Things I’ve Seen
May 29, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

A cool damp spring like the one we’ve had can make New Englanders out of sorts sometimes and downright grumpy at other times, but a snowstorm in May can seem like a real slap in the face. Just as we were raking all the leaves we couldn’t get raked last fall because of November snows, along comes more snow on May 14th. Luckily this time we only saw about an inch but one year we saw about a foot of snow fall after the leaves had come out on the trees, and it caused an unbelievable amount of tree damage. I was still picking up fallen branches in July.

Luckily most of the leaves appeared after the snow had melted, so it was little bother.

Of course I watched the leaves appear. Beech leaves especially, are very beautiful in the spring. They look like little angel wings.

This photo shows how bud break progresses on a beech tree. Many people think one leaf comes out of each beech bud but in fact all of the current year’s growth for that branch is contained in a single bud. Here you can see at least 4 leaves coming from this bud. The branch will grow and elongate so the leaves are separated just enough so one doesn’t block the sunlight falling on another; just one of the many miracles of nature that so many never see.

A new beech leaf retains its silvery hairs for just a very short time so you have to watch closely to catch it. I try not to offer much advice to the readers of this blog but I know that what works for me might work for others so as I have said before; try to find joy in the simple things in life, because if you do joy will follow you wherever you go. When you find yourself passing up just about anything else to watch the unfurling of a leaf or to sit beside a giggling stream you’ll know you are there. And you’ll want to stay.

Beech isn’t the only tree growing leaves in spring of course. Oak leaves usually start life in some color other than green like red or purple, but this is the first time I’ve ever seen them wearing white.

Maple trees also have leaves that open to something other than green; usually red or orange if it’s a red maple (Acer rubrum.) If it’s cold or cloudy as the new leaves emerge they’ll stay in their non green state but sunlight and warmth will eventually coax the tree into producing chlorophyll and they green up quickly so they can start photosynthesizing and making food.

Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) can be beautiful in the spring; beautiful enough so you want to touch it, but if you do you’ll be sorry. I know the plant well and would never intentionally touch it but I got into it somehow and I’ve been itching for a week. You can get the rash even from the leafless stems and that’s usually where I get it.

There are a few evergreen trees in a local park that produce beautiful purple cones in spring and this is one of them. It’s a spruce tree but I don’t know its name. It’s needles are very stiff and sharp and I actually drove one of them into my finger when I was trying to get this photo.

Many plant parts are purple in spring, including flowers like those on what I believe is sweet vernal grass (Anthoxanthum odoratum.) Grasses can be very beautiful and I hope everyone reading this walks a little slower and looks a little closer so they can see them.

I thought these new tall meadow rue leaves (Thalictrum pubescens) edged in purple were very pretty. This is a fast growing plant which will tower over my head and be blooming on the fourth of July with little orange tipped white flowers that look like bombs bursting in air.

Right after I told Jerry at the Quiet Solo Pursuits blog that I hadn’t seen any butterflies I started seeing them, and that’s the way this blogging thing always seems to work. I don’t dare tell you it will be sunny tomorrow because if I did it would surely rain. Anyhow, this eastern swallowtail landed in a bare spot in a lawn I was standing on and I noticed that it had a large piece of its left wing missing. It was a close call because whatever took its wing just barely missed its body. I’m guessing a bird got it.
By the way, you can find Jerry’s blog over there on the right in the “favorite links” section and you should, because it’s a great nature blog that I’ve enjoyed for many years.

An ant was on a dandelion blossom but when I went to take its photo it crawled off onto a nearby leaf. I never knew they were so hairy.

This swamp is where I find many of the spring ephemeral flowers that you see on this blog. Goldthread, trillium, bloodroot, wild ginger, dwarf ginseng and others grow here. Great blue herons nest here and many types of ducks visit, but they’re very wary and almost impossible to get a good shot of.

Many ferns also grow around the swamp in the previous photo. This cinnamon fern (Osmundastrum cinnamomeum) was unfurling beautifully one recent day. It’s hard to believe this little thing will be waist high in just a short time.

I find chanterelle wax cap mushrooms (Hygrocybe cantharellus) growing in clusters on well-rotted logs, but I don’t think I’ve ever found them in May. This is a pretty little orange mushroom with a cap that might get as big as a nickel, but that’s probably stretching it. These mushrooms show themselves for quite a long time and I often still see them in September.

Fuzzy foot mushrooms (Xeromphalina campanella) are easy to confuse with chanterelle wax caps but they have a dense tuft of orange brown hairs at the base of the stem and these mushrooms didn’t have that. Chanterelle wax caps have pale yellow gills that run down the stem. They also have occasional short gills, which means they stop short of the stem. Both features can be seen in this photo.

The skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus) swamp is green with new leaves. Many thousands of plants grow here as they have for who knows how many hundreds or even thousands of years.

I love the spring green of the forest floor seen here. It’s hard to tell but the green comes from many thousands of wildflowers, including sessile leaved bellworts (Uvularia sessilifolia.) This forest along the Ashuelot river is where I come to find them each spring.

I also visit the Ashuelot River to watch the buds of shagbark hickories (Carya ovata) break each spring. They’re one of the most beautiful things seen in a New England forest in spring in my opinion, and I wouldn’t miss their opening. I’ve always thought this tree liked lowlands but I recently saw them growing high on a hillside in a hardwood forest.

