Tag: Goldenrod


Spring Blooms and Color in December

3
December

 

False Rue Anemone

False Rue Anemone

I usually tell attendees on spring wildflower walks that if you come back around Thanksgiving and look, you may possibly find a couple of False Rue-Anemone, Enemion biternatum in bloom again. All of the photos (including the flowers) with this entry were all taken this morning, December 3 at the Hudsonville Nature Center. Usually in November a few can be seen, but this year there are more than normal and with a warm forecast for the next week there will be more as there are several unopened buds still to be found. Not every clump will have flowers, but it is worth looking for the ones that are there and enjoy them since they are usually under snow by now. This flower has lobed leaves and flowers with no petals as the sepals take on the color and are petal like.

 

Goldenrod

Goldenrod

Other things to look for this time of year are the usual left over flowers like goldenrod or aster, berries still hanging on, insect galls and leftover bird’s nests. With the lack of snow lower plants in the woods like Blue Cohush and Leek seeds can easily be found. There are also some great moss colors with all the moisture we have had and still some fungi showing up. Normally I focus on tree buds a little later in winter but they are in good shape, identifiable a quit colorful now.

Bitternut Hickory

Bitternut Hickory

 

The mild weather is making many things visible and accessible to those willing to get out and look. Get out and enjoy the warmer weather we are having.

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Duck Lake Fire Recovery and Regeneration, One Year Later

27
August

Duck Lake Fire

If it weren’t for the blackened pine tree silhouettes still scattered across the landscape of the area that burned just over a year ago, one would not know that such a devastating fire had occurred. As I visited some of the same areas as last year, it was difficult to get the same exact position and angle for pictures. Larger trees have been removed, so the land marks used a year ago for photo monitoring are gone. Most of the area is covered in a lush green of bracken fern, grasses, blueberry and flowering plants. Hardwood trees that seemed to be killed by the fire are regenerating with new growth from the base. Pine trees are popping up all over as seedlings. Jack Pines need the heat of the fire to open their cones and release the seeds to the soil below. As can be expected this is a bumper year for blueberries in the burned over area. Some are small but many are of good size for wild berries and very tasty.

Pine Seedlings

Pine Seedlings

Wetlands and lakes that were dry and burned over a year ago once again have water in them and are flourishing. Many shallow wet depressions in the midst of dry barren pine areas are yellow with goldenrod as well as with the grasses and sedges in abundance. Sundews, pitcher plants, cotton grass and many other species have reemerged.

Swamp Lakes Area

Swamp Lakes Area

We often look at the devastation left behind by wildfires, but forget that fire is a natural purging and regenerative tool. As already mentioned some plant species need fire to release their seeds or start germination. Fire cleans the landscape of fallen or felled trees and as it moves across the landscape, fire helps to release nutrients tied up in old plant material and litter on the forest floor. In prairies fire helps keep out non-prairie plants and maintains the system. As one walks through the fire zone we see an abundance of new growth and life emerging from the ashes and will continue to see this area grow into a lush environment. The bottom line is that this area is probably healthier than the surrounding areas that have not been burned.

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