Things I’ve Seen
November 13, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

November on average is the cloudiest month, but we’ve seen quite a lot of sunshine so far. Unfortunately the sunshine hasn’t warmed us up much and we’ve had a string of several cold days and below freezing (32º F) nights. This week we’re to see January type cold that could break records that have stood for 150 years. Historically the colder the November the snowier the winter, but we’ll see. In spite of all the cold this dandelion struggled to come into full bloom.

And this chicory blossom did the same. I was very surprised to see it.

We’re at the stage where the grass is coated by frost overnight but then it melts off as soon as the sunlight reaches it.

Leaves that have gone unraked get covered by frost and then become wet when it melts off.

Ice baubles formed in the Ashuelot River one cold night.

The waves in the river splash up on twigs or anything else that the water touches and it freezes there in the cold air. Much like dipping a candle in molten wax the waves splash again and again and ice baubles like the one in this photo form. It was about an inch across but I’ve seen them get bigger. Just as a side note: that small starburst over on the right hasn’t been added. This is just the way it came out of the camera. The ice is very clear and will act as a prism in the right light.

There was hoar frost on the fallen pine needles on the river bank. Hoarfrost grows whenever it’s cold and there is a source of water vapor nearby. When it is below freezing the water vapor from unfrozen rivers and streams often condenses on the plants and even trees all along their banks and covers them in hoarfrost. It looks so very delicate that I often have to remind myself to breathe while I’m taking its photo. One touch of a warm finger, a ray of sunshine, or a warm breath and they’re gone.

I’m guessing there was plenty of water vapor coming from the river. The river wasn’t really raging but I did get to practice my wave catching skills on this day. At a certain time of morning the sun hits the river just right for a wave photo at this spot and the colors are ofen very beautiful. I love the how the colors of the water change as the light changes. The river taught me that if you want blue water in your photo you should have the sun more or less behind you, and it taught me that right in this very spot.

This photo changed my mind about what I thought were oyster mushrooms because of the brownish cast I saw, which I couldn’t see in person. They might have been flat creps (Crepidotus applanatus,) which start out white and then shade to brown. Flat creps resemble oyster mushrooms but without a microscope to study the spores with it’s hard to be sure. I could have done a spore print; crepidotus species have brown spore prints and oysters have a white to lilac spore print, but I didn’t bring one home.

I’ve said a lot about turkey tail fungi (Trametes versicolor) over the years, including how they are showing value in cancer research and how they have been used medicinally by the Chinese, Japanese, and Native Americans for thousands of years, but I keep coming back to their multitude of color combinations and their beauty. For me, that’s enough to keep me interested.

I had been looking for scarlet elf cup fungi (Sarcoscypha coccinea) for a very long time and then a friend showed me a photo of something growing in the gravel of his driveway and I thought I’d found them. I went there and took the photos that you see here, shocked that they grew where they were, with just sand and gravel around them. That’s especially surprising when you consider that this fugus typically grows on moist, rotting branches. I would have guessed that there might be a branch or root buried under the gravel but they grew in groups over a wide area, so that theory didn’t work. That fact leads me to believe that they are instead the orange peel fungus (Aleuria aurantia.) It likes to grow in clay soil or disturbed ground, often in landscaped areas.

The clincher is, my color finding software sees shades of orange, but no scarlet. I was surprised by how small they were. Some were as big as a penny at about 3/4 of an inch, but a pea would have nestled perfectly in this example. Orange peel fungi get their common name from the way they look like orange peels strewn on the ground.

I always look for juniper berries at this time of year because I love that shade of blue. A waxy coating called bloom reflects the light in a way that makes them that color. I always wonder how many gin drinkers know that the unique flavor in their drink comes from this plant’s fruits. Though they’re called berries, botanically speaking juniper fruits are actually fleshy seed cones. Unripe green berries are used to flavor gin and the ripe, deep purple-black berries are the only part of a conifer known to be used as a spice, often used on game like venison, moose and bear meat. Birds also love them.

The golden sunlight on the blueberry bushes in the foreground was lighting up the trees on the far side of Half Moon Pond in the same way and it was beautiful, but I wasn’t fast enough to catch it. It disappeared in just seconds and before I could turn my camera on it was gone.

Here is that same golden light caught in the tops of these bare trees. Sometimes I see it in the morning on my way to work and it’s very beautiful. On this morning I had to stop and watch.

I like lake sedge (Carex lacustris) because of the way it seems to flow like the waves of the pond and lake shores it grows on. It is really the wind and its own weak stems that make it bend so, but I think it makes a pretty display. Lake sedge is native to Canada and the northern U.S. and can at times be found growing in water. Waterfowl and songbirds eat its seeds. Even when it isn’t blowing in the wind it seems to have movement.

