I hope everyone had a nice Christmas. Our presents from nature were temperatures in the mid-30s F. and plenty of sunshine but we’ve also had some cold, as this frozen view of Half Moon Pond in Hancock shows. We have no snow in my corner of the state though, because it seems to warm up ahead of every storm and we see rain instead of snow. That’s a good thing because just one storm last week would have dropped over two feet of snow.
Pressure cracks in ice are caused by stress, which is caused by fluctuating temperatures in the ice, wind, or waves. Some are contraction cracks, caused by the top surface of the ice sheet shrinking quickly. I think that’s what this crack on the pond ice in the previous photo might be. There are also wet and dry cracks. Dry cracks obviously have no water in them like this one. Ice can make some very strange, eerie sounds as it changes and sometimes this pond sounds like a Star Wars movie. This crack went all the way across the pond.
There seems to be plenty of seeds and other food for the smaller birds this year, especially since the asters seen here along with goldenrods and so many other late blooming plants grow many millions of seeds each year. All of these seeds are what help small birds and small animals through winter.
And they do get eaten, as this aster seed head shows.
Though the smaller birds seem to have plenty to eat things might be a bit difficult for larger birds like turkeys. Last year was a mast year and millions of acorns and white pine cones fell; easily more than I’ve ever seen, and turkeys, deer, squirrels and other animals had a bountiful year. But as is often the case when trees grow so much fruit, they need time to recover. In the following few years the harvest can be meager, and that’s what has happened this year. Last year I saw more acorns fall than I ever have and this year I’ve seen fewer fall than I ever have, and turkeys and larger animals are now paying the price. Add to that a layer of snow like that seen here in Hancock, and there could be a serious thinning of the flocks and herds.
Technically a group of turkeys is called a “rafter” rather than a flock but I doubt they care. This one had to come over and see what I was up to. Here in New Hampshire we see turkeys chasing people on the news fairly regularly. They also have a habit of standing in roads. Why, I don’t know.
The way some of these photos show a snow pack and others show none you might think they were taken in different seasons but no, it’s just a matter of a few miles between snow and none at all. In fact looking at this colony of heartleaf foam flowers (Tiarella cordifolia) one might be fooled into thinking it was spring, but they’re an evergreen plant and look like this even under snow. Come mid-May they’ll be covered in small white flowers with long stamens, and it is these “foamy” flower stamens that give the plant its common name. It’s so nice to see green plants in December.
Mosses like this delicate fern moss (Thuidium delicatulum) are non-vascular plants and most if not all are evergreen. I love seeing them at all times of year but especially in winter when there is so little green showing. This moss changes color from deep green to bright lime green when it starts getting cold and it always looks orange to me in the fall, but I’m colorblind so I’m sure it’s just me.
Last year I found this odd, sprawling little plant that I had never seen before. I showed it on a blog post and helpful readers told me it was a spikemoss, which I hadn’t heard of. I went back to see it this year and it really hadn’t changed but I tried to look it over a little more carefully and I did some reading about it. I believe this example is meadow spikemoss (Selaginella apoda.) Spikemosses are considered “primitive” seedless (spore bearing) vascular plants and therefore aren’t mosses at all. This pretty little plant is more closely related to the clubmosses, which are also spore bearing vascular plants known as lycopods. It doesn’t appear to be evergreen like the clubmosses however.
I didn’t look closely at this fern but I think it might be an eastern wood fern (Dryopteris marginalis) which is also called marginal wood fern because of how its spore bearing clusters are placed in relation to its pinnule (leaf division) margins. We have a few evergreen ferns and like the mosses they add much to the winter landscape. They might look delicate but I’ve seen them grow on even after being encased in ice.
Polypody fern (Polypodium virginianum) is another of our evergreen ferns but it doesn’t look delicate at all. In fact if you run your hand over its fronds you’ll find that it feels tough and leathery. This fern is also called rock polypody or rock cap fern because it is almost always found growing on stones. They are one of just a few vascular plants that can rehydrate after drying out, much like mosses do.
The sori of the polypody fern are considered naked because they don’t have the thin tissue covering, called an insidium, which many other ferns have. I think the little clusters of sporangium look like baskets of flowers. Though small they can be seen with the naked eye. The druids thought this fern had special powers because they found it growing near oak trees. Its roots and leaves have been used medicinally for many centuries and its name appears in some of the earliest herbals and botanical texts.
Milk white toothed polypore (Irpex lacteus) is a resupinate fungus, which means it looks like it grows upside down, and that’s what many crust fungi appear to do. This is a very common winter fungus that grows on the undersides of limbs. The “teeth” are actually ragged bits of spore producing tissue which start life as pores or tubes and then break apart and turn brown as they age. This example was very young and shows what look more like pores than teeth at this stage. If you pick up a fallen limb and touch something that feels cold and rubbery, it might be one of these. They are very tough and can stand all the snow and cold that winter can throw at them.
Another tough fungus is the turkey tail (Trametes versicolor,) but this one feels leathery rather than rubbery. This is a common fungus that can be found just about anywhere but the beautiful blue, purple, and orange ones are rare in this area. It seems to depend on the year I’ve noticed; sometimes most of them are shades of brown but in some years many will lean towards blues, purples and oranges. I have no idea what determines their color and apparently science doesn’t either, because I’ve never been able to find a single word about what colors them in print.
