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Tendrils

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  • Wild Peach

    Wild Peach

    Now blooming in the woods, a native to China. It’s believed that Hernando de Soto brought the first Peach Trees (Prunus persica) to North America in 1539. Now innumerable cultivars of those trees populate orchards. Thank goodness for those orchards. Peaches make summer so wonderful. And a tossed seed will eventually result in a random…

    April 1, 2021
  • Mayapple

    Mayapple

    Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) is a perennial herbaceous plant that is native to eastern North America. In the past few days Mayapples have been poking their noses up through the surface of the earth in one of my gardens. The beginning of a beautiful process. They emerge with their leaves, either one or two, folded like…

    March 31, 2021
  • Fox Sparrow

    Fox Sparrow

    Another winter has come and gone and no Fox Sparrow (Passerella iliaca). During only two winters I’ve had one come to visit, over the course of perhaps fourteen years. Each of those two winters, just one individual that I saw and captured in pixels. A large and chunky sparrow. The Fox Sparrow hangs out with…

    March 30, 2021
  • Sunflower

    Sunflower (Helianthus). The happy flower. You bet. Today would have been my Dad’s 96th birthday. He LOVED sunflowers. He loved to grow huge sunflowers! This post is a salute to my Dad’s favorite flower. A flower that’s popular with many creatures including bees. A flower that brings on the butterflies. A flower that inspires artists.…

    March 29, 2021
  • Golden Ragwort

    Golden Ragwort

    Such great fortune to have Mother Nature as my landscape architect up here in the mountains. She provides me with such wondrous plants to enjoy. Like native Golden Ragwort (Packera aurea). I just have to help her out with things such as the removal of exotic species invasives. Which I have to admit is not…

    March 28, 2021
  • Hellebores (Hello Boris!)

    Hellebores (Hello Boris!)

    Hellebores (Helleborus) are champions in my gardens. Though not native to North America but to Europe, they are extremely well behaved. They haven’t wandered at all from where I planted them long ago, only spreading slowly by rhizomatous roots. They’re an evergreen perennial that begins to show buds in January as icy winds blow. Soon…

    March 27, 2021
  • Corydalis flavula Revisited

    Corydalis flavula Revisited

    If you’ll bear with me, I’m going to start calling this plant by its scientific name largely because I had misidentified it and want to make it clear to me what it is. That’s why I’m reposting about this precious little plant. Getting things straight in my mind. A couple weeks ago as the earliest…

    March 26, 2021
  • Greenbrier, and Catbrier

    Greenbrier, and Catbrier

    Greenbriers and Catbriers are in the Smilax genus of plants in the family Smilacaceae. About 300 species of these vines live worldwide. Twenty of the species are native to North America north of Mexico. Eleven are native to Virginia. The small flowers of Greenbriers and Catbriers attract bees, beetles, and flies as pollinators, with their…

    March 24, 2021
  • Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

    Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

    My first sighting this season was yesterday. The state insect of Virginia, the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly (Papilio glaucus). Native to eastern North America. The butterfly I saw yesterday had just emerged from its chrysalis. Brand new. In the autumn an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail caterpillar will form itself into a chrysalis. NOT a cocoon but…

    March 23, 2021
  • Trout Lily

    Trout Lily

    If ever there was the perfect use of the word “diminutive” I think it would be for describing Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum). A lily that grows to be just six inches tall. A bit too big for a doll house but still mighty small for a lily. It’s flower which dips shyly has no petals…

    March 22, 2021
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