sure it’ll prove useful!
Thanks so much for taking us on this outing! The closeup of the cinnamon fern was a great treat! I first thought we were looking at frog eggs1 and the snake! Here on the equator, what one learned in the USA does not always apply. Some snakes with ’round’ pupils are poisonous, and some coral snakes have different color variations! The triva about the turkey feathers made me a little sad; our species has lost a lot of respect for our natural world.
Thanks for placing that robin where it would brighten our day! I’ve not seen a robin in years – but we have our own cousins in that family tree, so easy to spot when they forage for similar breakfast morsels at ground level! The extrafloral nectaries remind me of the Müllerian bodies of the Cecropias.. The ants live on/in the Cecropia, and various birds feed on the little Müllerian orbs.
Thanks again for sharing your world with us!.
You’re welcome, and thank you. I thought the fern sporangia looked like frog eggs too!
The timber rattlesnake is the only poisonous one we have and it’s very rare. I’m sure you have many more species than we do.
I agree, we have lost respect for the natural world and ignorance is nature’s number one enemy. That’s why this blog is here.
Some robins are very wary but others will almost let you walk right up to them. This one landed on that limb no more than two feet away. I’m guessing there must have been a nest nearby.
Interesting about the müllerian bodies of the Cecropias. I’ve never heard of them.
The timber rattlesnake is an impressive one to have in your neighborhood… It’s probably rare – now – because people think ‘Danger!’ and kill all they see.
Yes, we have many dangerous snakes – from the fer-de-lance to the ‘toadhead’ and palm vipers… the site tropical herping lists 16 coralsnakes!
Yes, like the wolf and others, timber rattlers have been nearly wiped out.
I’m guessing people don’t spend too much time in the woods there!
Through several snake ‘discoveries’ I am now friends with one of the country’s ‘specialists.’ I don’t think there are too many bites per year, but next time I send him some rep reports, I’ll ask….
Have a good week!
Thank you, you too!
The brook is really pretty and it’s nice to see it full. Our streams are full now too and the small springs and seeps are back to normal.
I love the shagbark hickory! It’s as pretty as a flower.
Thanks Montucky! It’s great that the droughts on both ends of the country are over. Without water we’re pretty much done for!
I look forward to those shagbark hickory buds opening all winter. They really are beautiful.
Always a joy to read. Thanks.
Thanks very much Paul, I’m glad you enjoyed it.
Another superb post capped off by that spectacular photo of the shagbark hickory bud. It’s stunning.love your blog – thanks.
You’re welcome Judy, and thank you!
Reblogged this on Poltrack Pix and commented:
Wonderful collection of photos
Thank you John.
Among all your beautiful photographs I particularly enjoyed the brook gurgling and the red maple seeds. The quote was good too.
Thanks very much Susan. There has been a lot of brook gurgling going on here recently.