
This week the temperature reached nearly 60 degrees on three or four days and we also had some rain, and this meant that most of the snow left in a hurry. The ice on vernal pools is melting and I was happy to see this, because places like these is where many spring peeper frogs will sing from. Much life depends on these pools; not only frogs but at least three different salamanders and fairy shrimp rely on them. They also ease the burden of finding a water source for many other animals and birds. They play a very important role in the life of the forest in spring and early summer but by August almost all of them will have dried up.

For those who have never seen one, this is a spring peeper. It is a small tree frog which might reach an inch and a half long on a good day, but its small size doesn’t mean it doesn’t have powerful lungs. Standing beside a pond full of them singing on an April evening can be almost deafening. The easiest way to identify them, if you can even find one in all the leaf litter, is by the X on its back. Some call it a cross but it looks more like an X to me. They can be tan, brown, green, or gray and have round pads on the ends of their fingers and toes. If you’d like to hear them there are videos of them on You Tube, some less than a minute long. They should start singing here any day now.

I looked at red maple buds one day and they hadn’t changed much, but then I went back two days later and saw trees full of flowers. These are male (staminate) flowers, many already laden with pollen.

The sticky red maple female (pistilate) flowers are ready for pollen. It really is amazing how fast this happens. You have to look at them every day to catch the various stages.

Part of my days have included looking at hazelnut buds and I must have looked at hundreds before I found this one in bloom. Each tiny red filament coming out of the bud is a female flower and on this day they were radiant and glowing with an inner light. If everything goes well each tiny flower will become a hazelnut.

For those who haven’t seen hazelnut flowers, here is a photo from a few years ago with a paperclip for scale. They are some of the smallest flowers that I try to photograph and they can be a real challenge.

One very windy day I went to try to get a photo of some male hazelnut catkins and this is the so-so result. It’s not a great shot but it shows that the catkins have loosened up and lost their winter stiffness, and will now move in the wind. This is important, because hazelnuts are wind pollinated. Though the catkins, which are just long strings of male flowers, aren’t releasing pollen yet it won’t be long now. This is what the sticky red female flowers in the previous shot are waiting for.

Alder catkins have started to open up and they’re beautiful as always. All the greenish parts seen here are male flower buds just starting to peek out from under the tiny red /purple bud scales. They are very beautiful the way they sparkle and shine as the wind moves them. They make the bushes look as if someone had strung jewels or lights on them. I haven’t seen any of the very tiny female flowers yet but with this happening it won’t be long.

The willows are filled with furry gray catkins But I haven’t seen any of their yellow flowers yet.

The skunk cabbages, once more released from their cover of snow, sit and wait patiently in their swamp, still leafless. Soon they will hear a signal only they can hear and this swamp will erupt with big green leaves.

A dandelion flower seemed as bright as the sun after a string of cloudy days. Botanically speaking this is a flower head made up of many small ray florets. Each yellow strap shaped petal is actually five petals fused into one, and the five notches at their ends show that. You can see the many tiny ram’s horn shaped stigmas loaded with pollen in this shot. On a dandelion blossom the stigma comes out of a tiny tube formed by the anthers. This plant is calling loudly to the bees.

But the bees are rolling around drunkenly in the crocus blossoms, spilling pollen grains all over their petals. What a life.

The bees didn’t seem to care for these pale yellow crocuses.

Hellebores are also showing their big buds. Interestingly on these plants the buds are prettier than the sickly looking greenish white flowers. That’s just my opinion but there are a lot of them in this city park, as if a nursery donated all the hellebores that didn’t sell. I’m not sure who would buy a dozen or so plants with that color flower and then scatter them here and there.

I was surprised to see scilla up and blooming already at the local college. The plants in my own yard aren’t even showing yet.

These are pretty little flowers but getting a shot looking into one can be challenging. I had to gently bend the stem back with one hand and take this photo with the other. I’m often glad that cameras have built in image stabilization these days.

The cress is flowering madly and if all those flowers are allowed to go to seed, it will do so for years to come.

Cornellian cherries often remind me of a child dipping their toes in the water to decide if they want to go in swimming or not. This bush has been slowly opening its buds and dipping its toes for weeks now so I hope it decides to bloom soon.

The beautiful plum colored reticulated irises are in bloom. At one time the only way to get this color to dye with was by boiling a certain kind of snail for three days, Is it any wonder that the color was reserved for royalty? They were the only ones who could afford it.

