Picture of the Day for August 23, 2013

This newly opened sunflower is smiling in the sunshine and many others are smiling because it is Friday and the weekend is near.

The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is an annual plant native to the Americas. The earliest known examples in the United States of a fully domesticated sunflower have been found in Tennessee, and date to around 2300 BC.

What is usually called the “flower” on a mature sunflower is actually a “flower head” (also known as a “composite flower”) of numerous florets (small flowers) crowded together. The outer petal-bearing florets (ray florets) are sterile and can be yellow, red, orange, or other colors. The florets inside the circular head are called disc florets, which mature into seeds.

The flower petals within the sunflower’s cluster are always in a spiral pattern. Generally, each floret is oriented toward the next by approximately the golden angle, 137.5°, producing a pattern of interconnecting spirals, where the number of left spirals and the number of right spirals are successive Fibonacci numbers. Typically, there are 34 spirals in one direction and 55 in the other; on a very large sunflower there could be 89 in one direction and 144 in the other. This pattern produces the most efficient packing of seeds within the flower head.

(And for those who haven’t had math class is a while, the Fibonacci numbers are the numbers in the following integer sequence: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, …, where the first two numbers in the Fibonacci sequence are 0 and 1, and each subsequent number is the sum of the previous two. And the sunflower uses 34 and 55 or 89 and 144.)

The Golden Sunflower

The Golden Sunflower

Picture of the Day for August 22, 2013

What a difference sitting in this old Ford car to a new Ford car. No SYNC, no MP3 or CD player, no cruise and all the other gauges. No bells and whistles in this car as it doesn’t even have a cup holder! The dash has the ignition key and the amp gauge and nothing else to clutter up this nice old car.

(And another old Chevy truck to enjoy too even if through the dirty window.)

Old Ford Car

Old Ford Car

Picture of the Day for August 21, 2013

Farm machinery has its own type of artwork. This inner circle of the Case Steam Tractor rear wheel makes an interesting pattern. But it isn’t a wheel that you would want to run over your foot as the wheel is five and a half feet in diameter and two feet wide and the steam tractor empty weight is 24,000 pounds. You can see the full wheel on Monday’s picture.

Red Rear Wheel

Red Rear Wheel of Case Steam Engine

Picture of the Day for August 19, 2013

The steam tractor was used in rural North America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, to aid in threshing, in which the owner/operator of a threshing machine or threshing rig would travel from farmstead to farmstead threshing grain. Oats were a common item to be threshed, but wheat and other grains were common as well.

Steam traction engines were often too expensive for a single farmer to purchase, so “threshing rings” were often formed. In a threshing ring, multiple farmers pooled their resources to purchase a steam engine. They also chose one person among them to go to a steam school, to learn how to run the engine properly. There were also threshing contractors, who owned their own engine and thresher, and went to different farms, hiring themselves out to thresh grain.

The steam tractor ran the belts that would turn other equipment like the threshing machine. The big boiler on wheels had water which was heated into steam in a boiler until it reaches a high pressure. When expanded through pistons or turbines, mechanical work is done. The reduced-pressure steam is then condensed and pumped back into the boiler. And on this Case engine, the piston turns the large wheel which turns the belt used to power other equipment.

Case Steam Tractor

Case Steam Tractor

Picture of the Day for August 14, 2013

One often thinks of a cardinal as a winter bird as its red colors stand out against the white snow since they do not molt into a dull winter plumage but they are rather striking in the summer time too. In summer, their sweet whistles are one of the first sounds of the morning.

Only a few female North American songbirds sing, but the female Northern Cardinal does, and often while sitting on the nest. This may give the male information about when to bring food to the nest. A mated pair shares song phrases, but the female may sing a longer and slightly more complex song than the male.

Northern Cardinal

Northern Cardinal