Sunday, May 31, 2026

Backyard Mini Duck Ponds

 Where I live in Saratoga Springs, there are three lovely ponds in Congress Park, which lies just one block away from my home on Circular St. Here's a crabapple-blossom-strewn bank of one of the ponds.

These ponds are usually home for an interesting mix of wild Mallards and domestic white ducks, including substantial numbers of ducks that are hybrids of those two species.  With such lovely waters to paddle in, plus many human visitors there eager to feed them (mostly on non-nutritional bread, despite signs that discourage such inappropriate food for them), why are the ducks found wandering around the city? I have seen them stopping traffic on busy Broadway as they amble across the streets.

And this summer, a pair have crossed two streets from Congress Park to take up residence in our backyard. Sometimes there are even three of them, two drakes and one hen, and they treat our birdbaths as their personal watering holes. The ducks' muddy feet make a mess of our birdbaths, and the trio gobble up the expensive birdseed we scatter for the wild birds, but they have resisted our efforts to direct them elsewhere. 


Well, it seems that one of those drakes must have cozied up with that hen, for look what we saw in our yard on Mother's Day: 10 tiny ducklings, so small they must have just hatched.


I worried about how those ducklings would thrive so far from a pond, but within hours this brand-new  duck family had disappeared from our yard. I have to assume (and also greatly hope!) that mama duck led her brood across the two streets that lie between our backyard the the Congress Park ponds, and are now safely ensconced in a habitat more conducive to their health and their needs. But what an adorable  Mother's Day gift for me!

But the following day, another pair of ducks was standing in our birdbaths.  I hope it was not the same hen, for her ducklings are still young enough to be cared for by their mother.


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

New Trails To Explore (And Lots of 'Em!)

 Oh my dear loyal readers, I realize I have been neglecting this blog for several weeks. It's not that I haven't been walking nature trails and taking hundreds of photos of our region's natural beauties. It's just that each year as I get older, I have less energy to edit the hundreds of photos I take and then try to think of something new to relate about places I've visited dozens of times and the wildflowers I am always delighted to see again. And again and again and again.  Having posted over 2,100 blogs since starting this venture back in 2009, I sometimes feel I am repeating myself at this point.  But this week I visited a nature preserve I've not explored before, and it was such a fine one, I really want to tell everybody about it.

The Sullivan Preserve is in Warren County, located on Glen Lake Road almost directly across the road from the popular Docksider Restaurant on the shore of Glen Lake. This 70-acre forested preserve was donated by Robert Sullivan to the Queensbury Land Trust in 2017, and it offers a variety of trails through a mixed conifer/hardwood forest, some of which lead to beautiful views of a forested mountain reflected in the quiet water of an open pond.



I was glad to follow my friend Sue Pierce or I surely might have gotten lost,  as we followed a green trail from the parking area to a convoluted course of red trails that took us to that splendid pond view, discovering a delightful variety of native wildflowers along the way.



The trees of this preserve were now well leafed out, but still allowing dappled sunlight and shade to reach the forest floor. And we had a gorgeous blue-sky day of moderate warmth for enjoying a walk in the woods. 



The up-and-down trail took a few twists and turns but eventually led us right to the shore of this forest-rimmed pond with its mountain reflection.



The still surface of the pond was adorned with numerous Yellow Pond Lilies (Nuphar variegata).




We passed many different species of ferns, but this Interrupted Fern (Osmunda claytoniana) was the species most immediately identifiable without close examination, thanks to its spore-bearing structures so obviously interrupting the pinnae of its fronds.




We did not find many fungi, but we did see this abundant cluster of large yellow mushrooms crowding the top of a rotting log. Although we were impressed by the handsome appearance of its golden caps and descending white gills, I was disappointed to discover by searching the internet when I got home that this is quite likely the Golden Oyster Mushroom (Pleurotis citronopileatus), an edible Asian import escaped from cultivation to potentially out-compete our native fungi. Luckily, we found just this single cluster.




Late May is the best time for enjoying the beauty of many flowering shrubs that prefer the dappled shade of the springtime forest. Black Chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) is one of our prettiest, with ample terminal clusters of showy white flowers.




Black Huckleberry (Gaylussacia baccata) is another pretty shrub, especially when its flowers develop their optimum shade of deep red.  These flowers were not yet as colorful as they can be, but its leaves had already produced their sparkly sticky resinous dots on the back.  If you pinch a Black Huckleberry leaf at this stage, it will definitely stick to your thumb.




