October 9 2014 Ramble Report

Fifteen Ramblers gathered at 8:30AM by
the Arbor on another fine fall October day. 

Click here
to see Don Hunter’s album of today’s ramble.

Many Ramblers will remember Joan West, a young UGA post-doctoral
student who accompanied us for about a year before she left Athens to hike the
Pacific Crest Trail. Joan was temporarily sidetracked by injury but continued
her trek after recovering. Winter is now impending so she will take a break and
will resume hiking the PCT next year. Click here to read her blog about
her PCT experiences, as well as her helpful tips on backpacking and hiking.

Opening Reception for
Hugh and Carol Nourse photography exhibit, Wild Flowers, Wild Places:

The reception will be held in the Visitor Center, October
12, 2-4PM. The Nourses have selected 33 Images drawn from over 20 years of
photographing native plants and their habitats, mostly from Georgia and the
southeastern U.S., with a few from the western U.S. and Newfoundland. The
exhibition will display in the Visitor Center of the State Botanical Garden of
Georgia from October 12 thru November 23.

Today’s reading:

Lee read from a letter to Josiah Bartlett’s wife about what was happening while he was
at the Convention in Philadelphia in 1776 that created the Declaration of
Independence.  The letter was
written only weeks before the signing of that document.

Philadelphia

Last
thursday after Congress, I, with
5 or 6 other Delegates walked about a mile & half out of the City to see
the Proprietors Gardens: there are a great many Curious trees, Bushes, Plants,
&c. Among the rest the alois Plant is I think the most Curious. I Cannot
Describe it as it is not like any thing I Ever Saw before. There are a number
of Sweat & Sower orange trees, Lemmon trees, lime trees & Citron trees;
the Same tree had some flowers, some Small & some ripe fruit at the Same time;
the trees are about 8 or ten feet high Set in Boxes of Sand So that they Can be
removed in Cold weather into a hot house, So that they grow & bear fruit
all the year round.

Josiah
Bartlett to Mary Bartlett, 10 June 1776,

Frank C. Mevers, ed. , The
Papers of Josiah Bartlett
(Hanover, N.H.:
For the New Hampshire Historical Society by the University Press of New
England, 1979), 69-70.

editor’s
note alois=aloe.

 Today’s route:

Today’s route was the short Tree Trail,
accessed through the Shade Garden.

At the first turn down the path through
the Shade Garden we passed a very large Japanese maple with three large
trunks.  Shirley Berry told me that this
was the champion Japanese Maple in Clarke County.  The Shade Garden tends to rest through  late spring and summer after the leaf cover
shades everything.  But now the fall
flowers are arriving, and the first is the

Sasanqua Camellia

Camellia.  Cultivars of Camellia sasanqua are the first
to bloom.  Since this is a tree walk, we
noted the mockernut hickory with its deep diamond shaped bark pattern.  Or, as Linda Chafin describes it, it looks
like the pattern of iron on an outdoor grill. 
Toad lilies from Asia are very small, but if one looks closely the anthers
and stigmas remind one of passion flower (but they are unrelated). 
Dan Williams argues that green ash grow in the Piedmont, while white ash
trees grow in the mountains.  So it is
nice to see the white ash beside the walk through the Shade Garden.  The two ash trees are hard to distinguish,
but it can be done by looking at the seeds from each.  Not having them, this was not discussed.  But a wonderful find farther along was the
original tea plant Camellia sinensis, which was blooming with small white
flowers as compared to the larger pink and white ones seen on C. sasanqua.

We side tracked into the Dunson Native
Flora Garden to take a look at the rusty black haw, which gets its name from
the rusty hairs on the leaf petioles.  I
was hoping we could compare this one with the one on the white trail later, but
we did not get that far.  Here a green
caterpillar fell on my shirt. It was a moth caterpillar, abut we couldn’t
identify it further.  Returning to the
paved path through the Shade Garden several stopped for an orb weaver web
between the two stone bridges.

Beefsteak Plant flower

Walking up the gravel path to the Power
Line ROW we

Late purple aster

observed three plants with beautiful deep blue flowers, the late
purple aster.  Lee wandered over to the
area near the bee hives and returned with a lovely flower with a square stem,
two leaves, and beautiful blue flowers. 
It was the beefsteak plant, which has been used for flavoring meats, but
is not good for you when too much is eaten. 
Golden asters were still blooming in the power line ROW.  They have been around for many weeks for our
rambles.  Although the ROW had been
mowed, there was still a rim of purple top or grease grass.  Dog fennel and rabbit tobacco were also
continuing to bloom.  Dale found a horse
nettle which he picked, but was stuck for his

Horse nettle

trouble.  He then told the story about when he was
collecting frogs once and saw one on a nettle leaf.  He thought if he grabbed from the top, the
leaf would sink and the frog would get away. 
So he clapped his hands together one on top and one underneath the leaf.
The frog still got away because of the hurt he felt from the sharp needles
underneath the leaf of the horse nettle.

