Monday, June 30, 2025

Mowing Mania

For many years, I visited the nearby Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail to exult in the gorgeous Canada Lilies (Lilium canadense) that used to grow there. They grew there abundantly, in every color this native wild lily is known to grow in.  Orange was the most typical color:


And sometimes the orange-flowered specimens produced extravagant numbers of flowers per plant:



Yellow was also a not uncommon flower color:



Red was not a common a color for these lilies, but I found that color occasionally. And sometimes the red ones were red and yellow bi-colored:



These lilies usually grew close to the trail, but occasionally I would see their brilliant flowers glowing like lamps quite a distance away in the forested wetland:


All so gorgeous.  And I could count on them always blooming close to the Fourth of July,  like silent fireworks, their flowers as bright as bombs-bursting-in-air. So 8 years ago, on July 4, 2017,  I headed out to Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail as usual, expecting to find the lilies' usual brilliant display.  But this is the horror-show I found instead:  hardly any signs of Canada Lilies at all, and otherwise only the remnants of them, with chunks of the flower buds chewed off, and slimy, poop-colored blobs clinging to the outsides.  Few leaves remained on the stalk, already having been devoured by the feces-covered larvae of the Scarlet Lily Beetle  (Lilioceris lilii):

The larvae are the first visible signs of infestation, as they consume first the leaves of the lily and then the buds, covering themselves with their own excrement as protection from the weather as well as predators.  Unfortunately, these beetles have no natural predators or parasites native to the U.S., although there has been some success in reducing beetle populations with the use of biological controls, including the introduction of European species of parasitizing wasps. I doubt very much, though, that those parasitoids have been released at Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail.  In the eight years since I first discovered this infestation, the Canada Lilies have continued to decline, with only an occasional mature plant struggling to persist, and those solitary survivors producing only one or two flowers, none with the abundant number of flowers per plant I used to find.


I do keep my hopes up, though.  When I visited Bog Meadow Brook Trail in late May this year, I found masses of Canada Lily babies happily growing along the trail, close to the edge of the path.  

Could it be that the Scarlet Lily Beetles have moved on from this location, having so depleted the Canada Lily population here that their pickings would now be slim?  Would any of these many lily sprouts make it to maturity? My hopes were high, since the verges of the path looked so green and delightfully floral as we walked it that day in late May. There were Wild Strawberries then, and Grove Sandworts and Spotted Geraniums and Wood Anemones and Wild Ginger and Sessile Bellworts and many other wildflowers in addition to the Dandelions so visibly starring the trailside grasses in this photo.


Well, those hopes were promptly dashed when I stepped onto this same section of trail yesterday.  Those verdantly floral trailside verges had been mowed to within an inch of the ground.  Not a single wildflower of ANY kind in sight. 


Could any of those lily sprouts have escaped the mower blades?  Yeah, dream on! Not a trace of any lily stems could I find among the mown stalks of every plant that dared to inch closer than four feet from the edge of the hard-surfaced path.


Why this mania for mowing a trail wide enough to accommodate a semi truck? Maybe the lilies got eaten by beetles again, but those trailside verges are rife with other native wildflowers that now will never be seen this year by anyone walking this trail. Couldn't the mowers wait until after frost, when  biennials would have a chance to drop seeds for next year's basal leaves? This is called a "nature trail" after all. There's no HOA to fine anyone for letting the wildflowers grow.  Why does a "nature trail" have to be shorn as short as a lifeless, useless suburban lawn?

Monday, June 23, 2025

No Paddling, But a Fine Walk

Finally! Four months after my total knee replacement surgery, I felt I might be able to lift myself into and out of my solo canoe. It was time to go for a paddle. To test my capability, my pals Sue and Ruth and Bonnie came with me to rescue me should I overestimate my strength or my tolerance for pain. We chose to meet at Archer Vly, a pond with a beautiful wild shoreline up in northern Saratoga County, one that offers easy access for launching our canoes.  


I realize this photo makes the pond look calm and serene.  But that was just for the brief moment of this  picture-taking. Most of the time, the wind was whipping waves up on the water past the shelter of this shore, and with temps only in the 60s and paddling muscles grown lax from all winter's dis-use, we thought better of making today our first paddle of the season. Especially since my exit from my canoe with my untried knee might lead to a dunking in still-cold pondwater.

Lucky for us, the pondside woods offered as many botanical rewards as a paddle along the shore would have done.  And lucky for me, my friends can fill in the gaps in MY botanical knowledge with much expertise that I myself lack, be it birdsong or bryophytes.



Later in the summer, the banks of this pond will be a veritable garden of beautiful wildflowers, and this lovely waterside patch of Blue Flags (Iris versicolor) indicated that the show was off to a good start.