And here is the queen of beautiful springtime shrubs,  Early Azalea (Rhododendron prinophyllum), with its abundant clusters of vividly pink large flowers, as fragrant as they are beautiful.




There were areas where large numbers of Partridgeberry plants (Mitchella repens) carpeted the forest floor, and some of the plants still bore last year's berries, looking as fresh and glossy as ever.  These berries are remarkable for requiring two flowers to produce one fruit, so each berry presents two blossom ends, as this one demonstrates.




The small shiny yellow star-shaped flowers of Hooked Crowfoot (Ranunculus recurvatus) are centered by developing seed pods that look like green balls covered with curved hooks. The better, when mature, to grab onto a passing pant-leg or fur-bearing animal and distribute the seeds within.  Usually found where the ground is damp.




What could be prettier than masses of these cute little vibrant-purple flowers spreading across the forest floor? I first learned the scientific name of this plant from my 1977 edition of Newcomb's Wildflower Guide as Polygala paucifolia.  Then later it was changed to Polygaloides paucifolia. And just recently, the word has gone forth from taxonomists that this wildflower is now to be called Chamaebuxus paucifolia! Yikes! I think I will stick to its vernacular name of Fringed Polygala.  Or even better yet: Gaywings. The flowers do look like tiny single-engine airplanes, propellors a-twirl.




I have to turn over the leaves of Hairy Solomon's Seal (Polygonatum pubescens) to see if the flowers that dangle from each leaf axil are blooming yet.  In this specimen, two of them had opened.  I would need to use my loupe to see the hairs on the ribs of the leaves that suggested the name "Hairy."




OK, is this the Red Baneberry flower raceme (Actaea rubra), or that of the White Baneberry (A. pachypoda)? Since this cluster is just about as wide as it is long, I bet it's the Red Baneberry's. Also, the Red Baneberry blooms and fruits earlier than does the White Baneberry, and these are the first of either species I've seen blooming yet.




Here was the great surprise:  Nodding Trillium grows here!  Some years ago,  a professional botanist told me that this species of trillium (Trillium cernuum) seemed to be disappearing from previously reported locations. I had known of three locations where I knew they did grow, and (happily) they seemed to be persisting.  And now I know of a new location!  Hurray!



And this was another treat we found along the trail: a Pink Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium acaule) of a particularly deep pink. Not masses of them, like populations we know of from other local preserves, but a delightful find nevertheless. Like a cherry on top of all the other delights we encountered at Sullivan Preserve.



Saturday, May 9, 2026

Mother Nature As Flower Arranger

 Sometimes I simply marvel at how beautifully our native wildflowers are arranged by Mother Nature. Here are just three examples of spring-blooming wildflower settings I stood in awe of:

I was delighted to find Foamflower (Tiarella stolonifera) in full bloom this week, lucky to see it before it fades. It was blooming earlier than usual this year, and its flowers would soon go to seed. A spring-watered, moss-covered boulder provided the perfect foil for the delicate florets.  I loved how this fern frond appeared to be bowing before the Foamflower's beauty.




Both Canada Violet (Viola canadensis) and Maidenhair Fern (Adiantum pedatum) share a woodland rich in lime as well as a delicate beauty



The elegant Starflower (Lysimachia borealis) usually bears two or three or (rarely) even more flowers per plant on thread-fine stalks, but I particularly loved the stunning simplicity of this solitary bloom, startling in its pure whiteness against the rough dark bark of a fallen tree.




Saturday, May 2, 2026

Rock Garden Along the Road

 For many years now, as soon as the days warm up enough to awaken the very earliest of spring wildflowers, I hurry over to where the Palmertown Mountain Range falls steeply to the banks of the Hudson River along Spier Falls Road.  To create the road that follows the river here, the mountainside was blasted back from the riverbank some centuries ago, creating steep cliffs that rise directly from the edge of the road. Ledges of sharp-angled rocks traverse these cliffs, and by now those ledges are cushioned with thick mounds of beautiful green mosses, mosses that are constantly dampened by the springs that seep down the mountainside.  And every spring, masses of the native wildflower called Early Saxifrage (Micranthes virginiensis) rise up from those mossy cushions. Oh, what a lovely sight!  Like drifts of snow resting atop soft mounds of bright green!  Would those flowers be blooming already?

Oh yes, they certainly are! 



The soft moss and delicate flowers create quite a contrast against the spring-darkened and sharply jagged rocks.




