We had a single day of rain on Thursday the 29th so this past Sunday I thought I’d hike around Goose Pond in Keene. It’s a great place to find fungi and slime molds at this time of year and I thought the rain would have brought them out for sure. The trouble was the weather people were warning about dangerous heat, but I thought if I went early enough I’d miss the worst of it so at 9:00 am off I went. The sun was bright and hot in some places but this tall meadow rue (Thalictrum pubescens) wasn’t bothered by it.
Most of the trail around the pond is shaded so though it was warm and humid it didn’t seem too bad. Back in the old days people would either climb a mountain or find a lake or pond to escape the heat so I thought I would do the same. I have an old black and white photo somewhere that shows a woman dressed in 1800s garb walking along the shore of this pond.
Some of my favorite woodland scenery lies near Goose Pond. This fern filled glen is a special treat.
This is another favorite spot. I often see salamanders here. This spot says wild to me and the Goose Pond natural area is indeed a wilderness; a 500 acre wilderness. The vast forest tract has been left virtually untouched since the mid-1800s. The pond itself was once used as a water supply for the city of Keene and in 1865 it was enlarged to 42 acres. It takes a while to walk around it.
White pine trees have roots that lie just under the soil surface and when people walk on that soil it tends to disappear, and this is what happens. Much of the trail has exposed roots like these and where there aren’t roots there are stones and / or mud, so it’s best to wear good sturdy hiking shoes if you come here. I actually saw one lady wearing flip flops! I’m guessing that she’s never been here before. She had to stop every few feet and fix them, so I’m also guessing that she learned an awful lesson.
A century or more of people walking on tree roots can sand them down and even polish them, and I’ve seen some that were so beautiful I wished I had a saw so I could carry them home with me. They were like living sculptures. I thought this one was very pretty but it would have been even better with bark still on it.
Pipewort is an aquatic plant that grows in the mud just offshore. As the photo shows the stems have a twist and 7 ridges, and for those reasons it is called seven angle pipewort (Eriocaulon aquaticum.) The quarter inch flower heads are made up of tiny white, cottony flowers. Another common name for them is “hat pins.” I think this is the best shot I’ve ever gotten of one. They can be a tough subject.
American bur reed (Sparganium americanum) also likes to grow just off shore and that’s where this one was, just beginning to flower. There are two types of flowers on these plants; the smaller and fuzzier male staminate flowers bloom at the top of the stem and the larger pistillate female flowers blossom lower down. After pollination the female flowers become a bur like cluster of beaked fruits that ducks and other waterfowl love. These plants, though native, act like invasive aliens and can fill small ponds quickly.
What I think were creeping spike rush plants (Eleocharis macrostachya) were flowering just off shore. Though it has the word rush in its name this plant is actually a sedge, and it’s a small one. The cream colored oval parts are its male parts and the white, wispy parts are its female flowers. There are several sedges in this family that look almost identical so I could easily be wrong about the identification, but it is a sedge and it was flowering.
Fringed sedge (Carex crinita) is one sedge that’s so easy to identify it can be done from just a silhouette. This sedge is a water lover and I usually find it on the edges of ponds and streams. It is quite large for a sedge and is sometimes grown in gardens. This plant looks a lot like pendulous sedge (Carex pendula) but that plant grows in Europe.
I took several photos of the pond and the island but it was so hazy and humid this was the only one that came out. There were people out on the island on this day, swimming. They had kayaks that they must have dragged up here, because you can’t drive to the pond. It seemed a little hot to be dragging kayaks up hills, but to each his own.
I saw slime molds almost everywhere I looked but instead of the yellow, red and blue ones I hoped to see all I saw were white ones.