I’ve seen several trees with these markings on them and I think it might be the start of a bright yellow crust fungus called conifer parchment fungus (Stereum sanguinolentum.) This fungus is also called bleeding parchment because of the blood red liquid it exudes when it is damaged. It causes heart rot in conifers and is a death sentence for the tree. It seems to be very widespread because I’ve seen it in almost every bit of woodland I’ve been in.
A single terminal bud and two lateral buds in red or sometimes pink help identify striped maple (Acer pennsylvanicum.) In late April or early May the bud scales on these buds will open to reveal the beautiful pink and orange buds, which are some of the most beautiful the things one can see in the spring forest.
Many things in nature will turn blue when it gets cold enough. Ice can be blue and so can the sap of the white pine tree. I’ve also seen the white striations that give striped maple its name turn blue. This is the only maple tree in New England that has bark that is striped like this. Other names for the tree are snake bark maple, moosewood maple, goosefoot maple, Pennsylvania maple, and whistle wood, because the soft pith makes the wood easy to hollow out and make whistles from. Native Americans used the bark of the tree to treat many ailments including coughs and colds.
A burl is an abnormal growth on a tree that grows faster than the surrounding tissue. Scientists don’t fully understand why it happens but burls are thought to grow on trees that have been weakened by stress or damage. Once the tree’s defenses have been weakened insects and/or fungi can attack and cause the abnormal growth. Woodworkers prize burls very highly and make some beautiful bowls and other things from them which can sometimes sell for thousands of dollars. This one grew on a maple and was quite large.
Bunch gall is another plant deformity that appears on Canada goldenrod (Solidago canadensis) at the very tip of the stem. A gall midge (Rhopalomyla solidaginis) lays its egg in a leaf bud and when the larva hatches the plant stops growing taller but continues to produce leaves in a “bunch” like that seen here. Since the midge only lays its eggs on Canada goldenrod it makes this plant easy to identify.
I was working one day and this spider crawled up to me and watched for a while. After letting me take a couple of photos it walked off to wherever it was going. It was about as big as a quarter (3/4”) from leg tip to leg tip. I don’t know its name but it could move very fast when it wanted to.
This is how the sky often looks as I drive to work at 7:00 am at this time of year. It’s a great gift that costs nothing but my being there to see it. I hope all of you received similar gifts this year.
A wonderful gift may not be wrapped as you expect. ~Johnathan Lockwood Huie
Thanks for coming by.
The sunrise was a great catch!
It must be nice for you to have snow in one area that you travel, but no snow in other places, the best of both worlds this time of year. And, it was nice that you found so many examples of green plants this time of year.
As per your usual post, this one is full of interesting things that you found, and I am trying to learn from them. It’s really amazing what you can find when you take the time to look at the smaller things in nature. I spent some time yesterday photographing lichens, which as you said recently, seem really happy in winter, and is that ever true.
I can’t ID any of them that I found, but I did learn a great deal from looking closely at what I found. I saw a tree that I thought had dis-colored bark, and learned that it was lichens not the bark of the tree that created the color, along with far more species of them than I noticed from a distance. The same applies to mosses, I didn’t realize that we had so many different species here in Michigan.
The spider was pretty cool too!
Thanks Jerry! It is nice to have no snow on hikes but still kind of a pain to work in, especially when it has turned to ice like it has at work.
I’m glad you’re finding plenty of lichens. Look on the trees and rocks anytime you’re near water and you’ll find plenty more. There is a great lichen site called Lichens of Canada on Flicker that might help with IDs http://www.flickr.com/groups/1050078@N24/pool/22196144@N06/?view=md
The trouble is, there are hundreds of them there to look through so you need to be able to narrow it down a bit.
Such a beautiful sunrise! In winter I do take more notice of the ferns, clubmoss, and fungi, and I just might try to figure the differences between them this winter. Like the spikemoss, I’m not sure I have seen it. We had a wonderful family walk on Christmas day. The weather was calm with just a dusting of some fluffy snowflakes, perfect.
Thanks Chris! I’ve only seen spikemoss in one spot so it doesn’t seem that common. I found it growing in hard packed soil.
There are some good guides to help with mosses but without a microscope you identify too many. I feel good about maybe 20 that I know of.
I’m glad you aren’t getting buried by snow this year!
As every beauty and wonder. Happy New Year! 🙂
Thank you Ben, and the same to you!
🙂
Thank you for all the interesting information and beautiful photos.
Thank you too Jane!
I’m never up for the sunrise so I doubly appreciate seeing this gorgeous pink beast of a sky. Thanks! Also, I’m getting more into lichens so will be looking through your past posts for some IDs in 2019.
Thank you. I couldn’t have fit more color in that sky if I had designed it myself.
I’m happy to have you look at any older posts but beware that I’m an amatuer when it comes to lichens. It’s difficult without a microscope but I think I have some of them identified correctly.
At least it’ll give me a start, even if not 100% correct. I do have guidebooks and FB groups too 🙂
I hope that you escape heavy snow for as long as possible though too much rain might not be a good bargain in exchange. I enjoyed your mosses and ferns.
Thank you, I agree. We’re supposed to have a lot of rain again Friday.
What a beautiful sky! We are now getting winter weather. Pretty, but cold and hazardous for travelers.
Thanks Montucky! We had that kind of weather in November but haven’t seen much since. I hope yours moves through quickly.
That is a beautiful sunrise, Allen.
Always love those mosses and ferns in winter.
Thank you Lavinia, me too!
That sunrise certainly is a gift. Also a gift not to get two feet of snow. 😉
Thanks Laurie. Yes, that was the best gift of all!
What a wonderful sunrise, lucky you.
Thank you, it was a beauty!