The flowers make their home in almost every crack in the rock and mound of moss.



Here's a closer view of the pretty little flowers of Early Saxifrage:



So cute!




Most of the mounds of green moss are the species Spring Apple Moss (Philonotis fontana), the "spring" part of its name suggested by its preference for spring-dampened habitats.


And the "apple" part of its name refers to  the apple-round spore capsules the moss will soon be producing:




A second moss that commonly abounds on these spring-watered cliffs is one called Marsh Cardinal Moss (Ptychostomum pseudotriquetrum).  As the tiny water droplets adorning this pretty cluster attest, this moss truly thrives in a constantly watered habitat.



In this photo, the Marsh Cardinal Moss (center) is crowded on all sides by the Spring Apple Moss. I believe both mosses prefer a calcareous habitat, and I wonder if the springs that normally wet these rocky cliffs are delivering lime to the habitat. I am not sure if the rocks themselves are rich in lime. 



So much beauty is springing now, even from bare rocks along the road!


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

A Wild Cherry Sampler

 While driving this week along Spier Falls Road, which follows the Hudson River where this river forms the northern boundary of Saratoga County, NY, I noticed the white blossoms of three different wild cherry trees now blooming along the roadside.  That reminded me of a blog I posted back in 2023, in which I posted photos and descriptions of each of these Prunus species:  P. susquehanae (Appalachian Cherry), P. pensylvanica (Fire Cherry), and P. tomentosa (Nanking Cherry).  That post was helpful to me back then, so why not re-post it right now, while the white cherry blossoms are so evident along nearly every roadside?


 Cherry Puzzler (Redux from May 5, 2023)

While traipsing about various habitats (sandy or rocky, open or shady) along Spier Falls Road this week, I found three species of small wild cherry trees in bloom.  Two were native: Prunus susquehanae (Appalachian Cherry) and Prunus pensylvanica (Fire Cherry).  One, Prunus tomentosa (Nanking Cherry), was not, but it was definitely growing wild, far from anyone's garden. The flowers all look pretty much alike, with five white petals and a single stamen surrounded by multiple pistils.  Read on, to learn how I managed (with help from some friends) to distinguish each species.

Appalachian Cherry (Prunus susquehanae)


Appalachian Cherry was the easiest to ID, since it was the only cherry that grew no higher than maybe 18 inches from the ground, in a cluster of many branches, rather than as a single small tree. Although there's not much about Appalachian Cherry flowers to distinguish them from other species of cherry blossoms, the leaves are unique to this rather uncommon species. Unlike those of other cherries, they narrow toward the base, and they are not toothed below the middle (see the photo below, which better illustrates this trait). This cherry was growing in a sandy-soiled powerline clearcut, with full exposure to the sun. Very fragrant! And also noisy, buzzing with bees! 




Fire Cherry (Prunus pensylvanica)


Fire Cherry (Prunus pensylvanica) is the most common of the small cherry trees around here, since I see it blooming now along many roadsides, as was this one. It was partly shaded by surrounding woods, though. It's a small tree, maybe 8-10 feet tall, with the flower clusters marching in a row along the twigs, each twig sporting a terminal cluster of tapering serrated leaves. Its most distinguishing feature is the reddish color of the flowering branches, a feature that's obvious in the above photo. This cherry has multiple vernacular names: Fire, Bird, or Pin. I call it Fire Cherry to remind me of those red twigs. And also because it is known to populate burned-over sites quite quickly. 


Nanking Cherry (Prunus tomentosa)


I needed help from some pro botanists to decipher the name of this small tree, the Nanking Cherry (Prunus tomentosa). I sure could not find it in my guides to North American trees, because it's an introduced ornamental species that somehow made it from manicured gardens to thrive on some rugged mountainous cliffs and quarries along the Hudson River. Unlike the other cherries in question here, the flowers are sessile to the twigs, not borne on long slender pedicels. And boy, are those twigs fuzzy! As are the leaves. This trait is called "tomentose" in botanical jargon, so hence the scientific name. I found 10 of these cherry trees scattered around an old quarry that was mined way back in the 19th Century. I wonder how they got there. Perhaps they are remnants from ornamental gardens that surrounded the hotels and cabins built back then to house the workers who quarried the mountainside for rock to build the nearby Spier Falls Dam on the Hudson River. Yes, not native (the name Nanking was a clue about that!), but I was glad to find them. So pretty! And a fun botanical puzzle.


Friday, April 17, 2026

Spring is Bustin' Out All Over!