Entering the woods, we stopped at the
dead northern red oak with its white ski slope bark.  Here we commented on how many northern red
oaks are dying in these woods.  The next
stop is great because you can compare the bark of the mockernut hickory with
that of the pignut hickory.  Dale found
both a mockernut nut with its thick outer covering, and a pignut nut with its
much thinner outer covering.  Hugh
commented on the edges of the leaves of the beech tree that are like waves at
the beach.  On the ground at our feet
were a number of muscadine leaves.  Hugh
noted that muscadines are everywhere on the ground in the woods, but are rarely
seen blooming or making grapes.  They
have to climb higher in the trees to get the light necessary for flowering and
making grapes.  Along the trail were a
number of high bush blueberry bushes that are distinguished by the green color
of their new growth.

Someone asked about a sapling with
tannish bark.  Dale pointed out the
leaves with their edges doubly serrate, meaning that the teeth alternate big
and little.  It was a hop hornbeam, which
is easier to identify when it gets larger, just by looking at the bark, which
looks like a cat scratched it.

The white oaks were huge.  Jackie said she could spend the whole time
just looking at the very large one just off the path.  As the white oaks get larger the upper bark
becomes shaggy, like a shagbark hickory. 
White oaks also experience white patches caused by non-deleterious
fungal infection.

June bug; no head, legs, thorax; Ouch!

Someone found a dead bug for
identification.  Dale declared it was a
June bug (really a beetle, but called a bug by everyone).  I was thinking there was only
one species, but he said no, there are a number of species.  It is the one that bangs into your screens at night in
late spring, early summer. 

Along here we found our first of many
sourwoods with its deeply fissured bark. As with many of these trees, it was
bending as it grew taller to reach the light. 
We tried to identify a pine tree, which had a bark like shortleaf, but
it did not have glandular holes in the bark, so it was probably a loblolly
tree.  Loblollies have larger cones than
the shortleaf pine, but we did not see any at this site, although later we
found a loblolly cone that had been completely stripped by squirrels.  Just before going through the deer fence, we
noted the star shape of the sweet gum leaves. 
According to foresters this tree has highly variable bark and cannot
be reliably identified it by it.  Pat added that
sweet gums have winged twigs like the winged elm tree.

A dead tree had mushrooms growing up the
side.  They looked like faded turkey tail
mushrooms, but on closer inspection of the back side, it was a false turkey
tail.  False turkey tail mushrooms are
smooth on the bottom side, but turkey tail mushrooms have holes on the lower surface.  Being at the top of a dry
ridge, scarlet oaks were common.  We
compared the deeply incised leaf of the scarlet oak with the wider less
incised leaf of the northern red oak. 
The leaves are important for identification because both trees have
white metallic ski slopes on their bark.

Ebony Spleenwort

Here we also found three ferns.  Don pointed out the ebony spleenwort with it
black rachis (stem) and small leaves. 
The common Christmas fern was everywhere with its boot like leaves.  But the best was the southern grape fern with
its fertile frond coming from below the intersection of the leaves with the
stem.

Southern Grape Fern
Fertile frond closeup  
Script lichen

Hugh had not stopped for the common
script lichen in a long time, so he stopped this time because many on this
ramble had not seen it before.  Bob said
it looked more like Sumerian writing than Egyptian writing to him!?

We did finally find a beech tree with
beech blight aphids after seeing the sooty mold.  In this

Sourwood leaves turning

area a number of sourwoods were
growing at odd angles to reach the light. 
Sourwoods and black gum trees are among the first to turn red, and some
of the leaves of these sourwoods were turning red.  A musclewood tree seemed an anomaly, since it
was on this dry ridge instead of its usual habitat is along streams near
water.  Nearby was a triangulate orb
weaver.  A pine tree this time turned out
to be a shortleaf with many glandular pits in the bark.

Turning the corner to go on the shortcut
red trail we saw a sapling damaged by deer rubbing their antlers. Along this
trail we found the loblolly pine with the cone stripped by squirrels.  But the most interesting tree on this short cut
was the huge sourwood tree.  Jackie

Jackie amazed

was
so enthusiastic about the size of it that Don asked her to pose by the tree for
a photo.  She insisted on taking off a
white shirt so that her picture would be taken with her green t-shirt.  Dale asked if she wanted to put on
lipstick.  The photo turned out great!

