Leader
for today’s Ramble: Roger
Nielsen
Authors of today’s
Ramble report: Roger and Don Hunter
Insect
and fungi identifications: Don Hunter
Link to Don’s Facebook album for this Ramble. All
the photos that appear in this report, unless otherwise credited, were taken by
Don Hunter. Photos may be enlarged by clicking them with a mouse or tapping on
your screen.
Number
of Ramblers today: 27
Today’s emphasis: Seeking what we find along
the White, Orange, and Purple Trails with a quick stop in the lower Flower
Garden.
Ramblers exiting the Children’s Garden via the Fallen Giant Chestnut tunnel |
Reading: Roger read excerpts
from “July,” a chapter in “Moods of the Ohio Moons: An Outdoorsman’s Almanac”
by Merrell C. Gilfillan (1991, Kent State University Press). Gilfillan was a
wildlife biologist with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of
Wildlife and later a freelance writer.
“July
is the first full month of summer, yet it comprises the heart of the summer
season with its dog days intensity of heat and humidity. It was known to the
Indian tribes as the Thunder Moon or the Heat Moon… During the Thunder Moon,
the great summer storms build up and roll across the land. Rural people will
run out to stand in the rain, finding delightful, tactile pleasure in the
caress of the raindrops and the cooling breeze the rain brings… In July… events
are already pointing to autumn. At the start of the month, tree foliage, which
has attained the solid, glossy look, indicates that it has reached its full
growth for the season, until drought and the chemistry of autumn changes its
appearance. Summer gardens are beginning to display their brightness. Hollyhock
blooms climb the stalks as summer strengthens… Dry maple samaras are still
falling or being eaten by squirrels. Beechnut burrs change from green to gold…
But the outstanding feature of summer vegetation is the tall, bright wildflowers;
they seem to reflect the bright energy of the day star in their blossoms… Fields
of chicory are a blue haze, perhaps dotted with Oxeye Daisies, Queen Anne’s Lace,
and Black-eyed Susans. Joe Pye Weed, Teasel, sunflowers, magenta and yellow ironweeds,
and the striking orange of Butterfly Weed are noticeable… July birds are
quieter than during the nesting and rearing season… Late in the month, they
will molt and be private for a time. To the Cree and Ojibway, July is the Moon
When Birds Cast Their Feathers… July is host to a number of beautiful
insects—the butterflies and moths. These brightly colored creatures command
wide attention as they dance over garden and meadow, visiting flowers… But
perhaps the givers of most romance and beauty are the fireflies. Has there ever
been a child who didn’t run through the dusk, pursuing and catching fireflies
to keep in a bottle—a living light for a few hours?”
Announcements/Interesting
Things to Note:
Some of you may remember Joan West, who was a Nature Rambler in 2013 and 2041 and is now a National
Park employee at Arches National Park in Utah. She just let Don know that she has completed her final
remaining section of the Pacific Crest Trail. She began the hike in 2014,
shortly after leaving the Nature Ramblers, but had to withdraw in the fall
of that year due to a stress fracture. She says Hi! and sends best wishes to everyone she knew
before leaving for the West.
Two
articles of interest caught Linda’s eye this week…
How
Do Plants Remember Experiences?
Urban
Meadows Hold the Key to Pollination Prosperity
Today’s
Route: From the Children’s Garden, we walked through the Fallen Giant Chestnut tunnel, down the White
Trail to the Orange Trail, then downstream on the Orange Trail to the beaver marsh. From there we turned uphill on the Purple Trail and wound up in the Lower Flower Garden. We chose this route to be
mostly in the shade and mostly downhill or level.
OBSERVATIONS:
Don got
to the Ramble a little early to look for an interesting photo or two…
Broken-backed Bug on Maximilian sunflower |
Darkling Beetle on leaf of Short-toothed Mountain-mint |
Ramblers were hoping to find Crane-fly Orchid in flower along this stretch of trail but found only two plants with flower stalks, both with immature buds. However, Don spotted a nice Old Man of the Woods mushroom growing in what is probably an Armadillo burrow.
Old Man of the Woods mushroom |
American Toad |
American
Toads are common throughout eastern North America, except in the southeastern Coastal Plain. They are usually brown or gray, but may be olive, tan, or even brick red. There is always a light stripe down the middle of their backs. This is the frog whose call is so frequently heard along the river in late winter and spring; its call is “a long, high-pitched,
musical bu-r-r-r-r that is 6-30 seconds in duration.”
Silverbell trees are one of many host plants for the gorgeous Promethea Moth (Callosamia promethea) Photo credit: Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren |
A mystery Viburnum, probably an escapee from a Garden landscape planting, possibly Linden Viburnum which is planted in several places throughout the cultivated beds in the Garden. |
Hop Hornbeam trunk festooned with Crossvine in the bottomland along the river. |
Roger
discussed how vines have evolved to reach the sunlight without having to expend
massive amounts of energy to make the thick, tall trunks of trees that
carry their canopies into the sunlight. Vines just sort of “tag along” with
trees, using tendrils, twining stems, or sticky pads to attach to a tree which carries the vine’s leaves as well as its own upward to the sun.
The trail |
Painted Buckeye fruits mature as the leaves begin to fade |
We stopped at a couple of small Painted Buckeye shrubs whose leaves were already beginning to change color and fall to the ground. Roger pointed out that buckeyes are among the first trees and shrubs to leaf out in the spring and the first to lose their leaves in the summer – one of the “events already pointing toward autumn,” that Gilfillan mentioned in his “July” essay.
