Ramble Report May 23 2019

Today’s Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.

Here’s the link
to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in this post are
compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)

Today’s post was written by Dale Hoyt (Added Milkvine text by Linda.)

Today’s Focus:
Power line right of way and Carolina Milkvine.

29 Ramblers met today.

Show and tell:

Luna moth cocoons

(click to enlarge)

1)
Kathy brought two empty Luna Moth cocoons.

Red Mangrove embryo

(click to enlarge)

2)
David brought a Red Mangrove embryo that he
collected on a recent trip to the Florida Keys. He told us the fascinating story of mangrove
reproduction

Blue Gray Gnatcatcher nest

(click to enlarge)

3)
Avis brought a Blue Gray Gnatcatcher nest. It
resembles a gigantic hummingbird nest.

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Ramble Report May 16 2019

Today’s Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.

Here’s the link
to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in this post are
compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)

Today’s post was written by Linda Chafin.

29 Ramblers met today.

Today’s focus:
 
Cool-season grasses along the White Trail and in the powerline
right-of-way.

Show and
Tell:

Halley brought a section of tree top that recently fell in her yard.  It was a hollow section with a large hole for
a woodpecker nesting cavity.  Eugenia
thinks it may be a Red-bellied Woodpecker (Melanerpes
carolinus
) nest.

Announcements: Tomorrow (Saturday, May 18) is Snake Day at Sandy Creek Nature Center (12 to 4 p.m.)  Bring the children or grandchildren!

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Ramble Report May 9 2019

Today’s Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.

Here’s the link
to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in this post are
compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)

Today’s post was written by Linda Chafin.

29 Ramblers today. We were happy to have Sandra Hoffberg, a former Nature Rambler who left us for a
post-doc at Columbia University, back with us today. She brought a long a
friend named Todd, who is studying salamanders at UGA – read further about his
salamander finds today.

Show and
Tell:

Catawba Rhododendron
(click on photo to enlarge)

Linda brought two flower clusters of Catawba Rhododendron,

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Ramble Report May 2 2019

Today’s Ramble
was led by Dale Hoyt.

Here’s the link to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble.
(All the photos in this post are compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)

Today’s post was
written by Dale Hoyt.

Today’s Focus: Seeking what we find on the Purple and
Orange Trails.

21 Ramblers met
today.

Announcements:

1.     
This
weekend is the big fund-raising event for the State Botanical Garden of
Gerogia. Andrea Fischer told us that the contributions from this year’s Ball
will be earmarked for the Conservation program.

2.     
Friends First Friday, is usually, as the name implies, held on
the first Friday of each month. But due to preparations for this weekend’s Gala
it has been postponed until the following Friday,
May 10
. Our very own Don Hunter will be talking about the Nature Ramblers
and other activities he is involved with. Expect plenty of wonderful
photographs. Sign up soon if you plan to attend.

Today’s
reading
:
Dale read an excerpt from the book Crow
Planet
by Lyanda Lynn Haupt; Little, Brown & Co., 2009, pp. 4-5:

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Ramble Report April 25 2019

Ramble Report April 25 2019

Today’s Ramble was led by Dale Hoyt.

Here’s the link
to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in this post are
compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)

Today’s post was written by Dale Hoyt.

Today’s Focus:
Seeking what we find in the Dunson Garden down to the River Cane.

26 Ramblers met today.

Announcements:
Next Weds., May 1, Emily will lead the monthly guided walk at Sandy Creek
Nature Center. Walk starts at 9 a.m.; coffee and snacks afterwards.

Show and Tell:
Robert was walking into the Conservatory building this morning when he heard a
“thwack.” A bird had flown into the glass and died.

Rose=breasted Grosbeak,killed by flying into a glass window.

It was a lovely
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, on its way north. These are usually only seen at our
feeders for a week or two during spring migration.

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Ramble Report April 11 2019

Today’s Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.

All the photos in this post, unless otherwise credited,
were taken by Hugh and Carol Nourse, former leaders of the Nature Ramblers.

Today’s post was written by Linda Chafin.

Today’s Focus:
The Rock and Shoals Granite outcrop.

25 Ramblers met today.

Today’s reading:
No reading today.

Announcements: The Garden is participating in a “Plantapalooza” plant sale this weekend (Saturday). Click here for the details and a link to the species offered.

