4 specimens of Lysichiton americanus |
Doral first pointed out this stretch to me when Rebecca and Trell were small. We used to take hikes up in there, and at one time had named it the snail trail for there were so many small snail shells that we could pick up.
"Skunk Cabagge" or "Swamp Lantern" |
Right now, just one shot of the camera can catch three or four of these plants in any part of the wet woods.
The leaves are not a foot high yet, and the distinctive odor of the flower and leaves is still attracting the scavenging flies and beetles.
I began to pick up the deadfall on the ground and carry it out of the woods to the burn pile.
The next trip there was with David and he learned how to step onto on j-shaped log that is firmly planted in the middle of the stream and stream and swing back and forth on it.
I come out of that area with wet knees for I am kneeling down, trying to capture the new moss that is growing, or seeing if I can get the light just right on one of the drops of dew that hangs onto the new False Solomon's Seal that is just beginning to grow there.
I went to brush some moss from a large rock, but it was so perfectly formed there, that I put the moss back and stayed on my feet -- why should I sit for a few seconds when that moss has been growing there for years.
Asarum caudatum or Wild Ginger |
Still, I pick one or two of the leaves and smell them again, as though I am testing to see if they have the same fragrance that they did the day before.
fiddleheads |
What a surprise that will be for everyone.
Arta
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