Indescribable, endless beauty and deep, immense joy. These are what nature offers to those willing to receive them, and all it costs is a little time. I hope you’ll take that time, if you can.
I meant to do my work today, but a brown bird sang in the apple tree, and a butterfly flitted across the field, and all the leaves were calling. ~Richard le Gallienn
Thanks for coming by.
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Posted in Nature, Scenery / Landscapes, Things I've Seen | Tagged American Beech Bud Break, Ant, Ashuelot River, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Chanterelle Waxcap Mushrooms, Cinnamon Fern, Eastern Swallowtail, Keene, May Snow, Mushrooms, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, New maple Leaves, NH, Oak Bud Break, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Poison Ivy, Shagbark Hickory Bud Break, Skunk Cabbage Swamp, Spring, Spruce Cones, Swamp Wildflwers, Swanzey New Hampshire, Sweet Vernal Grass, Tall Meadow Rue | 34 Comments
That purple cone is fantastic. Great captures of the colorful new foliage.
Thanks!
Thanks for the shout out!
You’re having the same type of up and down spring that we’ve had here in Michigan, and at least here, everything seems to be running late because of that. I loved the images of the various leaves opening, I guess great minds do think alike, I’ve been shooting a lot of them also this spring. I missed the shagbark hickory though, and that’s one of my favorites so it was great to see them here.
As wet as it’s been here, I’ve seen very few mushrooms, maybe it’s been to cool for them? But I did enjoy seeing the chanterelle wax cap mushrooms in this post.
You’re welcome Jerry. I hope everyone went and gave you a read.
Yes, this weather is downright unpredictable. Today was supposed to be wall to wall sunshine and now it’s drizzling.
But it is good for plants! I’m glad you’re seeing plenty of new leaves. They can be very beautiful. There are spring, summer and fall mushrooms but most appear in fall. I don’t know that the weather has much to do with it, unless there’s a drought. They do need moisture.
We’re sure not having a drought here, all of the Great Lakes have hit record high marks for the month of May due to the excess rain we’ve had. And, it’s getting hard for me to go to the nature preserves that I visit the most, large portions of them are under water now.
I hope your rain stops soon Jerry. Since your weather is usually our weather our skies might brighten too.
I’m sorry to hear about the flooding especially. I couldn’t believe it this morning when the weatherman said rainfall was 3.5 inches below normal in the state capital! He said we’ve had clouds and drizzle but no downpours. Since I work outside, I could have argued that point!
If nothing else, we’ll be seeing plenty of mushrooms later on!
A quote for the ages: “Indescribable, endless beauty and deep, immense joy. These are what nature offers to those willing to receive them, and all it costs is a little time.”
Thank you Cynthia. That’s what nature does for me!
Very nice to see all of these through your lens!
Thanks Montucky!
The second photo – woods, green leaves, I really liked that. The snow is easy to forget with all the green leaves everywhere. Thanks for sharing your walk. I enjoyed each part of it!
Thanks Chris! Me too, I’m sick of white!
I’m glad I’m not the only one enchanted by shagbark hickories in the spring. My husband had the foresight years ago to plant one outside our front window, and it’s now mature and thriving. Seeing those little leaf buds seem to burst open to unfurl the leaves is a treat. I wasn’t sure how the tree would survive last year’s onslaught of squirrels. Every single hickory nut was stripped off the tree by the end of September. Didn’t bother the tree, apparently!
Thank you Ellen. There are few bud openings more exciting than shagbark hickory!
I don’t think your squirrels will harm your tree but it doesn’t sound like future generations have much of a chance. I find intact nuts occasionally but not very often!
A very fine selection of photographs combined with some sound advice which I will do my best to follow….but I keep getting distracted by politics.
I try to stay away from them!
I do so enjoy your bud-break shots! I always seem to just miss bud break; either too early or too late! I also enjoyed seeing the hairy ant, the unfurling fern and the beautiful purple spruce cone.
Thank you Clare. I’ve learned to watch for certain buds by watching what other plants are doing. If I see purple trillium blooming for instance, I know it’s time to start looking at beech buds. It might help you too, but I’m not sure what plants are doing there. Bud break is certainly worth watching for though!
Thanks, Allen – I’ll keep that in mind for next year.
No snow in central Maine! Glad it melted.
Me too Laurie!
More great snaps! Especially the ant.
Thank you Ben. I think that was the easiest photo here.!
The focus/clarity here is outstanding.
Thanks! The ant stood still for a second.
And the quality of the technology had its part too of course. 🙂
Yes. I have a good camera!
I believe so. 🙂
Beautiful photos, even of the dreaded poison ivy, and good information!
An old American Indian cure, folks:
If you get poison ivy or poison oak, grind some elderberry leaves into a poultice and apply. The rash should be gone in 3 days. Otherwise expect 3 weeks of misery, itching and scratching.
If you’re on the West Coast, manzanita offers the same cure. You can find elderberry there too.
These plant cures worked for me every time! 🐶
On Wed, May 29, 2019, 4:11 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions wrote:
> New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” A cool damp spring like the one > we’ve had can make New Englanders out of sorts sometimes and downright > grumpy at other times, but a snowstorm in May can seem like a real slap in > the face. Just as we were raking all the leaves we couldn’t get raked last > ” >
Thank you Ron, I haven’t heard about using those plants for poison ivy. I’ve used orange jewelweed (Impatiens capensis) though, and it does work.
Thanks very much for the tips!
Oh my, so sorry about the poison ivy! Been there, done that, not fun! That new purple cone is so lovely, Allen, as are the emerging beech leaves. You just love everything nature, huh? It’s kinda like when someone asks me my favorite flower, and I say, “the one that’s blooming right now”. Impossible to choose. So much beauty.
Thank you Ginny. Luckily poison ivy rash doesn’t seem to spread on me, but it does itch!
I can’t think of much about nature that I don’t love about nature, except maybe meeting up with a bear. But even that is fascinating.
I agree with your thoughts on your favorite flower. It’s impossible to choose just one!
The beech leaves were indeed very pretty and I loved your quote.
Thank you Susan. I wait impatiently all winter to see those beech leaves.