Picture of the Day for May 21, 2014

A warmer day finally revealed more wildflowers but many of them are spring ephemeral, which emerge quickly in the spring and die back to their underground parts after a short growth and reproduction phase, so they disappear quickly from the woods. The Adder’s Tongue, Trillums, Bloodroot, Spring Beauty, and the Virginia Bluebells are all spring ephemeral plants.

The Virginia Bluebells buds are pink which transition to purple and finally to a sky blue color so one plant provides a rainbow of colors. Only a few blossoms in the back have turned to the blue color so I might have a few more days to take pictures of them before they fade away for another year.

Colorful Virginia Bluebells

Colorful Virginia Bluebells

Picture of the Day for May 20, 2014

It is finally getting warm enough to plant some flowers, which the chipmunks like to ‘unplant’ for me and now they will be even braver to come on the porch to unearth the plants since my cat, Dutch, went to the happy hunting ground as he passed away yesterday afternoon. Hunting chipmunks was the rare time had patience as he could watch the hole where chipmunk had disappeared for hours. He wasn’t very successful but seemed to enjoy it and still had one last hunt Saturday evening even if his eye sight might have been failing him in his old age since I had to point out the chipmunk for him.

The Last Hunt

The Last Hunt

Picture of the Day for May 19, 2014

This single, nodding flower was lucky compared to its fellow Yellow Adder’s Tongue which was eaten off by a deer and only the lower part of the twin leaves remain. Only when the plant’s corm becomes large enough, the second leaf and blossom will appear. I have a several patches of the Adder’s Tongues but very few have a blossom as the area they are growing in are not as fertile soil as it needs to be so all single leaves. So it isn’t nice when the deer eat one of the few blossoms I get.

I learned the name Adder’s Tongue for Erythronium americanum, and it is in reference to the tongue-like shape of the flowering shoot as it rises up in spring and the supposed resemblance of the flower to the open mouth of a snake. Another common name for the flower is Trout Lily for the similarity between the leaf markings and those of the brown or brook trout. Some other names are Fawn Lily because of spotted leaves and the two leaves being fawn ears and the misleading Dog-tooth Violet name, since it is not a member of the violet family, but named for the corm resembling dog teeth.

Lone Yellow Adder’s Tongue

Lone Yellow Adder's Tongue

Picture of the Day for May 17, 2014

It seemed very wrong to have to wear a stocking cap and jacket when mowing lawn yesterday but then it wasn’t real warm and clouds dropping sprinkles on me kept occurring most of the day. This storm cloud coming from the north glowed as the sun was setting to the west, but I wasn’t looking at the pretty colors but dark streaks of rain at the bottom and I was trying to guess if I would get wet again or not.

Rain on the Way

Rain on the Way

Picture of the Day for May 16, 2014

I don’t know if the Great White Trilliums have finally opened up, as these three and all the other the Trillium grandiflorums have disappeared along my path to the pond. There are some stems in spots, or like these three, no evidence left that there had been a trillium growing there except for the photo taken a few days ago.

Great White Trillium as well as other trilliums are a favored food of white-tailed deer. Indeed if trilliums are available deer will seek these plants, with a preference for Great White Trillium, to the exclusion of others. If they keep eating the same trilliums each year, it can lead to extinction of those plants along my path and then the Nodding Trilliums will have to be the new favorite deer snack.

Great White Trillium No More

Great White Trillium No More

Picture of the Day for May 15, 2014

This flower needs the sun as much as I do and will expand wide in the sun but as evening draws near or if rain threatens, the Wood Anemone will close and droop it head so that no dew will injure it. The blossom has no true petals but has sepals instead and it is the sepals that fold over the mass of stamens and undeveloped seed vessels in the center like a tent. When closed, the pale rose colored underside of the sepals are seen, otherwise in the sun, the white upper side dance in the wind.

The Wood Anemone (Anemone quinquefolia) is often overlooked since it is a small blossom in the low bed of green leaves. It is not flashy or colorful and even the insects ignore it has little scent or nectar to attract them.

Wood Anemone

Wood Anemone

Picture of the Day for May 14, 2014

Sometimes newer and bigger isn’t always better as the farmers in the area are finding out. The horse drawn plows have been working in the fields for almost a month, but the big ‘horse’ power tractors have been getting stuck quite frequently in the soggy ground. And then there are the bets going on whether the third tractor will get the second stuck tractor out which was trying to pull the first stuck tractor and plow out.

The Old

The Old,