Much more shy of bloom are the yellow florets of Indian Cucumber Root (Medeola virginiana), which dangle beneath the top of two tiers of leaves. These florets will rise through the leaflets to crown the plant with blue-black berries as fall approaches.  We were astounded by the numbers of these native wildflowers we found blooming along the trail today.




If we'd been here last week, I bet that the bracts of Bunchberry (Cornus canadensis) would have been pristine white, not showing the first signs of aging as they did today. Beautiful, nonetheless!




The purple-striped blooms of White Wood Sorrel (Oxalis montana) were at the prime of their beauty, nestled amid their triads of heart-shaped leaves.




It would have been a marvelous sight to see, the dozens of rose-splashed white flowers of Painted Trillium (Trillium undulatum) that bloomed along this trail back in late May.  We could ID this particular trillium even now, by the short petioles that join each of its three leaves to its stalk, as well as by the smooth, oval fruits atop each plant, green now but eventually turning bright red.




Here was another wildflower we found that was in between flowering and fruiting, the yellow lily-like blooms of Clintonia (Clintonia borealis) now faded to yield its unripe berries.  Currently green, these berries will eventually turn the vivid blue that suggested this native plant's alternative name of Blue-bead Lily. The best way to recognize this plant now is by its broad shiny-green untoothed basal leaves that appear to have only a single middle vein.





Here were more smooth green leaves displaying a prominent middle vein, but these were narrower and not at all as leathery as those Clintonia leaves.  This leaf sheathed the single flower stalk near its bottom, and two much smaller leaves sheathed the stem higher up. At this young stage, it would have been hard to guess what the inflorescence would look like, but having in past years seen this Little Green Wood Orchid (Platanthera clavellata) thriving along these banks by the hundreds, it wasn't hard to guess the species.




I was ecstatic to find P. clavellata leaves along the shore this year, since four years ago, deep flooding that rose far into the woods had appeared to have wiped out every single one of these little orchids we used to find growing right at the edge of the water. Until now, I'd not seen another one again along these shores. When I now found this row of leaves emerging from beneath a fallen tree limb higher up on the banks, I pondered how this grouping and location must have happened. That 2021 flooding had occurred in September, after the orchids would have gone to seed.  Did the flood waters carry that seed higher up on the banks, where clusters of seeds might have gotten deposited beneath the shelter of this fallen limb? And only now, four years later, the seeds have produced new plants? Not impossible, do you think?





We found the shrubby young growths of Balsam Firs (Abies balsamea) almost as colorful as any flowers, with the bright yellow-green tufts of new needles decorating every twig. It was hard to resist the urge to pluck a tuft to breathe in its wonderful Christmassy scent. And I didn't resist. Aaah!






Both Sue and Ruth are dedicated "mossers" who could tell at a glance the names of many mosses we found along the trail today.  If they did tell me the name of this pretty one, alas, I've already forgotten it. And I never bothered to suss out the name of the vividly colored mushrooms, either. I was simply delighted by the colors and shapes of this arrangement, content to not need any names to stand between my seeing them and the aesthetic pleasure I took in their beauty.




I did know the name of this fungus, a patch of itty-bitty jelly dots decorating a wettish fallen log, although I did need Sue to jog my memory.  Helicogloea compressa (no common name). Ah yes. That's the name!  They don't get any bigger than this.





Whoa!  I DID know that all this fluffy brown stuff was the Chocolate Tube Slime Mold (although I did have to look up its scientific name: Stemonitus axifera.) But I had never seen such an impressively extensive patch of it.


Here's a closer look at that Chocolate Tube Slime Mold, the better to see all those tiny tubes. There are several similar species that can only be distinguished by microscopic features, but I think they all answer to the vernacular name of Chocolate Tube.




This shiny green stuff strewn with what look like skinny rice noodles reminds me of a similar liverwort I found last year that was called Mueller's Pouchwort (Calypogeia muelleriana).  Is this the same stuff, Sue? (I hope Sue might confirm or not in a comment or email.) Whatever its name, it was just one of the incredibly diverse organisms that surrounded us on every side as we walked around the pond.  Wonderful compensation for losing out on a paddling adventure.





We did not see many insects on our walk today (perhaps the brisk wind impeded their flights), but this one, a Swamp Milkweed Leaf Beetle (Labidomera clivicollis), was chowing down on a Common Milkweed leaf. 