Today’s route:
Ramblers met today at the Botanical Garden and carpooled to the Rock &
Shoals Natural Area off Barnett Shoals Road. Mid-April is peak blooming season
for the Piedmont granite outcrop specialties and endemics.

Piedmont granite outcrops are found from SE Virginia to
central Alabama, totaling about 12,000 acres, but 90% of them occur in the Georgia
Piedmont. There are approximately 5,000 granite outcrops in Georgia larger than
¼ acre. Unfortunately, only 11 of them are protected, including Rock and Shoals
(R&S), which is owned jointly by Athens-Clarke County and Georgia Department
of Natural Resources. Though small, R&S supports many of the
outcrop endemics and four rare species.

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Ramble Report March 7 2019

Leader for
today’s Ramble,
Dale

Today’s
emphasis:  
Lower Shade Garden, Dunson Native Flora Garden

21 Ramblers today even though the
temperature was only in the high 30s.

Today’s report was written by Dale, Don and Linda

Here’s the link to Don’s Facebook album with all the photos of today’s Ramble. (All the photos in today’s post were taken by Don, except where credited otherwise.)

Reading: Don read a passage from the book According to Season by Frances Theodora
Parker (also known as Mrs. William Starr Dana). From the chapter titled A
Spring Holiday
:

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Ramble Report November 15 2018

Today’s
Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.

Here’sthe link to Don’s Facebook album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in
this post are compliments of Don.)

Today’s
post was written by Linda Chafin.

Ramble Report November 15, 2018

Today’s
leader:
Linda

Today’s
emphasis:  
Seeking what we find and getting back by 10.

7 Ramblers today.

Today’s
Reading:
Jeff
read “Tapestry,” by Phyllis Barnet, a commemoration
on a plaque at the Bryant Ridge Appalachian Trail Shelter
in Virginia.

Autumn threads it slow burn

through the forest loom

we spin into winter and my

twenty forth year

the 1st without you brother,

your last fall fringed in loose hung stings

I braid them now, twist to

yarn the quiet fire that brought

you back to dust

This shuttle beats the rhythm of

your heart, I’ll lay the half-done

cloth for the wind to weave over

mountains season after season

after season

Show and
Tell:
Dale brought White Oak acorns gathered two weeks ago to see how many were
occupied by weevil larvae. Over the course of two weeks six weevil larvae
chewed their way out of their host acorn. One large acorn had germinated even
though it had 4 exit holes, indicating that 4 weevil larvae had been eating its
food stores. All told, six weevil grubs emerged from 15 acorns.

Today’s
Route:
   We walked through the Great Room and out
back through the International Garden, took the Purple Trail to the river and
returned to the Visitor Center in time to meet the other ramblers for
refreshments and conversation at the Cafe Botanica.

LIST OF
OBSERVATIONS:

Plaza
Fountain:

Dorotha
asked about all the fresh new pitchers on the pitcher plants in the plaza
fountain. Most of these pitcher plants are hybrids between the White-topped
Pitcher plant and another species of pitcher plants, as can be seen by the
white mottling and ruffled edges at the top of many of the pitchers. White-tops
are famous for their twice-yearly pitcher flushes – one in spring, the other in
fall, with the latter being especially vigorous. The plants in the fountain
seem to have inherited the fall-flushing gene from their White-top ancestor.

Herb and Physic Garden:

American Witch Hazel; even without the rain drops the petals are scraggly.

Witch
Hazel is currently blooming, one of only two native flowering plants that bloom
at this time of year. Actually they started blooming several weeks ago, in late
October. Whenever autumn days are warm and sunny enough for insects to fly you
can find them on the Witch Hazel flowers. Further north, with a cooler climate,
naturalist Bernd Heinrich suggest that a group of moths, called, appropriately,
Winter Moths, might be their pollinators. Winter moths can fly when the air
temperature is close to freezing.

And
what, you ask, is other native flowering plant that blooms as late or even
later than Witch Hazel? Mistletoe!

Ginkgo leaves in their fall color.

Linda
pointed out the golden colors of the Ginkgo tree and the Pawpaw patch. Dale
reminded us that the yellow color in autumn leaves is due to the presence of a
group of pigments called carotenoids. These pigments are present in the leaf
throughout the growing season, but are masked by chlorophyll. When the
chlorophyll degrades in the fall (a process triggered by longer, cooler
nights), the yellow color shines through. Yellowing of leaves any time of the
year due to disease or herbivory results from the same process: the breakdown
of chlorophyll.