Remerging with the white trail, a tulip
tree leaf caused us to stop and look around for one of these very tall straight
trees.  When we found it we discussed how
weak its wood is, which is surprising given how tall and straight it
looks.  Hugh told that they had tulip
trees in their yard when they lived on Ashton Drive in Homewood.  Before a gable roof was put on the house, the
roof was flat with a fabric roofing material where water puddled after a rain.  Twice limbs broke off a tulip tree and
pierced the roof, resulting in a swimming pool in the bedroom.  That tree was removed.  Someone commented on how big some of the
leaves on the ground were and why was that. 
It gave Hugh a chance to talk about how leaves high in a tree with a lot
of light are small, whereas those on lower limbs are much bigger to gather more
of the lesser amount of light available. Just before we merged with the Green
trail a dead northern red oak showed deep holes, which Dale thought only a
pileated woodpecker would make.

We found that nice pawpaw patch that we
have seen on previous trips on the Green trail. 
Then going through the gate at the deer fence, we viewed the bright red
of several black gum trees.  Beside them
was a very small hawthorn with woolly apple aphids.  The southern red oak next to it does not have
ski slopes like its relatives the northern red and scarlet oaks.  Southern red oak leaves when turned with the
stem up look like bells with the rounded base next to the stem.  The whole leaf is curved like a scythe, which
is why the latin species name is falcata. 
Down the slope from the road was the muscadine vine in the top of a
small tree which got enough light to bloom and provide grapes this year.  Someone had asked about whether there were
shagbark hickories in these woods.  There
are a few, and we stopped to view one next on the Green trail.

Fallen trees had many mushrooms.  Mostly they were dried out, and we saw many
fewer mushrooms along the trail than usual. 
But one fallen tree had false turkey tail mushrooms, which were
identified as before because there were no holes in the back side.  Pulling out another nearby, however, provided
a surprise.  Turning it over it had
gills!  It was a split gill

Split gill mushroom

mushroom.This mushroom has another rather unusual characteristic: it
has over a thousand different sexes! Dale talked about this at great length in an
earlier post this year. You can visit this discussion by clicking here
and scrolling toward the bottom, looking for the section titled: mushroom sex.

After that, we did not see much new to
discuss, although on the last banister as we turned a corner in the Shade
Garden we did find a daddy longlegs.

A small group retired to Donderos for
snacks and conversation.

Hugh

 

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

Common Name

Scientific Name

Japanese Maple

Acer palmatum

Camellia

Camellia sasanqua

Mockernut hickory

Carya tomentosa

Toad lilies

Tricyrtis sp.

White ash

Fraxinus americana

Tea plant

Camellia sinensis

American sycamore tree

Platanus occidentalis

Rusty blackhaw viburnum

Viburnum rufidulum

Unidentified moth caterpillar

Redbud tree

Cercis canadensis

Unidentified orb weaver

Late purple aster

Symphyotrichum patens

Beefsteak plant

Perilla frutescens

Golden aster

Heterotheca latifolia

Purple top grass/Grease grass

Tridens flavus

Dog fennel

Eupatorium capillifolium

Carolina horse nettle

Solanum carolinense

Southern red oak 

Quercus falcata

Pignut hickory

Carya glabra

American beech

Fagus grandifolia

Muscadine

Muscadinia rotundifolia

High bush blueberry

Vaccinium elliottii

Hop hornbeam

Ostrya virginiana

White oak

Quercus alba

 June bug

Phyllophaga sp.

Sourwood

Oxydendrum arboreum

Loblolly pine

Pinus taeda

Sweetgum

Liquidambar styraciflua

False Turkey Tail mushroom

Stereum ostrea

Scarlet oak

Quercus coccinea

Ebony spleenwort

Asplenium platyneuron

Christmas fern

Polystichum acrostichoides

Southern grape fern

Botrychium biternatum

Common script lichen

Graphis scripta

Beech blight aphids

Grylloprociphilus imbricator

Bracket fungus

Phylum Basidiomycota

Musclewoods

Carpinus caroliniana

Triangulate orb weaver

Verrucosa arenata

Shortleaf pine

Pinus echinata

White-tailed deer

Odocoileus virginianus

 White micrathena

Micrathena mitrata

Tulip tree

Liriodendron tulipifera

Pileated woodpecker

Dryocophus pileatus

Paw Paw tree

Asimina triloba

Black Gum tree

Nyssa sylvatica

Hawthorne shrub

Crataegus monogyna with

Wooly apple aphids

Eriosoma lanigerum

Shagbark hickory tree

Carya ovata

Common split gill mushroom

Schizopyllum commune

Grandaddy longlegs

Order Opiliones