Despite the "swamp" part of its name, this colorful beetle can eat the leaves of any milkweed species. Like many other insects that feed on milkweed, this beetle's bright color advertises the toxicity it acquires from consuming the milkweed and thus discourages predators.  And like some other milkweed eaters, this beetle nips the leaf veins upstream of where it feeds at the edge of the leaves, thus preventing the sticky latex sap from glueing its jaws shut. A bug that's as smart as it is beautiful!

Monday, June 9, 2025

Evelyn Greene, Dear Friend and Cherished Mentor

Stunned by grief, I have found it hard to express my feelings of loss, because my dear mentor and friend, Evelyn Greene, died of cancer on May 27. I know many of my naturalist friends will also grieve her death. Her son David Greene has informed us that Evelyn remained positive, physically and mentally and socially active and relatively pain free until literally the last day of her life, when her hospice nurse helped her passing to be more comfortable. A remarkably smart, funny, generous, deeply knowledgeable, one-of-a-kind kind of gal, I am enormously grateful that she recognized a kindred nature-nut spirit in me and took me under her tutelage about all things nature: plants and birds and "holey boulders" and "frazil ice," to name just a few.  Longtime followers of this blog will recognize Evelyn from the many blogs I posted about our adventures together. My mantra about my friend was "I would follow Evelyn anywhere!" Wherever she led me, the rewards were always amazing, her companionship always delightful.

Evelyn liked this portrait (below) because she told me she was wearing her favorite hat. I wish I could remember the story behind it. Evelyn had LOTS of stories. As the daughter of Paul Schaefer, a foremost advocate for the protection of wilderness in the Adirondacks, she and her siblings were required to climb all the Adirondack high peaks as children (whether they wanted to or not). When I met her in our mutual maturity, she preferred paddling and exploring lower-altitude wild places and had no use for "mindless mountaineering and oblivious hiking." Together, we moved slowly, paid attention, and bowed often. Evelyn is pictured here on the Hudson River shore called the "Ice Meadows," an area she knew very well, becoming a true expert on the often-enormous build-up of a special kind of ice that has created the remarkable habitat along this section of the river north of Warrensburg, N.Y.


These are not snowbanks behind Evelyn, but rather that special kind of ice called "frazil."  Evelyn was known as "the queen of the Hudson River Ice Meadows" because of her expertise regarding this snowy-white ice that forms in turbulent river waters during sub-zero weather. 


Sometimes this frothy-looking (but powerful!) ice will mount up so high it will cover the riverside road to heights of 10 feet or more, pushing over trees in the riverside forest and requiring weeks for road crews to clear passage along the road. The remarkably rich botanical habitat along these shores is  caused by the effects of such massive deposits of ice. Often not melting until nearly June, the weight and freezing temperature of all that ice discourages the intrusion of invasive plant species, preserving this habitat as home to many rare plants, including some that are found nowhere else in the state.


Here, Evelyn stands before an Adirondack boulder that displays a remarkable weathering pattern that has puzzled many geologists: granitic gneiss pocked with very odd holes of different sizes, formations that even the state's chief geologist couldn't explain. 


Thanks to Evelyn's diligent efforts to learn more about them, she eventually found a name to put to them: "tafoni" rock formations. The cause of them is not simply wind or water erosion but probably some kind of weathering process involving the mineral makeup of the rock. The exact cause remains mysterious. This is just one example of Evelyn's always active mind: observations would impel her to find out not only WHAT she observed, but also WHY.


Evelyn and I met because we both had Hornbeck super-lightweight solo canoes we could carry ourselves and paddle alone at the speed most effective for observing natural wonders along waterways: slow and close to the banks, more interested in what we might see of plants and animals there, instead of seeing how fast and far we could go. (That's how we walked together, too, slow and observant of all that lay around us, not giving a hoot about reaching a mountaintop.) Whenever Evelyn invited me on an adventure, I jumped at the chance, for this life-long Adirondack explorer knew of many isolated ponds I would never find on my own. On the day pictured below, we visited three of them: Wakely Pond, Helldiver Pond, and Ice House Pond, all situated in a part of the Adirondack Park called the Moose River Plains, a vast area of state forest accessed by seriously rutted old logging roads and snowmobile trails.  Evelyn had volunteered to monitor all three for the presence of aquatic invasives. Happily, we found none.

Evelyn owned several Hornbeck canoes, which she generously would lend to friends she invited to come along on her adventures.   I believe that was her true mission in life, to share her knowledge of and love for all things natural to as many folks as she could, among those who expressed a similar interest. What a generous mentor she was to all of us! And what a fun companion, whether teaching us about frazil ice or tafoni boulders or birdsong or plants or moss or the rarest liverworts in the country! She loved welcoming neophyte nature explorers under her wing and enlarging our worlds enormously. She certainly recognized that incipient passion for nature in me, and she changed my life. I will miss her as long as I live.