Many people notice the brilliance of the yellow Ginkgo leaves. This startling color is not solely due to carotenoids. An additional chemical, 6-Hydroxykynurenic acid (6-HKA), is present in the leaves and reaches its highest concentration just before they fall. 6-KHA has an unusual property that explains why the yellow color of the leaf is so intense: it absorbs ultraviolet light, which is invisible to the human eye, and re-radiates it in the yellow part of the visible light spectrum. This phenomenon is known as flourescence. The same principle is used by fabric whiteners but the whiteners re-radiate a broader spectrum of light, which we perceive as white.

The
red color in fall leaves has a different origin. As nights lengthen and cool, a
waxy layer forms at the base of the leaf stalk of trees such as maples,
sourwood, sweet gum, and black gum, sealing the leaf off from the plant’s
vascular system. Sugars that are produced in the leaf on warm autumn days are
trapped in the leaf by the waxy layer and are converted to a group of pigments
called anthocyanins. Anthocyanins include the pigments responsible for nearly
all red and purple coloration in plants, including red and pink flower petals;
the outer surface of apples, cranberries, and blueberries; and the lower
surface of Crane-fly Orchid leaves, just to name a few. (An exception are
beets, colored by a non-anthocyanin pigment called betalain.)

One
reason that southern autumns are usually not as colorful as those in the
northeast is that our forests are dominated by hickories and some oak species
whose leaves do not produce anthocyanins. Northern forests are more likely to
include sugar maples, whose leaves do. Also, we in the Piedmont rarely get that
lucky combination of warm days and cold nights that produce the brightest
colors– a good excuse for a trip to the Blue Ridge!

Purple
Trail:

Water Oak acorn; from the bottom.
Partially eaten Water Oak acorn; from the top.

Numerous
Water Oak acorns were seen scattered along the leaf-covered path on the Purple
Trail. Many were half-eaten, probably by squirrels or chipmunks, and were
highly visible due to the orange color of the exposed meat of the acorn. That
coloration might be due to the presence of tannins. Water Oaks are members of
the red oak subgroup and have higher tannin concentrations than white oaks.
Tannins are astringent and, in high concentration, make food almost inedible. Unripe
persimmons are an example you may be familiar with. Red wines also get their “bite”
from tannins in the grape skins. (White wines, which lack the bite, are made
from grapes minus their skins.) But tannins have another effect: they inhibit
the growth of fungi that would like nothing better than to feed on acorns and
other fruits. The partially eaten acorns might result from naïve rodents
discovering what is edible and what is not.

Hornbeam Disk mushrooms

There
is a bumper crop of Hornbeam Disk mushrooms on the Hophornbeam trees this fall.  Despite recent heavy rains, the disks
appeared to have desiccated a bit, becoming more like shallow, white-rimmed
cups.

Sweet Gum leaves, one a deeply
lobed sun leaf and the other a less lobed, more typical star-shaped leaf from
lower down on the tree, where increased leaf surface maximizes photosynthesis
in the filtered light.

A wet and shiny False Turkey Tail
mushroom, with green stripes of algae growth alternating with unaffected red
stripes.
A large, wet and shiny red-orange wood ear mushroom was seen on one of
Northern Red Oaks we visited last week.
Coral-pink Merulius fungi
growing on the downed Northern Red Oaks that we saw last week.  As usual, they seemed to be growing with
False Turkey Tails.

Brilliant white examples of Little Nest Polypore

Lion’s Mane

Don
spotted two small Lion’s Mane fungi on the underside of a fallen log. Lion’s
Mane is widely collected as a choice edible mushroom. Our examples are still
very small–Lion’s Mane can reach more than a foot in width.

SUMMARY
OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

Ginkgo

Ginkgo
biloba

Witch Hazel

Hamamelis
virginiana

Pawpaw

Asimina
triloba

Water Oak

Quercus
nigra

Hop Hornbeam

Ostrya
virginiana

Hornbeam Disk Mushroom

Aleurodiscus
oakseii

Winged Elm

Ulmus alata

Sweet Gum

Liquidambar
styraciflua

Northern Red Oak

Quercus
rubra

False Turkey Tail

Stereum
ostrea

Wood Ear

Auricularia
sp.

Coral-pink Merulius

Phlebia
incarnata

Little Nest Polypore

Trametes conchifer
syn. Poronidulus conchifer

Lion’s Mane

Hericium
sp.