 Well, it sure took a while.  But then, WHAM! It went from below freezing last week to 85 degrees two days in a row this week.  That sure did the trick, regarding our spring wildflowers.  I've been tearing around from woods to woods trying to keep up with what posies are poppin' up, so here's a list of them, in the order in which I found them blooming (at least, so far):

Spring Whitlow Grass (Draba verna)




Snow Trillium (Trillium nivale)




Leatherwood (Dirca palustris)




English Violet, white form (Viola odorata "Alba")




Round-leaf Violet (Viola rotundifolia)




Round-leaf Hepatica (Hepatica americana)




Early Blue Cohosh (Caulophyllum giganteum)




Yellow Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum)




Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis)




Red Trillium (Trillium erectum)




Dutchman's Breeches (Dicentra cucullaria)



And I also found a couple of early spring fungi, both of them in the Sac Fungus group, according to my old mushroom guides.

Devil's Urn (Urnula craterium)




Scarlet Cup (Sarcoscypha austriaca)


I'm sure I could find many other flowers if I extended my woods walks now, but we might have a few days of delay ahead, since our temps are now going to plunge back below freezing at night for several days this coming week. Luckily, most of our earliest native wildflowers around here have evolved to cope with late freezes.


Saturday, April 11, 2026

It's Violet Time for One Species!

 We had such a warm day yesterday, I bet our earliest violets are starting to open their petals. And our earliest species to bloom around Saratoga is actually an imported species called the English Violet (Viola odorata).  And oh boy, is it aptly named "odorata!" It has such an exquisitely intense fragrance, just a tiny nosegay will perfume an entire room. It's a basal-leaved species that can bear pure white flowers with no dark veining on the face but with a purple spur behind, or else with flowers of a deep rich purple throughout, and both species are equally fragrant. One of its most distinguishing features (in addition to its intense fragrance) is its curved style. I have been observing the same two patches in the woods (one white, one purple) for over 15 years, and the plants have not spread beyond their original patch. So although this species is not native to our continent, it does not seem to be invasive, either. At least, not as I have observed this species in my local woods in Saratoga Springs, NY. I am might happy I found it.

The English Violet is a remarkably early bloomer. For that reason, it's sometimes called April Violet, like the perfume called "April Violets" by Yardley, which does smell very much like this violet. I have not seen that perfume for sale for decades, though. I used to buy it in my Michigan hometown's Rexall Drugstore when I was a teenager. I'm just about 84 years old now! But this violet's fragrance brings lots of teenage memories back.

I'm about to head out to the Skidmore woods to see if these lovely violets have come into bloom. I don't have new photos of them yet, but here are photos I took on previous years:

Since this purple patch of English Violets grows wild by the side of a city road where mowers are likely to cut them down, I feel no compunction about picking a small bouquet of them.  In this photo, you can see the flower's hooked style, which is one of the distinguishing features of this species, in addition to its fragrance.  Some of our native small white violets do have some fragrance, but not nearly as intensive as these imported violets do.




Just a tiny bouquet like this will perfume an entire room.   And the flowers usually last for several days, continuing to emit their fragrance.  What a gift from the violet gods!



There's a patch of the white form of Viola odorata way over on the opposite side of the Skidmore campus, this patch along a path through the woods.  I never pick any wildflowers in the woods, so I have to get down on my knees to breathe in these violets' fragrance.  Note how purely white these flowers are, without the dark veins that decorate the faces of our native white violets. But these pure-white flowers do have a purple spur, which you can glimpse on the left-hand flower in this photo.  Another feature of this species is the way the plants spread by underground stolons.  I did long ago scratch away some soil to observe this stoloniferous trait.  I was totally puzzled as to this violet's species, until our state's then chief botanist Steve Young sought advice from our country's foremost expert on violets Harvey Ballard, who ascertained that these lovely flowers were indeed Viola odorata.


The site where both of these English Violet varieties grow, the Skidmore College campus, is located on land that once supported a collection of Victorian mansions. I could imagine that the Victorian ladies who lived in those mansions carried nosegays of these fragrant violets to mask the smells of horse manure as they rode in their open carriages along the carriage lanes that once wound through the woods at this site. I imagine their gardeners planted the patches to have such fragrant flowers available to make nosegays of. The word "nosegay" means a small fragrant bouquet that was carried or pinned to a shoulder to counteract unpleasant odors. Both patches of fragrant violets occur along what once were carriage lanes.  Souvenirs of a different era!