Henry David Thoreau said about polypody fern (Polypodium virginianum) “Fresh and cheerful communities of the polypody form a lustrous mantle over rocky surfaces in the early spring.” I would add that, since they are tough evergreen ferns they are there in the winter too, and that’s what cheers me most about them. They are also called rock cap fern or rock polypody because they love to grow on top of rocks, as the above photo shows. There were hundreds of them on a large boulder.

Turn over a polypody fern leaf and you’re apt to see tiny mounds called sori, which are made up of clusters of sporangia (receptacles in which spores are formed) and are naked, meaning they lack the protective cap (indusium) that is found on many fern sori.

Once they ripen polypody fern sori are very pretty and look like tiny baskets of flowers; in this case yellow and orange flowers. They always make me wonder why so many ferns, lichens, fungi and mosses produce spores in winter. There must be some benefit but I’ve never been able to find out what it is.

Partridgeberry (Mitchella repens) is one of the lowest growing evergreen plants on the forest floor, hardly growing more than 3 or 4 inches high. Plants have a vining habit but do not climb. Instead they form dense mats by spreading their trailing stems out to about a foot from the crown. Roots will often form at leaf nodes along the stems and start new plants. The 4 petaled, pinkish, fringed, fragrant, half inch long flowers appear in June and July. The berries shown here will remain on the plant for long periods unless eaten, and can often still be found the following spring. The berries are edible, but fairly tasteless and eaten mostly by birds. If I was going to spend my time in the forest looking for small red berries to feed on I’d be looking for American wintergreen, (teaberry) which are delicious.

Partridgeberry flowers always appear in twos as twins fused at the base. Once pollinated, the ovaries of these flowers will join and form one berry with 8 seeds. Partridgeberry plants can always be easily identified by the two indentations on the berries that show where the flowers were. Other names for this plant include twinberry and two-eyed berry. I like the hand hammered look of the leaves.

A big beech tree fell where I work and damaged one of the buildings, so it had to be cut up. When we cut it down to the stump we found it was spalted, and spalted wood is evidence of fungal damage. Sometimes woods affected by fungi can become very desirable to woodworkers, and spalted wood is one of them. Spalting is essentially any form of wood coloration caused by fungi but there are 3 major types; pigmentation, white rot and zone lines. Sometimes all 3 can be present as they are on the end grain of the beech stump in the above photo. Pigmentation is the blue gray color, which is probably caused by bluestain or sapstain. The white rot is in the areas that look soft or pulpy, and the zone lines are the dark, narrow lines found radiating randomly throughout the log. Zone lines often form where 2 or more types of fungi meet.