I think this one was white fingered slime (Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa, variety fruticulosa.) Slime molds can be very beautiful things and I hope everyone will get to see some for themselves this summer. They aren’t slimy and they aren’t molds. In fact science doesn’t really know what they are, but they have enough intelligence to navigate a maze to get to food. Look for them in shady places like the side of a log away from direct sunlight. They usually appear on hot humid days a day or two after a good rain, along with many mushrooms. Unfortunately on this day I saw only one sad little brown mushroom, shriveling from the heat.
An eastern tiger swallowtail finally decided to sit still for more than a few seconds. It was getting a drink from a wet spot on a piece of concrete at the pond’s outflow. Even the butterflies were parched. I was certainly glad I had something to drink with me.
The swallowtail even turned so we could see the outside of its wing. It held steady but I couldn’t; my sweaty hands were shaky from the heat, hence the poor quality of these photos.
A garter snake hoped I wouldn’t see it.
Maleberry shrubs (Lyonia ligustrina) line the shore of the pond along with blueberries, and sometimes it can be hard to tell the two apart. The flowers of maleberrry, though nearly the same shape and color, are about half the size of a blueberry flower and the shrub blooms about a month later. There are often berries on the blueberries before maleberrry blossoms.
Maleberry blossoms become small, hard brown 5 part seed capsules that persist on the plant, often for over a year. They make maleberrry very easy to identify, especially in spring; just look for the seed capsules and you’ll know it isn’t a blueberry.
The strangest thing I saw on this hike was a bee or wasp stinging a moth over and over again. I heard a buzzing that sounded like a bee swarm and when I followed the sound I saw a moth rolling in the leaves, beating its wings furiously. And then I saw a smaller insect attacking it. You can just see the striped body of the bee or wasp under the moth’s left wing in this blurry photo. It knew enough to sting the moth’s body and the poor moth must have been stung 12-15 times while I watched. Finally the moth crawled into a pile of leaves and the bee / wasp flew into a hole in the ground. Because it’s so dry many bees and yellow jackets are nesting in the ground this year and I think the moth must have blundered onto the entrance to an underground nesting site. I mowed over the entrance to a ground nest once and was stung 5 or 6 times by yellow jackets. I was wearing shorts at the time and it’s something I’ve never forgotten.
And then I started to feel strange; a bit dizzy and my legs felt heavy, and I began to wonder if I’d make it out of there without help. The heat was unbelievable and the sweat pouring from me was causing the insect repellant I was wearing to run into my eyes and all but blind me, so I sat down in the shade to rest and I let my thoughts go. I let them swim in the cooling water of the pond, and thought of nothing but an old tree stump for a time. After a while what the heat had taken from me my thoughts, cooled by the water of the pond, replenished and I was able to go on until I reached my car. Never was an air conditioner appreciated more than it was that day. Just before sunset that evening the thermometer here reached 101 degrees F., the hottest I’ve seen in nearly thirty years I’ve lived here.
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer’s day, listening to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is by no means a waste of time. ~John Lubbock
Thanks for stopping in.
I’m also glad that you survived the heat! I’m glad that I’m an early riser and outside at around sunrise, and beginning to think about calling it a day when it gets as warm as you suffered through.
On one hand, you’d think that as humid as it’s been that it would be good for seeing slime molds. On the other hand, if your area has been as dry as Michigan for the last three weeks, it make take a good deal of rain before either of us see many of them.
Great photos of the eastern tiger swallowtail getting a drink. Did you know that they also take in minerals that they need by drinking from the places that they do?
I really liked the scenery in your photos in this post, the glen, the island, and especially the two stumps in the pond.
https://polldaddy.com/js/rating/rating.js
Thanks Jerry! I’m an early riser too; I was up at 4:00 am but I thought 9:00 would still be plenty of time to beat the heat.
I doubt we’ll be seeing any slime molds or fungi for a while yet. It’s very dry right now and no real rain in sight.
I did know that butterflies took in minerals by drinking where they do. I must have read it somewhere!
Thank you for some magical pictures. So sorry you felt ill, it just goes to show how we need to take it easy when the weather is so frighteningly hot.
