Jun 112014
 

There are two more flowers in bloom in my neighborhood, though I haven’t found examples yet along Piney Woods Church Road.  The first is the Slender Ladies’ Tresses Orchid (Spiranthes lacera), which has been appearing in my front lawn for the past several years.  I do the best I can to mow around them when I see them; typically, there are half a dozen of them scattered across my yard.  Then, just across the road from my house, beside Rico Road and in the shade of a forest edge, I saw a single blossom of what I am nearly certain is the Carolina Wild Petunia (Ruellia carolinensis).  This lovely flower looked like it had escaped from somebody’s garden.  However, if my ID is correct, it is actually a wildflower native to much of the Southeast.

 

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May 292014
 

This tiny, rather nondescript purple flower carries a grand name indeed — Clasping Venus’s Looking Glass (Triodanis perfoliata).  It is an annual herb, native to most of the eastern North America.  I recently glimpsed a couple of isolated individuals, each bearing aloft a single five-petaled flower about half an inch across, near the Piney Woods Church Road intersection with Rico Road.  They offer practically the only patch of purple along the road right now, surrounded by a sea of green leaves.  Scotts Lawn Service offers to “fight” this plant with “systemic weed control,” “killing it completely, root and all.”  Am I the only one that is baffled by this assertion?  There are so many battles we need to engage in throughout our lives — fighting against injustice, poverty, industrial air pollution — but is this really one of them?

 

Clasping Venus's Looking Glass

 

Apr 172014
 

On my Piney Woods Church Road saunter this morning, I encountered two new “common weed” wildflowers in bloom:  the low hop clover (Trifolium campestre) and field madder (Sherardia arvensis).  The low hop clover is a yellow flower native to Eurasia now common in most of North America; introduced by farmers to improve the soil and feed their livestock, low hop clover is also a wild edible plant.  Field madder, also from Eurasia, commonly grows in farm fields and along road edges throughout the Eastern United States.  It has minute flowers that are less than an eighth of an inch across.  I only noticed it because I was sitting on the ground in one spot for several minutes, during yet another attempt to photograph a lobelia growing alongside a barbed wire fence.

Low Hop Clover

Field Madder

Apr 152014
 

On a raw, rainy, windy morning I set out down Piney Woods Church Road looking for new images, new windows into wonder.  I battled the wind for most of my journey; I would frame a photograph of a flower or leaf, only to have it start to sway in a suddenly-renewed gust.  Ultimately, my favorite three pictures from the journey (this one and two in a subsequent post) were successful because they were relatively unaffected by the wind.  This wild strawberry (Fragaria virginiana) was blooming in a ditch near Rico Road, sheltered from the elements.  I glimpsed it from above, as I was peering down into the ditch, and I was immediately drawn to take its picture.  I cannot wait to search here for strawberries, later in the season.  I can almost taste them on my tongue as I type these words.

Wild Strawberry

Apr 132014
 

I arrived early to Piney Woods Church Road, perhaps an hour after sunrise, before delivering a presentation on the Piney Woods Church Road Project to a Sunday interfaith group at Serenbe community here in Chattahoochee Hills.  Along the verge near the intersection with Hutcheson Ferry Road, I glimpsed an unfamiliar pale-yellow wildflower with four petals.  The petals were somewhat folded up; I assumed at the time that they were just opening.  In fact, after an hour of scouring the field guides and internet, the flower turned out to be a cutleaf evening primrose (Oenothera laciniata), an early-blooming member of its genus that is common to waste places throughout the eastern United States.  As the name suggests, its flower close during the day, opening fully only in the dark of night.  Had I arrived at the roadside later in the day, I would have likely overlooked the closed flower altogether.  Although some might consider it merely a weed, for me it was a gift of those early morning hours.

Evening Primrose

Apr 052014
 

Along the edge of Piney Woods Church Road at the junction with Rico Road, I glimpsed some of the earliest blooms of everlasting pea (Lathyrus latifolius) today.  This photograph makes this small flower look almost glamorous.   An immigrant from southern Europe that commonly frequents waste places (such as roadsides), everlasting pea arrived in the New World around 1720. Despite the flower’s unassuming, pea-like appearance, Thomas Jefferson judged it worthy of a place in his Monticello garden, so it certainly merits inclusion here.

Everlasting Pea

Apr 042014
 

Yesterday afternoon, my wife and I hiked a few of the trails in the Sope Creek Unit of Chattahoochee National Wildlife Refuge in Marietta.  In addition to encountering numerous wildflowers (both native and otherwise) and bursting buds on many shrubs and trees, we also visited the ruins of the Marietta Paper Company’s milling operation.  Constructed in 1859, the mill produced paper for Confederate currency during the early days of the Civil War.  It was burned by federal troops in 1864, but reconstructed after the war ended.  Finally, it was abandoned in 1902.  The mill machinery is long gone to rust and vandals, but the stone walls are quite impressive, with enormous window spaces providing views of Sope Creek or deeper into the ruins themselves.

Here are a few images from my day.  First, a few images on the path to the mill ruins:  a flowering dogwood; purple violets blooming along Sope Creek; an eastern redbud in flower among the ruins; and maple keys developing on branches overhanging the water.

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Violets

Redbud

Maple Seeds

Next, a few view of the paper mill ruins along the banks of Sope Creek.

Mill Ruins One

Mill Ruins Two

Mill Ruins Three

Mill Ruins Four

Finally, a few more signs of spring, from later in our walk. Yellow violets were blooming in a charming little ravine, where the water splashed over rocks and fiddleheads of ferns unfurled in the shade.

Yellow Violet

Waterfall

Fern Fiddlehead

Fern Shadow

Toward the end of the walk, we passed a pond where a pair of Canada geese were swimming.  On the earthen dam, European immigrants were in bloom:  crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum; also called carnation clover) and star-of-bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum).  The latter had flower heads so perfect that they looked artificial.  Other names for this beautiful perennial include nap-at-noon, snowdrops, starflower, and dove’s dung.  All parts of the star-of-bethlehem plant contain cardiac glycosides, making them toxic to livestock.  Unfortunately, the star-of-bethlehem is also considered to be invasive in ten US states.  Crimson clover, on the other hand, is an annual  commonly planted as a cover crop for hay, affording excellent forage for cows and sheep.

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Apr 042014
 

Everywhere I glance down Piney Woods Church Road (or, at least, everywhere that is fairly wild and was not recently mowed), I see flower buds and blossoms.  Here are four images from my walk today:  flowering dogwood (Cornus florida), a lovely pale purple violet, and the much loved and hated Chinese wisteria (Wisteria sinensis).  The wisteria is just coming into bloom; soon, much of the roadway will be lined with curtains of pale purple flowers, exuding a heady, almost sickly-sweet scent.  There will be more about Chinese wisteria in future posts.

Flowering Dogwood One

Flowering Dogwood Two

New Violet

Chinese Wisteria

Apr 032014
 

As a change of pace, I set out this morning for Piney Woods Church Road by way of Hutcheson Ferry Road.  Glancing in the ditch at the end of Piney Woods Church Road, I saw what I thought at first were unusually small dandelions, with flower heads perhaps half an inch across.  What I found suspicious is that there were so many, all of which were about the same size — leading me to think that this might be a different flower altogether.  Returning home, I did a quick internet search and discovered that they are, in fact, dwarf dandelions (Krigia virginica), native annual wildflowers common to roadsides, fields, and lawns in the eastern half of the United States.  Despite its similar look, the dwarf dandelion is only distantly related to the non-native true dandelion (Taraxicum officinale).

Dwarf Dandelion