Arrow-shaped Orbweaver suspended across the leaves of a Painted Buckeye. |
Bitternut Hickory bark, leaves, and nut |
Bitternut
Hickory occurs in bottomlands, seepy streamheads, and rich, moist forests, nearly
throughout Georgia. It is a close relative to Pecan but its bitter-tasting nuts
are not edible by humans. Its bark resembles that of Mockernut Hickory, with conspicuously braided ridges, but the leaves have 7-9 leaflets and the nuts are thin-shelled with low wings along the sutures.
The Middle Oconee River floodplain on July 20 |
The floodplain is relatively dry – there’s been little rain in the last 10 days and higher than normal temperatures have accelerated evapotranspiration – the
trees have sucked the floodplain dry. (Thursday and Friday night’s storms, after this photo was
taken, have corrected this situation.)
Erosion gully carrying sandy sediments onto the floodplain. |
Near
the junction of the White Trail with the Orange Trail, we stopped to view sandy
sediments that had washed down a small drainage, perhaps in the big storms we had June 21-22 (total 7.5 inches of rain). Roger Collins bushwhacked a
short distance up the drainage to confirm that the sand had washed down the small drainage rather than being deposited during overbank flooding of the river.
Jewelweed, with its distinctive spurred, orange flowers, is also common in the floodplain. |
A U.S.
Forest Service website says: “The
showy orange flowers of jewelweed must be cross-pollinated by [long-tongued]
insects or hummingbirds. However, jewelweed also has inconspicuous flowers that
never open. These closed flowers (termed cleistogamous by botanists) fertilize
themselves and produce seed without ever exchanging pollen with another flower.
Cleistogamous flowers are very small (about 1 mm long) and are borne near the
bases of the leaves. Research has shown that seeds produced by the showy,
cross-pollinated flowers grow into larger, hardier plants, but the cleistogamous
flowers produce seed at a much lower cost to the parent plant. Jewelweed has a
long history of use in Native American medicine. When applied topically, sap
from the stem and leaves is said to relieve itching and pain from a variety of
ailments, including hives, poison ivy, stinging nettle, and other skin sores
and irritations. The sap has also been shown to have anti-fungal properties and
can be used to treat athlete’s foot.”
Unripe fruits of Pokeweed adorn the many Pokeweed plants in the floodplain. |
Of Pokeweed,
the U.S. Forest Service says: “American
Pokeweed is a species of open or edge habitats, especially those where birds
are able to roost. It is found at forest edge, in fence rows, under power
lines, pastures, old field, forest openings, and other similar areas. The
entire plant is poisonous causing a variety of symptoms, including death in
rare cases. The berries are especially poisonous. Young leaves and stems when
properly cooked are edible and provide a good source of protein, fat and
carbohydrate.” (Knowledgeable Ramblers pointed out that the leaves should
be eaten ONLY before the flowers appear; otherwise they are
poisonous.)
Immature spikelets of River Oats |
Of
River Oats, the Missouri Department of Conservation website says: “River Oats is one of the major
food plants for the caterpillars of the northern pearly-eye (Enodia anthedon),
a beautiful woodland butterfly that is grayish brown with several dark eyespots.
A number of skipper species also use river oats as a caterpillar food plant…A
variety of rodents and seed-eating birds, including turkey and quail, eat the
seeds of River Oats. Deer eat the seeds and foliage. Bottomland and stream-edge
plants [such as River Oats] play important roles in preventing erosion by
floods. The network of strong roots helps hold the soil in place, and the
thirsty, growing plants absorb excess moisture from the soil.”
Southern Pearly Eye Photo by Judy Gallagher |
In the weeds around the River Cane, Don spotted these possibly mating Two-lined Spittlebugs, both of which were exuding beads of spittle. |
On the levee, a Green Ash that is clearly in distress, probably a victim of the Emerald Ash Borer, which has been documented at the Garden. |
Green Ash in fruit, each cluster containing many paddle-shaped fruits. |
At the junction with the Purple Trail, Roger pointed out the American Basswood tree, noting how the base of the heart-shaped leaf is asymmetrical. |
The
North Carolina Extension Service says: “Historically, Boneset was included
in medicinal herb gardens and used as a folk medicine for treatment of flu,
fevers, colds, and a variety of other maladies. Some authorities claim the name
Boneset refers to a former use of the plant to aid the healing process for
broken bones; others claim that the name is in reference to the plant’s use as
a diaphoretic in the treatment of an 18th century influenza called break-bone
fever.” Roger added out that although Boneset extends east of the Rocky
Mountains from Canada to Texas and Florida, it is uncommon in the Southern
Appalachian Mountains.
A well-camouflaged Carolina Anole hiding amid the Boneset foliage. |
Carolina Anoles are abundant throughout the southeast except in the Blue Ridge. |
SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:
Darkling Beetle family Tenebrionidae
Broken-backed Bug Taylorilygus apicalis
Short-toothed Mountain-mint Pycnanthemum muticum
Cranefly Orchid Tipularia discolor
Jack-in-the-Pulpit Arisaema triphyllum
Ebony Spleenwort Asplenium platyneuron
Black Locust Robinia pseudo-acacia
American Toad Anaxyrus americanus
Unknown Viburnum Viburnum sp. possibly V. dilatatum
Bitternut Hickory Carya cordiformis
Four-wing Silverbell Halesia tetraptera
Hop Hornbeam Ostrya virginiana
Crossvine Bignonia capreolata
Wing-stem Verbesina alternifolia
Painted Buckeye Aesculus sylvatica
Linden Viburnum Viburnum dilatatum
Virgin’s Bower Clematis virginiana
Sweet Autumn Clematis Clematis terniflora
Redheaded Ash Borer Neoclytus acuminatus
Elderberry Sambucus canadensis
Jewelweed Impatiens capensis
Pokeweed Phytolacca americana
River Oats Chasmanthium latifolium
American Basswood Tilia americana
Boneset Eupatorium perfoliatum
Carolina Anole Anolis carolinensis