Category: Picture of the Day

Picture of the Day for September 29, 2016

The critters and creatures have been after my raspberries like the deer eating the plants, chipmunks stuffing their cheeks with berries, picnic beetles chewing holes in the berries but this evening I found a different creature eating a ripe berry. By the time I got my camera, the caterpillar had moved off the berry and tried to look innocent of eating my berries.

The folklore is that the Banded Woolly Bear can predict how bad winter will be and woolly bears with a wide rusty band means a mild winter whereas more black means a harsh winter. And I have seen several all black ones this fall so that is not a good prediction but at least my berry eating caterpillar has a more positive outlook.

But actually the bands tell how the prior season was, as the caterpillar has to molt when its skin becomes too tight as it eats vegetation, and with each new molt, an additional orangish-brown segment is added to the exoskeleton so younger woolly bears have a shorter rusty band.  So if prior winter was short with an early spring, the caterpillars emerged earlier and had more time to grow and have more molts and have a wider band.

If the caterpillar endures wetter weather, more black setae are produced and we definitely had a wet fall so that could explain the all black ones I seen.

But even though the woolly bear coloring is based on last years winter, informal research since the 1940’s has determined that the folklore of the woolly bear caterpillar’s coloring has been right 70 percent of the time which is probably better than the meteorologists with all their fancy equipment and computer models.

Raspberry Eating Woolly Bear

Raspberry Eating Woolly Bear

 

Picture of the Day for September 22, 2016

The September equinox marks the moment the Sun crosses the celestial equator – the imaginary line in the sky above the Earth’s equator – from north to south and in the Northern Hemisphere, it marks the first day of autumn or fall.  And with autumn, one thinks of shorter daylight hours which causes the leaves changing color for autumn’s spectacular foliage display. Even on this cloudy and cooler day, I have one maple tree which does not want to let summer go as it always has about half the limbs staying green while the other half turn bright red before any of the other trees in the area.

Summer Passing to Autumn

Summer Passing to Autumn

Picture of the Day for September 20, 2016

During Fayette iron-smelting operations from 1867 to 1891 in Upper Michigan, the company produced a total of 229,288 tons of iron, using local hardwood forests for fuel and quarrying limestone from the bluffs to purify the iron ore. The hardwood was turned into charcoal in kilns like this one to fuel the blast furnaces for the iron smelting process.

The kiln was loaded at the top with thirty-five cords of hardwood and the charring process lasted six to eight days, producing 1,750 bushels of charcoal which was removed by hand from the lower door. In the mid-1880s, more than eighty kilns were located within ten miles of Fayette.

Charcoal Kiln

Charcoal Kiln