Moon phase: Waxing crescent
Weather: Hot
The first in a series of pictures from my trip to the Maryland side of Assateague Island in April.
Moon phase: Waxing crescent
Weather: Hot
The first in a series of pictures from my trip to the Maryland side of Assateague Island in April.
Moon phase: Waxing crescent
Weather: Hot, rainy, flooding
This is sweet cicely (Osmorhiza claytonii), a very pretty, delicate plant with delicious, licorice-tasting seeds.
Moon phase: Waxing crescent
Weather: Endless thunderstorms
Phenology: Purslane has sprung up overnight
Virginia bluebell (Mertensia virginica) is another plant discovered in Rock Creek Park this spring. I don't recall ever seeing it before, but I recognized it from various wildflower books. The day I took this photo there was so much the entire woods looked blue.
Moon phase: New moon
Weather: Warm, rainy
Phenology: Hydrangea are blooming
These are celandine poppies (Stylophorum diphyllum) I discovered in Rock Creek Park. I'd never seen them before, but then, I've been in Wisconsin the previous four springs, so that's not surprising. I'm so happy to be back in DC; one of the things I missed most is just experiencing the seasons here. Now that I've been back here for a year, I've seen all the seasons I'd missed, and it's a wonderful mixture of nostalgia and new discoveries. Wow, that sounded really schmaltzy, didn't it? I just love this place so much.
Moon phase: Full
Weather: Cool
Phenology: Clover is blooming
This a yellow trout lily (Erythronium americanum) in Rock Creek Park.
Moon phase: Waxing gibbous
Weather: Rainy
One of my favorite plants is bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis), though I can never seem to catch it to take a picture when it's flowering. Bloodroot is native to eastern North America, but it's rare and it's listed as endangered in some places. There are a few in select places in Rock Creek Park, which is where I found this one. Native Americans in this area used its reddish/orangish juice to make body paint.
Moon phase: Waxing gibbous
Weather: Hot
Phenology: Bee balm is blooming
Jack-in-the-pulpit is, hands down, the weirdest-looking flower ever. It's also nicely toxic, although if you dry or bake the roots they become edible. Here's a piece of a poem that mentions jack-in-the-pulpit:
Jack in the pulpit
Preaches to-day,
Under the green trees
Just over the way.
Squirrel and song-sparrow,
High on their perch,
Hear the sweet lily-bells
Ringing to church.
Come, hear what his reverence
Rises to say,
In his low painted pulpit
This calm Sabbath-day.
Fair is the canopy
Over him seen,
Penciled by Nature’s hand,
Black, brown, and green.
Green is his surplice,
Green are his bands;
In his queer little pulpit
The little priest stands.
Moon phase: Waxing crescent
Weather: Warm
This is a toad trillium (Trillium cuneatum). This one hasn't bloomed yet, but they have a nice red three-petaled flower. I also like the mottled leaves. This photo was also taken in Rock Creek Park on the DC/Maryland line.
Moon phase: Waxing gibbous
Weather: Warm with alternating blue skies and grey clouds
Phenology: Daylilies are blooming
Spring beauty (Claytonia virginica) is a lovely little spring ephemeral. Not only are they gorgeous (white petals with delicate pink/red stripes), but you can eat the tubers. Of course, the tubers are tiny, so it would probably take a while to harvest enough for a meal, but in some places they blanket the forest floor, and if you were dedicated enough, you could do it. There's another species called Carolina spring beauty (C. caroliniana) with wider leaves, which I've never seen around DC, but we saw them a lot in my Woodland Plants class in Wisconsin. These photos were taken in Rock Creek Park right on the DC/Maryland line.
Moon phase: Waxing gibbous
Weather: Cool & breezy
Delaware Bay from New Castle, Delaware, located where famed Pennsylvania founder (and Quaker) William Penn landed in the New World. This is the last picture from my New York trip; next time I'll start my spring wildflower photos.
Moon phase: First quarter
Weather: Cool & breezy
Phenology: Hydrangeas are blooming
Another snap from the car, this time accidentally catching a hawk sitting on a branch. Of course since it's in silhouette I can't tell what kind it is, but from the size and the short tail I'd guess it's one of the buteos.