There is beauty everywhere in this world, even in an old tree stump. The question is, will we let ourselves first be drawn into it and then actively seek it out or will we ignore it? I choose to seek it out, and now I see it wherever I go.
Life can be rich and rewarding and full of beauty, if a person would only pause to look and to listen. ~Rod Serling
Thanks for coming by.
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Posted in Nature, Things I've Seen | Tagged American Beech Spalting, Ashuelot River, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Chicory Blossom, Dandelion Blossom, Flat Crep Mushroom, Frosted Grass, Frosted Leaves, Half Moon Pond, Hancock New Hampshire, Hoar Frost, Ice Baubles, Juniper Berries, Keene, Lake Sedge, Mushrooms, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Orange Peel Fungus, Partridge Berries, Polypody Fern Sori, Spalted Wood, Summer Wildflowers, Swanzey New Hampshire, Turkey Tail Fungus, Wild Mushrooms | 28 Comments
I am catching up with your blog here. These are not only beautiful photos, but beautiful writing as well, Allen. It is always an enjoyable education stopping by here.
Thank you Lavinia, it’s good to hear from you again.
You’ve captured a beautiful wave, Allen! The ice baubles are pretty and I am fascinated by the strange partridge berry!
Thank you Clare. Those waves aren’t easy!
Partridge berries are unusual but are quite common here. I see them just about everywhere I go.
It’s been very cold here this week so I expect to see lots of ice baubles tomorrow!
The Juniper berries are quite beautiful, I think, but it’s too bad the tree doesn’t provide more contrast to show them off better.
I know what you mean. They’re actually hard to find.
I agree with your color finder. Scarlet elf cups would be quite a bit redder than your example.
You had a selection of very good pictures even by your standards in this post.
Thank you.
The fungi looked very red to me at first. I know you see them regularly so I’m glad to have you confirm the software’s opinion.
I like the ice baubles too. I’ve never seen them before.
Thank you. They form along the river banks here quite regularly but only before the river ices over. Once the river starts to freeze they disappear.
I always feel sorry for the people who don’t ‘see’ nature, much less any of the exquisite details! You always give us the details, both in words and visually. Thanks, Allen!
You’re welcome Ginny. I hope this blog helps people see these things for themselves!
Loved all the shots but especially the baubles.
Thank you, I’m sure there will be more of those!
You hit a couple of particularly resonant notes for me with this one. I love the flavor of gin and am grateful for the juniper berry that it derives from and I have a ukulele that I chose because it was made from a beautiful patterned spalted maple. I always appreciate your sharing your love of the natural world with us, even more so in the colder months.
Thanks very much. I’ve seen just a few things made from spalted wood. It really is beautiful!
The colder months are good for seeing the smaller things that are usually hidden behind all that foliage. I’m glad you like seeing them.
Beauty and knowledge sharing everywhere you and your camera go, Allen!
Brace yourself for a second cold and snowy winter in a row and plan accordingly. Grain crops have failed in the N.A. Plains and Prairies. We appear to have entered a Grand Solar Minimum, marked by a quiet sun and less protection from ionizing cosmic rays. The result is more cloud condensation nuclei, cold, and precipitation globally. The last one, the Little Ice Age, ended about 1850.
On Wed, Nov 13, 2019, 6:12 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” November on average is the > cloudiest month, but we’ve seen quite a lot of sunshine so far. > Unfortunately the sunshine hasn’t warmed us up much and we’ve had a string > of several cold days and below freezing (32º F) nights. This week we’re to > see January ” >
Thank you Ron. I doubt you’re wrong very often but I certainly hope you’re wrong about this!
Indeed, I want to be wrong about everything that is happening, but I don’t think the PTB mind if they are. It’s getting them results.
Summers have seemed to be getting hotter to me, enough so I’ve wondered about people moving north, so your travel bereau might have to try harder to convince New Englanders to move south.
On the other side of the coin, last winter was the first time in over 25 years that I haven’t had to shovel my roof. We didn’t get much snow at all and what we did get melted quickly.
But what all of that really means, I don’t know.
Anecdotal evidence can be pretty persuasive at times until it is compared to the historical record: https://youtu.be/St6E1cF00GA
I’m guessing that piece comes from the coal, gas and oil industry, or maybe I misunderstood.
I can’t deny what I see and I see a lot less snow over the last few winters and record breaking heat in New Hampshire summers. I spend virtually all of my waking hours outside year around, so I’m sure I’m not imagining it.
Your comment requires a response:
The historical data for the nation and globe presented by Tony Heller (Steve Goddard) is taken ultimately from the official scientific records of government agencies and universities. It would be easy for me or anyone to infer what might be happening nationally or globally based on observations in a single location, such as your part of NH.
The truth is that the hottest periods in U.S. history occurred between 1940 and the start of record-keeping in the 1880s (the U.S. has the longest and best records). But, the atmosphere began cooling after 1940 up until the late 1970s–so much that the most prominent climate scientists were quoted by the media as warning that “we could be entering a new Ice Age.”
But, then the average global temperature began a 20 year warming phase that lasted until 1998, when it began leveling off and actually cooling sharply over the past two winters. This made no sense and it flew in the face of all the “mainstream” climate models, which were predicting “rising oceans, flooded cities, completely melted ice caps, unbearable heat, droughts, and unprecedented extreme weather events.” None of this has happened. And, nothing has been more extreme than before the 1940s or even the 50s.
CO2, a trace gas in the atmosphere, was at a relatively low level before WW II, yet that period saw the hottest temperatures on record (hotter than any recently) and glaciers rapidly melting. 90% of CO2’s increase in ppm has occurred since WW II, so if IT is the cause of global warming we should be toast by now.
