
This post will be, more than anything else, about some of the beautiful things in nature that you may have been passing by without noticing, like the immature Colorado blue spruce seed cones in this photo. The color only lasts for a week or two on these cones and science doesn’t see that the color serves any useful purpose. Since evergreens are wind pollinated they don’t need color to attract insects, so maybe it’s there simply to attract our attention. They certainly caught my eye.

There are beautiful things happening all around us right now and bud break is one of them. There isn’t much in the spring forest that is more beautiful than the appearance of new beech leaves, in my opinion. Delicate as angel wings they dangle from the branches in the state you see here for just a very short time.

Each spring the miracle of life unfolds all around you. Just stop for a moment and see. Don’t just look; see. There is a difference.

“Unfolding” is a good description for what happens. You can see it in this oak; bud break has happened and now all of the current years’ leaves and branches unfold themselves from what was a tiny bud. Actually uncurling might be an even better term; you can see how they spiral out of the bud.

They start out in a spiral when just out of the bud and you can watch that twist straighten out as they grow.

Once they’ve straightened themselves they begin to look more like what we’re used to seeing, but if we wait to catch up to them until they’ve reached this stage, we’ve missed a lot.

Fern fronds start life wound like a spring and this process has a name: circinate vernation. They are curled into what look like the carved head of a violin and the growing tip of the frond and all of its leaflets are within the coil. In this photo you can see this particular fern frond just beginning to unfurl. The scientific term describes the process; circinate means circling or spiraling and vernation comes from the word vernal, which means spring.

All the fiddleheads that make up a fern plant spring from a root which might be 100 years old in some cases. These were some of the darkest fiddleheads I’ve seen. Lady fern, I believe.

Once again you can see the uncoiling of all that will be a single fern frond. Everything that will become a frond possibly three feet tall comes from a coil that might be a half inch across.

Solomon’s seal is another plant that spirals out of the bud and you can see that in this plant. The spirals are all about leaf placement, so each leaf can get the optimum amount of sunshine. Scientifically it’s all about ratios and Fibonacci numbers and other things that I don’t have the time or the knowledge to talk about but I will say this: spirals work and they have for many millions of years. That’s why they’re found in everything from our inner ear to nautilus shells to spiral galaxies many light years across.

This mountain ash tree reminded me of the child’s game where you clench your fist and the child pries open your fingers one by one until they find that there is nothing there, but when the fist is a mountain ash bud there is something there; flower buds. The leaves open to reveal flower buds, already there.

Some native dogwoods have the same secret as mountain ash; the leaves unfurl to reveal flower buds.

Sugar maple buds are very beautiful with their pink bud scales and I’m always grateful to have seen them in spring when they’re at their best. And there is that spiral again.

Some maple leaves are quicker than others, even when they grow on the same branch.

I thought these new red maple leaves with the sun shining on them were very beautiful. The scene only lasted a few moments but that was enough. It stayed with me all day.

The fuzzy pink and orange bud scales of a striped maple pull back and what happens thereafter happens quickly, so you’ve got to be aware of what the plant is doing and what stage it is in. This is why, once bud break begins to happen, I check them regularly.

Because I wouldn’t want to miss the unusual strings of bell shaped flowers that appear on striped maples. Some trees have hundreds of them, and just the slightest breeze gets them all swaying back and forth up over your head.

Here was a Norway maple (Crimson king) with everything showing; open bud scales, new purple leaves, flowers. and even seeds. Invasive yes, but beautiful as well.

This is what poison ivy looks like when it first appears in spring; beautifully red. I know the plant well and would never intentionally touch it but I got into it when I was taking this photo and I just finally stopped itching. You can get the rash even from the leafless stems and that’s usually where I get it.

Poison ivy can be beautiful enough so you want to touch it, but if you do you’re liable to be sorry. I’m not super allergic to it but I get a rash from it every year and itch for a week or two. Luckily with me it stays on the body part that touched it and doesn’t spread, but I’ve known people who became covered by its rash and had to be hospitalized. Admire it from a distance.

I wondered and wondered what kind of tree this was until I finally noticed a tag on it. You could have knocked me over with a feather when I scanned the tag and learned that it was a dawn redwood, which is an ancient, once endangered species of tree from China. It was once so rare that in 1941 it was declared extinct but then two small groves were discovered in a valley in central China. Before that there were only fossils from the Mesozoic Era which were 150 million or more years old. So what is a beautiful dawn redwood doing in Keene, New Hampshire of all places? Seeds from living trees were distributed all over the world and now you can actually buy a dawn redwood from a nursery for your front yard if you’d like. Chances are you’ll be the only ones on the street to have one. Mankind does do things right every now and then.