Thanks very much Jane. I think I just had to rest a bit. It was extremely hot that day.
Great timing, in my opinion. In parking garage for employees I came across a butterfly, I thought was resting. Alas it had passed on & i carefully carried to my car, with plans to gift to a child. I was blanking on the name–now I know-Eastern Tiger Swallowtail.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge & gifts, Allen.
You’re welcome, I hope the child was happy with the gift.
[…] https://nhgardensolutions.wordpress.com/2018/07/07/hot-fun-in-the-summer-time/ […]
Those ferns in the glen seem to be glowing – beautiful.
That’s what I love about that spot!
I like your reflective picture at the end as your thoughts cooled down. Anything over 90 would finish me off if it lasted.
Thank you. You wouldn’t have liked last week at all. It was tough.
You are right.
Sorry the heat got to you like that, well done for sorting yourself out the way you did. I loved the pattern on that tree root.
Thank you Susan. That’s the first time heat has ever bothered me. Luckily I had a drink with me and some shade, and that was all it took.
I love tree roots and look them over on every trail I follow. They really can be beautiful.
What a beautiful place for a hike or walk-around…and yes, that heat can be a monster sometimes! Glad you made it home.
Thank you Scott. If any reader knows heat it has to be you, but I’ve heard that yours is a “dry heat.”
We had high humidity and that really drains you. Some days it’s hard to even breathe.
That’s a beautiful place, but that’s way too much heat! It’s not that hot here, but even when it’s in the 80’s I do what I have to do before noon and then get out of the heat.
https://polldaddy.com/js/rating/rating.js
Thanks Montucky! I work in it so I’m stuck with it all day every day and the last 7 days were tough. The very high humidity made it nearly unbearable.
In one of your shots the air around the plant appears to be crowded with flying insects. I find myself reluctant to be in the woods much before the end of July because of the progression of black flies, mosquitoes, gnats, deerflies and horseflies.
I’ve seen white and yellow slime molds, but never blue or red!
Always love your blog and am glad you got to the car stil upright. That last photo is hauntingly gorgeous!
https://polldaddy.com/js/rating/rating.js
Thanks very much Sue. I don’t remember seeing a lot of insects but I wear insect repellent so they don’t usually bother me. Deer flies are the worst because they pay no attention to insect repellent.
I’ve seen blue slime molds two or three times and red many times. The blue ones are very hard to find!
I appreciate as always your eye for detail. Stay safe in the heat!
https://polldaddy.com/js/rating/rating.js
Be careful in the heat! It can be as dangerous as the cold. A brutal week, especially for those of us without an air conditioner. Luckily, we are supposed to have two delightful days before the heat returns.
Thank you Laurie. I work outside all day so I thought I’d be acclimated to the heat but this day it got so hot so fast it took me by surprise, I guess.
I’m sorry you don’t have an air conditioner. It’s a fine thing to come home to!
They say that only Monday and Tuesday next week will be hot and humid, but still nothing like what we just went through.
Stay cool!
Thank goodness! Last week’s hot spell really took it out of me. We live in the woods, and until recently, we have never felt the need for an air conditioner.
I think last week took it out of all of us. It was terrible here!
I hope you never do need an air conditioner, but it seems to get hotter every year here. The heat index in Keene one day was 107 degrees.
Oh, my word! We are making plans to get a window unit for next summer. On NPR, I heard about how extreme heat is killing elderly people. The heat is starting to feel extreme, and I’m heading toward elderly.
I don’t blame you. It is a nice thing to come home to, even though I only use it maybe 12 days each year.
But for those 12 days….As Clif and I, ahem, approach our senior years, we really feel as though we need an air conditioner.
I don’t think you’ll ever regret buying one. The prices have come down on them.
And maybe there will be some end-of-season sales.
Yes, but a lot of people are thinking the same thing I’d bet. You’ll have to watch the flyers closely!
Will do!