A robin wanted to show me that the ground had fully thawed so it hopped my way and pulled out a worm. I’ve seen this countless times but this is the first photo I’ve gotten of it. Mr. Robin had better eat his fill because it won’t be long before he has several more mouths to feed. The trees are filled with female birds that squawk warning cries when you get too close, so I assume they’re nesting.
Listen, can you hear it? Spring’s sweet cantata. The strains of grass pushing through the snow. The song of buds swelling on the vine. The tender timpani of a baby robin’s heart. Spring!
~Diane Frolov
Thanks for coming by.
Hi, thanks for you excellent photos and thoughtful words, and especially thanks for the spring peeper pic! i hear them all the time, but never see them!
You’re welcome, and thank you. Spring peepers are small but they can jump quite a distance and they blend in well with the forest litter. I usually see just a bit of movement out of the corner of my eye, and that’s how I’ve found them. Having taken only two or three photos of them in 50 years I can’t say my method is the best one.
A beautiful shot of the scilla. I will have to up my game. The dandelion is very good too.
Thank you. I don’t think you have to up it much from what I’ve seen.
I am still struggling to get good close ups with my new camera.
When my Olympus has trouble finding the subject I point it at the back of my hand a press the shutter button half way. Then, with the button still half way down, I point it at the subject and take the shot. This is usually enough to “train” the camera to see the subject. I think the root cause is low light. These cameras struggle in low light so boosting the ISO can help as well.
Spring is coming along nicely in your area! She is bucking and snorting her way into western Oregon, trying very hard to shake winter off her back. The tree frogs started up here in late January and have been singing the ancient song of their people even on some of the warmer mixed rain, snow and sleet filled nights now. I was out there one night listening to them calling down in the low swampy area, and I thought to myself that to stand among them in such numbers would be deafening. They make a wall of sound, one of Nature’s most beautiful symphonies.
I have a feeling I might hear the peepers tonight, after 3 or 4 warm days. Maybe not though. There is still a lot of snow in the woods.
Beautiful photos!
Thanks!
I’m really enjoying all the colors, from the luminous red of the hazelnut flowers to the gentle blue of the scilla. And the contrast of the green and plum colored reticulated irises is a treat for the eyes, as is the warm yellow of the dandelion.
Thanks Dave. Soon there will be all those colors in one flower bed, and that’s when I’ll try those color correcting glasses.
Such a delightful post! Love the photos and descriptions of catkins of all kinds. Thanks so much
You’re welcome Maureen. This is the time of year to see catkins!
It is so nice to see things starting to flower. The dandelion is beautiful, a burst of sunshine. And the Spring Peeper, I’m not sure I ever saw a picture of one! Thanks.
It sure is, Chris. It’s about time!
The only way that I’ve seen spring peepers is by seeing them jump out of the corner of my eye. Once you’ve seen one jump you can follow it but they can jump pretty far and they don’t sit still long if they know you’re there, so you’ve got to be quick on the shutter button. I’m looking forward to hearing them again.
That’s one sassy looking robin, Allen. Good capture! Sweet shot of the iris reticulata, too.
The gardener in me is at odds. Half is delighted with several days of gentle spring rains, the other half is inside sulking because I can’t be outside playing in the garden. Sigh. So today I’ve been trying to organize my outrageous seed stash. Do you save seeds?
Isn’t the blue pollen on the scilla just awesome?? It amazes me every year. Your pic reminds me to wander the yard looking for cress again as it pays to be vigilant.
The spring peeper is such a cutie, that’s a good pic. I’ve only seen brown ones. I love how hyper vigilant they are. They can all be peeping their little hearts out but if you make a noise, they are all instantly silent, simultaneously.
I imagine you’ll see lots of advancing spring over the upcoming week. Enjoy!
Hi Ginny! I think that robin just wanted its photo taken. It was very obliging for a bird. Sometimes they hop along with me as if they want to ask me something, but not very often.
I don’t save seeds but I know what you mean about rain for days on end. But at least it is rain. It’s been snowing here, but not enough to really amount to anything. I tell myself it will water all the bulbs that are coming up.
I didn’t know scilla had blue pollen but I do know that it comes in different colors, and it isn’t always the same as the flower color.
I thought that cress shot might bug you. Sorry. They certainly have a lot of it at the local college but their gardener died so I suppose they’re doing the best they can.
Yes, I cause spring peepers to go silent quite often! I’d love to get a shot of one showing its throat bubble but I never have.
Spring is coming slowly because of the coolness so far but that’s okay. It just means the flowers will bloom longer.
I hope it doesn’t get too hot too soon in Maryland!
Beautiful flowers and great weather. I was out working most mornings, and I must admit I was surprised that the soil is so pliable. I dug up invasive vines and transplanted raspberries like it was the middle of May. I’ve still got snowbanks that are melting but will still be there a while. I’m also still working on downed branches from that first heavy wet snow. I may still be working on those come May. 🙂
Thanks Judy. You’ve been busy! I’ve got branches to pick up as well and plenty of raking to do as usual but I’ve been waiting for it to dry out a little more. We still have snow in the woods.
I hope neither one of us has to struggle too much with those downed branches. I have a pine limb that’s about 9 feet long, so it’s time to get out the saws. Happy spring!
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Joyous harbinger post of what is to come!! Here in Central NH, the snow is still 1-2′ deep.
Think I will try a watercolor of your beautiful busy robin. Have a happy Saturday.
You’re welcome Ginger. We still have snow in the shadiest places but even there it has been melting quickly this past week. I hope the warmth reaches you soon. It looks to be a great day for painting!