I've been so bad at keeping up with this blog and good grief, although today is April 21, outdoors it is already midsummer. Everything that was supposed to bloom in the spring bloomed and everything that was supposed to bloom a month from now.....bloomed (Roses! I have roses the first week of April!). There's a lot going on out there but I want to capture the beauty of what was blooming a couple Sundays ago before I venture out to Kansas again tomorrow.
The Dwarf Crested iris (Iris cristata) I planted last year along the stream bank was blooming. I only got one bloom but the rest of the plants are looking good so hopefully next year they will be spectacular.
Last year I had planted some Heart-leaf Golden Alexanders (Zizia aptera) in an area I had cleared in the woods...
...but this year, you can hardly see them because of all the mayapples that took over this newly cleared area (I was trying to get rid of the coralberry (Symphoricarpos orbiculatus)... a native plant that is absolutely
everywhere. Everywhere. It's in the honeysuckle family...you can tell it's a relative because it makes its presence known absolutely everywhere. Everywhere! Coralberry is a woodlands plant and is probably of some use to deer if they are starving but in my 15 acres of woods, nobody seems that interested in it.....especially me. Okay, end of rant.).
Mayapples. Mayapples. Mayapples. They were coming up everywhere...this one was popping through an old oak leaf.
I remember when I saw my first small colony of mayapples when I first bought my land and was so happy to find that 10 square feet of native prettiness. Hahaha. Those mayapples are just everywhere this year. To the horizon line. Mayapples (Podophyllum peltatum) are spring ephemerals so in a couple months they will be gone...I sure wish that boring coralberry/buckbrush was an ephemeral. Too bad it's an "everpresent."
I remember when I saw my first small colony of mayapples when I first bought my land and was so happy to find that 10 square feet of native prettiness. Hahaha. Those mayapples are just everywhere this year. To the horizon line. Mayapples (Podophyllum peltatum) are spring ephemerals so in a couple months they will be gone...I sure wish that boring coralberry/buckbrush was an ephemeral. Too bad it's an "everpresent."
Violet Wood Sorrel (Oxalis violacea) was blooming right on the path. I had never seen it before.
You can tell it's in the oxalis family because of the shamrock leaves.
You can tell it's in the oxalis family because of the shamrock leaves.
This has been a spectacular year for Spring Beauties (Claytonia virginica). I usually find them lost in the growing grass but they were as elusive as mayapples this year. :-)
This year the hickory leaves are unfurling when they feel like it. I remember them synchronizing their ballet a few years ago so that it seemed like all the unfurling took place in just one day. I've been watching these guys unfurl for a couple weeks now. It's random this year for some reason.
Still, it was a day full of spring beauty...but this guy wouldn't know it. He had his head stuck in a hole in the dirt.
I pulled him out to get a look at him to see if we had met before.
I pulled him out to get a look at him to see if we had met before.
Nope. New box turtle to me. He was unimpressed with me and everything around him...nothing new there when it comes to turtles.
4 comments:
Wow! The Weird Warm Weather has really turned your part of the world into a Garden of Eden. I loved all the unfurling and blossoming and pushing and shoving for their share of sunlight. Too bad Mr. Box Turtle is so unimpressed. With that permanent frown and grumpy attitude he's going nowhere fast--and that's the way he likes it.
Leenie-It's a big mess of green and I'm not complaining (yet) but there's still the season called "the growing season" that hasn't even started yet. I hope I can make it on to my property a month from now because the honeysuckle and the poison ivy have gone carazy. It's just e v e r y w h e r e. Yeah, those box turtles are such little grumpies. I run into them every once in a while and they are all sour-faced and fearless but in a package so tiny, it's very cute. I do love the unfurling too but miss the dramatic presentation from last year or the year before. Those hickories are such a pretty thing when they put on their tutus and reach for the sun.
Good Morning Maria! What pretty pictures and I loved your description of what's happening on that land in Kansas. We love our grumpy faced turtles and we have quite a few. Not much happening here, like you said it already looks like summer and one of our pear trees has blight. Ick and ugly. I am waiting on our lilies but I don't want to hurry them and I want those brown stringie things that fall out of the oaks to get done falling. What a mess. And I would like the pollen that has been going on for weeks and weeks to be over with too. And Oooo I love Irises, my favorite flower after peonies :)
Good Morning to you too, Pix. Thanks for the compliments. I walk the same route just about every Sunday when I"m out in Kansas and it still never gets old. There's always something...even if it's another grumpy turtle. Or buzzard! I was driving back on Sunday when I had to stop the car and wait for a buzzard to stop picking at a possum and move out of the way. From a distance I thought he was a peahen(!!!). I've never seen one that close up before. They are huge! Sorry about your pear tree. This was a great blooming year for them.
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