This blog contains at least 40 posts about our nature explorations together, so I am comforted that I can revisit these posts to recall the many ways that Evelyn enriched my life.   These posts can all be visited by typing "Evelyn Greene" into this blog's search bar. Here's the link to just one of those posts, one that I think epitomized the kind of fun and adventure that Evelyn Greene added to my life.


Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Spring Saves Her Best For Last!

 The best? Well, let's say "the showiest." Lord knows, I adore the pastel-colored blooms of hepatica in earliest spring, then the shy violets that follow,  the trilliums of earlier May, and who could not adore the lovely aptly named Starflowers still holding their own in the woods?  But WOW!  Just LOOK at the colorful spectacle these gorgeous blooms produce, as the chill of spring makes way for the warmth of coming summer! These are only a few of the glorious flowers I encountered just this past week.

In the deep-shaded swamps and on forested river banks, Early Azalea (Rhododendron prinophyllum) is as brilliantly colorful as its flowers are intensely fragrant.




It's hard to believe that the dryest, most low-nutrient soils of sandplains and pinebushes could provide the favored habitat of one of our most generous and beautiful bloomers, the Sundial Lupine (Lupinus perennis).


As I said, a truly GENEROUS bloomer! (The photo below was taken at the Gick Farm Parcel of the Wilton Wildlife Preserve and Park, which manages this property to produce such floral abundance of the lupines to provide larval food for the endangered Karner Blue Butterfly.)




 Moving from the lupine meadows into the pine woods, I am often amazed by the vast carpets of blooming Canada Mayflower (Maianthemum canadense).  Individually, one probably would not call these flower clusters all that "showy," but such an abundance of bloom most certainly is!  And their fragrance is lovely, too, especially on warm humid days.




The acidic soil under pines is also the favored habitat of our gorgeous Pink Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium acaule), one of New York State's nearly 60 species of native orchids.  Many of our native orchids are the opposite of what could be called "showy," but not THIS one!




The Yellow Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium parviflorum) is equally as showy as its pink cousin orchid, but it prefers a more basic, lime-rich soil, in shaded, often rocky habitats.  Oddly enough,  that could be just a ditch along a country road, which is where I photographed these.




Now, I doubt anyone would classify the tiny, yellowish-white terminal flowers of Tower Mustard (Turritis glabra) as "showy."  But oh, have you ever seen another species so rigidly erect? I found this multi-height population along a sandy path quite delightful, like the vertical lines on a sonograph, a visual representation of the spectrum of frequencies in a sound.  I playfully imagined these plants were representing a happy spring song.




Here's another charming view of the Sundial Lupine, "showy" if you look closely at the crystal drops at the center of its radiating leaflets.  The lupine leaves are textured in a way that they can't be wetted, so the misty rain falling on them slid right into the center to form a single droplet. When the brief shower passed and the sun returned, the entire acres of lupine leaves sparkled like a field of diamonds.



Tuesday, May 20, 2025

The Swampy Stretch of Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail

Yes, my last post also featured a walk along Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail.  But that was just the first stretch of this two-mile trail, a section I think of as wet meadows.  Except for the trailside trees and shrubs, the trail mostly passes through open sunlit meadows that stretch for miles in each direction.  What grows there? Mostly Phragmites, Tussock Sedge, Poison Sumac, and non-native honeysuckles that line the trail and provide the shade for Nodding Trilliums to shelter beneath.  Coming in from the other end of the trail, the habitat consists of quite a bit of open marsh, where waterfowl paddle about in open ponds, cattails and willows flourish along the watery shores, and beavers do their bit every year to try and flood the trail.  That leaves the middle stretch of Bog Meadow Trail, which consists of wooded wetland, a part of the trail that is damp underfoot and densely shaded by trees. In other words, this is swamp.  And it's my favorite part. I hope by this post I can demonstrate why.

I usually enter this middle part of the trail by following a spur trail that starts in a posh neighborhood of stately homes off Meadowbrook Road. A quick stroll through upland forest brings me directly into the middle section of the Bog Meadow Trail, after crossing a boardwalk crowded on either side by masses of Skunk Cabbage, Cinnamon Ferns, and Horsetail Reeds.  Later in summer, this swamp is beautified by many towering plants of Swamp Thistle topped by their big bright fuchsia-colored flowers. Today, it was a mass of many shades and shapes of green




I love the frothy texture the Horsetails (Equisetum spp.) provide along the boardwalk.



