Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Humph ...


Remember this, from last week?


And this?




This is 5pm today, with more expected overnight.
.

'Nuff said.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Vernal pools, egg clusters and trillium


This afternoon I spent 2+ hours on a nature trek. At Town Meeting, a Brookfield resident who works for The Nature Conservancy in Montpelier announced that he was interested in hosting several "field trips" within Brookfield, and asked people to sign up, so I did.

I missed the first walk because the email had a strange subject line and was from someone I didn't know, so I deleted it. This hike came with the subject line "Brookfield Adventure Group", and it was a trip way up on the Chelsea side of Brookfield (very close to the middle of nowhere). Two members of the group live up there on 50 acres, a good deal of which is very unusual forest wetlands, and 8 people gathered there to go exploring, guided by the owners.

A vernal pool is a wet spot (and it can be very wet indeed) that dries out in the summer. We went to what the hosts believed was a vernal pool, but it had lots of plants growing in it, and tadpoles swimming. "Not a vernal pool", said Jon from the Nature Conservancy. "A marsh".  Vernal pools do not have vegetation growing in them. However, not much further, there was a Classic Vernal Pool, with wood frog egg clusters and (I believe) salamander egg clusters. There were mosquito larvae swimming merrily (looks like a bad skeeter season), and water striders, and a tiny frog.


These egg clusters are surrounded by a very thin permeable membrane which fills with water when the eggs are laid. On the right is a cluster of (I think) spotted salamander eggs, which are always hitched to a twig. In fact, salamanders look for twiggy pools. On the left is a cluster of wood frog eggs, about 5" wide. PLEASE click on the picture, to enlarge it.  Take in those incredible colors. People who know their insects, for instance, Kate, will see Caddis fly larvae. (Sorry about the branch.) 

Spring flowers were starting here - it's several hundred feet higher and therefore colder. We saw Spring Beauty (too hard to get a picture), Dog-Toothed violets (not in bloom yet), blue, white and yellow violets, and Red Trillium. Most of the trillium in my neighborhood got washed away with West Street. But on the way home I noticed some by the roadside. The trillium (left) in my yard are just up, too, along with a tiny little struggling Spring Beauty. My Bloodroot are flourishing.



The highlight of the afternoon was the sighting of a woodcock, a bird which I had never seen.  It's a medium-sized, squat, brown bird that blends in perfectly with dried and dead leaves. 

If it hadn't moved, we wouldn't have seen him.  It walks strangely, bobbing back and forth with every step.  According to our hosts, they are all over these woods.

Our group was a real bunch of experienced nature-lovers, all out of my league. The organizer is Director of Land Protection for the Nature Conservancy. Our landowners are very active in local conservation movements. One man captures local moths and butterflies, breeds them, and lets them go. One woman works for the Vermont Land Trust, and another is a board member for the North Branch Nature Center. The last member of the group is an "outdoor educator" at a local private school.  I was afraid I was out of my element. But no! I knew the dog-tooth violet by its leaf, and was the first to identify the Spring Beauty.  Everyone else seems to know trees and birds. Of course, the Nature Conservancy guy know everything,  and is really delightful.

Jon and Jen are planning one outing each month. I'm really looking forward to the next one.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Spring in Brookfield, Part 1 of ???


My oh my, I do enjoy Spring. My daffs are often the first ones out.

Daffodils by the brook.


Daffodils by the house


Rhubarb!  Rhubarb!


And the true harbinger of Spring-Is-Here-To-Stay
The first violets


Part 2 of ??? another time ...

Monday, April 12, 2010

It was certainly spring in Montclair, Glen Ridge and Bloomfield, NJ. As I drove south from Vermont, pale greens emerged and grew brighter. Buds became furled leaves. Then those leaves unfurled. Finally the spring outburst of flowering bulbs and trees was complete. It had been so hot in NJ the previous two days – one day in the 90’s! – that many of the trees had begun to go by. Most weeping cherries were pale and dropping blossoms like flies. I didn’t have time for many picture-searching detours, and this is the best magnolia I could find.


The crabs were in full flower.















Then there were the redbuds.  The blossoms erupt from the stems, and the leaves come later. So all you see is branches wrapped in pink and white.



Thundercloud cherry is another of my favorite trees, and they were at peak as well, and I didn’t have the camera. First to appear are a cloud of small pink single blossoms, joined by deep purple leaves that produce such a dark background for the blossoms that the origin of the name is obvious. It’s a wonderful spring tree without a bit of green on it during flowering time, and is a wonderful contrast to all the other shades of green in the yard and on the street. I really regret having no pictures. There are good pictures here and here.

About the only time I heave a heavy sigh about living in Vermont is that I am unable to grow either a redbud or a Thundercloud. If either were hardy in Zone 4 they’d be growing around here.

I returned to Vermont today and Spring found its way here! The daffodils are up, more have buds, many are blooming, and there are lots of little blue chinodoxia. Pictures maybe tomorrow, if the sun is out, but I’m tired from a long drive on an upset stomach. Ernie, by the way, seems to have enjoyed his stay at Thelma’s but was very happy to get outdoors.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Easter parade

A parade of spring shoots - the temperatures zoomed to 70 on Friday and 78 on Saturday and plants shot out of the ground.

Here's some sedum, in the rock garden.

Bleeding Heart, by the living room door
Lupine, by the living room door
Daylilies by the driveway
Lilacs in the back yard.  They'll be light purple and the leaves will be dappled green and white.

The rhubarb is peeking through, as well as iris, golden glow (a tall yellow flower that I have a large clump of), the bachelor's button, the pulmonaria, violets, and a solitary columbine.

I'm very excited about going to NJ at the end of the week, and seeing my sweeties and my good friends.