But we are not. While CO2 continues its steady rise–it is now 407 ppm–the global temperature has suffered otherwise inexplicable cold and warm periods since WW II. And, in prior geologic epochs CO2 has been 10x higher, even during glacial advances (see: https://youtu.be/dSVkSCN_hLQ )
Seventy percent of the earth’s surface is ocean. It takes in CO2 when it is cold and gives it off when it is hot. The Vostok Anarctica ice cores, which cover an 800,000 year period, initially revealed temperature and CO2 levels rising and falling seemingly in lockstep. But the ice cores were examined more closely by the same scientists 5 years later. It revealed that the CO2 rises FOLLOWED the temperature rises by a average of 800 years! Still, Gore published his book claiming the opposite.
What this means, Allen, is that something was cyclically heating the oceans and causing them to subsequently outgas CO2.
That something can only be the sun. The oceans warm during periods in which the sun has a high number of sunspots and geomagnetic activity. Based on what we have learned from cosmoclimatology in the past 20 years, this means more geomagnetic shielding of the earth and, thus, fewer cosmic rays that form cooling cloud cover. To get up-to-date, see: https://youtu.be/8dDjmSkpA3Y
We are in a quiet sun period now, whereas for most of the 20th century the sun was very active. A quieter sun means colder, snowier, and rainier weather globally.
Despite these facts, the wealthy, very undemocratic “we know what’s best for you” PTB who control governments, schools, and the media are doubling down on their claims and using their billions of dollars of government and NGO grant money as leverage to stack the climate science deck and snuff out dissenting voices. What the fossil fuel industry contributes to the debate in comparison is miniscule, and unlike the NWO globalists it has no obsessive ideological agenda.
Tony Heller is not funded by and does not represent the coal, oil, and gas industry. This is his background: https://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/who-is-steven-goddard/
Thank you Ron, you’ve given me a lot to digest and digest it I will. I should say that I’ve nevr climbed on the climate change bandwagon and I’ve never read Mr. Gore’s book. I tend to believe what I see and sense rather than what someone says I should believe, so I’ve never been a rabid advocate of shutting down power plants and all of that.
But what I see and sense is that summers are indeed getting hotter and winters are getting less and less snowier and that’s because, I found after a little reasearch, that New Hampshire is a bit of an anomaly, and the science backs up what I’ve been suspecting. This link will explain:. https://www.nhpr.org/post/even-nhs-cold-snaps-are-getting-warmer-research-says#stream/0
Climate Central is a political, not a research organization. See: https://junkscience.com/2012/03/pbs-newshour-climate-central-a-research-organization-sorry-no-they-advocate-solving-man-caused-global-warming/
and: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/12/01/friday-funny-climate-centrals-scare-graph-excuse-the-oceans-ate-the-warming/
The study cited, through the “urban heat island” effect, will of course show increasing heat in most cities given that ground weather stations in many cases have been swallowed up by asphalt, concrete, buildings, airports, and auto traffic and will naturally read higher temperatures in time. The most reliable measurements of earth’s surface temperatures come from satellites over the past 40 years.
Note that in CC’s article they disingenuously start their data summary in 1970 which, as I explained to you, was near the tail end of the inexplicable post WW II cold period of falling temperatures when the most prominent climate scientists were suggesting our possible entry into a “new Ice Age.” And, as I explained to you also, was the start of a 20 year warm period of rising temperatures that ended in 1998 and saw the return of cooler temperatures for the next 20 years to the present day.
This simply should not be happening with the continuous rise in CO2, particularly sharp since WW II.
We should all be frying by now according to ALL of the “mainstream” climate disaster models, which began expiring 10 years ago and have been proven egregiously wrong in every case. Garbage in, garbage out, but they’re still doubling down because they own the media and they can make a lie the truth by repeating it often enough.
So something else is going on and that something is the sun and its many cycles. IT drives our climate, not CO2, which is a mere 4% of the greenhouse gases, and as the PPMs increase plants take it up and thrive on it, as proved by the greening of deserts since WW II.
I strongly suggest you watch the Henrik Svensmark video until you understand the relationship between sunspots, cosmic rays, and the amount of cooling cloud cover on earth. If you have a tough time understanding what he has demonstrated through his review of historical data and scientific experiments, as confirmed by others since then, I will be glad to try to answer any questions you might have. Here is the link again to one of his best talks for the educated layman: https://youtu.be/8dDjmSkpA3Y
If you want to understand the political origin of the global warming/climate change scare being force-fed to the world, I suggest you watch this landmark speech by the Hon. Ann Bressington, Australian MP: https://youtu.be/sES6_OXPwOU
If there’s one thing I’ve learned over the years it’s to listen to gut instinct and gut instinct told me there was something very wrong about all of this, so I looked up “Steven Goddard,” aka “Tony Heller.” What I found, in a nutshell, was this: “Steven Goddard (not his real name) is probably one of the worst sources of information on climate change available on the internet.” Apparently, according to several site I visited, this man has been spreading misinformation about our climate for some time now.
Bob Dylan said “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows” and I agree, so I’ll just stick with what I see and sense. My gut instintinct tells me that if I cared enough to do some reasearch I’d find a path straight from this person to a major polluter.
Loved your clever wave photograph and the patterns on the tree stump.
Thank you Susan, I’m glad you liked them.