Three different species of Equisetum flourish here, the solo-branching Field Horsetail pictured below in the center (E. arvense), the multi-branching Wood Horsetail (E. sylvaticum) just to the left, and the tiny wiry-branching Dwarf Horsetail (E. scirpoides), which today was well hidden beneath all the other greenery, including the broad leaves of Skunk Cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus).




Just where this spur trail connects with the main trail, I always look for a solo plant of Water Avens (Geum rivale), which comes into bloom about this time in late May.  In all the more than 16 years I've been finding it, a solitary plant is all that persists.  And I did find it today. It's not a very showy flower, unless you look at it closely. That's when you notice the yellow petals nestled within the reddish-purple calyces. And the flower never opens wider than this, so you have to peer inside to notice the crowded mass of stamens, which will continue to lengthen as the summer proceeds.





Probably the most numerous flower blooming today was the Hooked Crowfoot (Ranunculus recurvatus), a common wetland denizen. If not for its bright shiny star-shaped flowers, this plant might be easy to overlook, the flowers are so small. If you peer very close, you could see the tiny hooks that cover its developing seed pod, a feature that suggested both its scientific and vernacular names.




The most numerous fern along this boardwalk was Cinnamon Fern (Osmundastrum cinnamomeum), an easy fern to identify, thanks to its cinnamon-colored spore stalks. I have found Lady Fern and Marsh Fern here in past years, but I did not take the time to look for them. I did find Maidenhair Fern as well, just beginning to open its delicate fronds.



When the boardwalk ended, I stepped onto the main avenue of Bog Meadow Trail, which now resembled a tunnel of spring greenery.




A number of lovely native wildflowers were blooming now along the trail. Here was a pretty patch of Canada Mayflower (Maianthemum canadense).




It would take a long time to pick a bowl of the fruits of Dwarf Raspberry (Rubus pubescens), since it usually bears but a single ripe berry at a time.




The flowers of Wild Sarsaparilla (Aralia nudicaulis) grow on a separate stalk from the stalk that supports its overtopping leaves.




Aha, here were some Maidenhair Ferns (Adiantum pedatum) adding their delicate beauty to this scene along a trailside brook, enhanced by a few Foamflower blooms (Tiarella stolonifera).




I'm so glad I found a few specimens of the Star-flowered False Solomon's Seal (Maianthemum stellatum) still in perfect bloom. They are blooming earlier than usual this spring, and many in this abundant patch already had fading flowers.





I believe these are the flowers of a species of Chokeberry, probably Black Chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa), since that's the species I've found along this section of trail in past years. My Newcomb's Wildflower Guide would have helped me with the ID, but I neglected to bring it with me. Very pretty, whatever its name!





The evidence of a solitary Golden Ragwort (Packera aurea) close to the edge of the trail alerted me to enter the woods at this point and seek out this abundant patch of it some distance from the trailside. This plant is happiest in swampy spots.


I was hoping I'd find some Early Azalea (Rhododendron prinophyllum) in bloom, but I could not remember exactly where I'd find it along the trail.  I trusted my nose would alert me to it, and I was right. Some time before I espied its gorgeous vivid-pink blooms some distance away in the woods, I detected its fragrance on the air, looked around, and there it was! 




It cost me some difficulty to approach it, teetering on tussocks and tripping over downed branches and stepping in mud, but I just had to fill my nose with that exquisite scent and my eyes with a closer look at the beauty of its blossoms.




Back there, near the azalea, I noticed a few stalks of Water Horsetail (Equisetum fluviatile) nearby.  This was my signal to continue along the trail to one of the only actual boggy pools along the Bog Meadow Brook Trail.




Just a few yards further along, I spotted this pool, so thick with Water Horsetails I could hardly make out the water.




I also spotted this thick patch of Sphagnum Moss, definitely a clue about this being a boggy, acidic habitat.




And here were the final plants I had hoped to find on my walk today.  But alas, the showy white flower clusters of Bog Buckbean (Menyanthes trifoliata) had faded by now, yielding  clusters of seedpods but not the masses of blooms I have found in other years. But at least it was reassuring that this flower HAD bloomed this spring.  Next year, I will have to look for it earlier in May.  My knee should be well-healed by then, the pain that kept me from seeking these many lovely plants earlier this spring only a memory by then.




One last treasure awaited me.  What a splendid dragonfly, and the cool, damp day had chilled it to the point where it would not fly away, even as I moved my camera close.  My "Snopes Beginner's Guide to Dragonflies" offered no ID, aside from suggesting this might be a spiketail.  Then my friend Sue Pierce checked iNaturalist, which offered the name Delta-spotted Spiketail. Except for the brown (not blue) eyes of this dragonfly, the images matched completely. Close enough, at least for now.