So here we are in the middle of May, a flowery month if there ever was one, and we’ve seen all of this beauty without hardly seeing a single flower. I remember how surprised I was when I saw my first shagbark hickory bud opening, like the one in the above photo. I couldn’t believe that something as simple and everyday as a tree bud could be so beautiful. It helped open my eyes to the fact that all of life is beautiful, everywhere I looked and in any season of the year. I hope you’ll go out and see it for yourself if you are able. I wouldn’t miss it for the world.
If one really loves nature, one can find beauty everywhere. ~Vincent van Gogh
Thanks for stopping in. I hope all of your days will be beauty filled.
Dawn redwood – I will remember that one! That should be able to grow here if it can stand dry summers. New leaves unfolding are always very beautiful, and special. I’ve noted that when oak finally unfolds, summer is not far off.
The dawn redwood in the photo made it through a drought last summer so apparently they can take some dryness.
Spring is such a beautiful time, it’s fun greeting “old friends” after a long winter.
My neighbor has a Dawn Redwood planted on the parkway by his house. I asked him where he got it and he said the city planted it. The Dawn Redwood is on the list of trees that the city of Chicago plants. I’ve since noticed it elsewhere. The leaves are beautiful.
Thank you Jane, that’s interesting! I found this tree on the grounds of the local college. It’s a beautiful thing!
Those seed cones are beautiful.
I thought so too. I think they appear on most conifers in spring.
As always, you teach us to look around carefully. If we do, we are rewarded.
Thank you. I’ve tried to stay on that message for a long time now.
Bits and pieces of emerging beauty! Thanks for bringing them to our attention, Allen. My faves are the fiddleheads.
Thanks Ginny! I’ve always loved seeing fiddleheads in the spring too. There’s nothing else quite like them.
THANK YOU .. Beauty is everywhere in MOTHER Nature. TAKE YOUR TIME and observe ALL those little things instead of quickly moving by .. It’s in the “details” and you will be delighted by what you will discover, xoxo
You’re welcome Krys. That’s the message!
I love all these burgeoning leaves and stems, Allen. The maple flowers are lovely – the striped maple and the Norway maple!
Thank you Clare, I think so too. I hope you have plenty to see there as well!
It is improving, thank you, Allen. Both April and May have been unseasonably cold.
We’ve had cold too in May. I hope we’ll all warm up soon.
Really, this is one of your finest posts. I’ll open my eyes and really “see” when I go outside today…and every day from now on, I think. Some things just stick with you–like Annie Dillard’s description of a tree full of birds and she couldn’t see a single one (Pilgrim at Tinker Creek)!
Thanks very much Lyn, I’m glad you enjoyed it and I’m happy to hear that you’ll go and see for yourself. You won’t be sorry.
I can relate to what Annie Dillard said. That happens to me regularly!
Of particular interest to me this time was your description of how the Mountain Ash leaves unfold to reveal the flowers. I planted a Mountain Ash some years back with what looked like a twig from the NH Ext. Two years ago it produced its first flowers — just three umbrels. Last year it had 11. So I was disappointed to look out and see none at all this year. But then — magically! — the tree was suddenly covered in blossoms — too numerous to count without taking a photo and examining it on my computer, which I will do later today.
The leaves don’t cover the flowers, just the flower buds. I’m glad your seeing plenty of them this year. You must be a little warmer than we are because ours probably won’t bloom for another week or so. It’s going to be a great year for their orange fruit!
Thanks for this post. I normally go wandering on my property to view such unfoldings, but I just had a knee replacement and it’s not advisable to be walking on uneven ground just yet — not to mention donning all the anti-tick paraphernalia. I did happen to catch the striped maple fairy bell chains on a drive with a friend a couple of weeks ago. It was the first time I’d ever seen them! How enchanting they are!
I’m sorry to hear about your knee keeping you from enjoying the outdoors Pat, but I’ve heard and read that knee replacements are a wonderful thing.
I’m glad you were able to see the striped maple flowers from a car. They are really unusual and as you say, enchanting!
just beautiful!
Thank you, I thought so too!
Beautiful. Just beautiful beyond words I can find, from the seed cones to the sugar maple bud, to the striped maple flowers, to the shagbark hickory bud and everything in between. Thank you for the perfectly timed bud break tour around Keene.
I’m glad you Liked it Dave. Spring is a very beautiful time of year, even without all the flowers.
nobody is better than you at drawing people’s attention to the unnoticed beautiful things that nature provides. Thank you.
You’re welcome Susan. I hope more people will see them.