Tendrils

Illustration of a bird flying.
  • Black Walnut Bark

    Black Walnut Bark

    So many trees out there! Summer provides us with leaves to look at to recognize species, often right away. When winter arrives we’re left with very little hint as to what species of tree we might be looking at. Along with limb character, the tips and buds on branches, and the look of leaf scars,…

    February 1, 2021
  • Ash Trees

    Ash Trees

    SNOW! Overnight I got six big inches of snow here at my cabin. Snow to me means photographs. Nature all dressed up in fancy sparkly dress. This afternoon my camera and I got our hiking boots on and went up the mountain. It has been much too long since we’ve been out to take in…

    January 31, 2021
  • Putty Root Orchid

    Putty Root Orchid

    An orchid that is native to eastern and central U.S., and Canada. Putty Root (Aplectrum hyemale). The world of Mother Nature is always filled with surprises. This plant provides one of those surprises. Its growth timing seems backward. In autumn the plant sends up ONE basal leaf to collect dappled sunlight during the fall, winter…

    January 30, 2021
  • Common Hackberry

    Tree bark offers great opportunity to identify a tree during the winter. Some more straightforward than others. One tree that through its bark is a cinch to figure out, Common Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis). Its bark makes me think of a 3D topo map with all the ridges and valleys laid out and wrapped around the…

    January 29, 2021
  • Intrepid Daffodil

    Intrepid Daffodil

    In the garden today – the intrepid daffodil. Sending fingers up to test out conditions. Or perhaps their bulbs are sending up periscopes to see if it’s safe. But for Daffodils things are just fine. They can take most anything. Even snow in late March. Tough as nails they stand up to wintery conditions. Surprise…

    January 28, 2021
  • Lucky Bird Day

    Lucky Bird Day

    Today was a lucky bird kind of day. And I didn’t even step outside. Mid-day I spotted a Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) in one of the huge oak trees in front of my cabin. Not at all unusual here, but to see one, a HUGE and BEAUTIFUL bird, is to stop everything to admire the…

    January 27, 2021
  • Dogwood Buds In Ice

    Dogwood Buds In Ice

    As I went to bed last night sleet and freezing rain were clicking at my skylight windows promising me a very good next day. There’s been hardly any snow so far this winter. Sleet and freezing rain with its resulting ice is NEARLY as wonderful to me as “take me back to my childhood” snow.…

    January 26, 2021
  • Cooper’s Hawk

    Cooper’s Hawk

    A garden with bunches of song birds cheerily partaking of the goodies put out at the feeders. Quite a busy scene. And then, “POOF!” in the blink of an eye everyone vanishes. Not a one to be seen. Totally quiet. Not a soul. What just happened? Look into the trees. There, sitting perfectly still. It’s…

    January 25, 2021
  • White-breasted Nuthatch

    White-breasted Nuthatch

    Yesterday’s post was about an irruptive visitor. The tiny Red-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta canadensis) who shows up in the woods of the Blue Ridge Mountains of central Virginia, if its usual seed supply is less than optimal. But there’s another Nuthatch that lives here all year long. The White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis). It is fun to…

    January 24, 2021
  • Red-breasted Nuthatch

    Red-breasted Nuthatch

    A little feathered creature that I see some winters. A bird that is said to be “irruptive,” meaning it depends on the seed supply where it normally spends its winters. In years when the seeds of pine, spruce, and fir trees are not plentiful these birds will venture into areas where they are not normally…

    January 23, 2021
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