September – Tipping
Point
September 14 and 27, 2016
I made it down to
Cottonwood Pond twice in September. Although it was still very green
and wet in the woods and some of the same plants were in bloom each
time, the two visits were like bookends – one set firmly in Summer,
the other occurring after the tipping point into Autumn.
We had one more “last
hurrah” of hot weather in mid-September, and then the weather, a
bit later than usual, turned blessedly cooler.
Though there had been rain
just before each visit (on the 14th, it started raining
again while I was there.) there had been a dry period in between I
had peeked down from the top of the woods and could see there was not
water in the pond during that spell.
September 14 - rain on the Smartweed
However, despite that dry
period there was more water in the area on the latter date. September
14 saw the pond fairly full, but with only mud at the inlet, and pond
water stopping about two feet away from the Inlet.
September 27
September 14
On September 27, water was
on both sides of the Inlet and “little pond” was so full that
water extended under the base of the Trunk.
September 27 - "little pond"
September 14 - "little pond"
I found a Green Frog
basking in the middle of “little pond”.
It was very evident that a
good amount of water (after storms previous) had been rushing down
Temporary Creek #1, into the Swampy Spot, then to the Inlet as well
as toward the Trunk to “little pond.”
September 14 - the Swampy Spot (left and middle) - notice that the ball, which used to be well upstream in Temporary Creek #1, has been pushed to the far side of the Swampy Spot, stopped only by vegetation between there and the Trunk area.
September 27:
Temporary Creek #1 running toward the Swampy Spot (foreground)
The end of Temporary Creek #1 where it pours into the Swampy Spot
Water running toward the Inlet from the Swampy Spot
Swampy Spot with dead Monkeyflower plants - water headed toward Trunk/"little pond" area
Water flowing under top limb of Barkless Log toward Trunk and "little pond"
It was a mighty storm. I
found that some things had fallen or been blown into the main Pond.
These things, especially
the section of thick branch, will become substrates for the growth of
more algae, and will harbor more diatoms and microorganisms, which
will, when warm weather returns, attract snails, tadpoles and other
more visible creatures needing food and shelter. It will be
interesting to take samples to examine next year.
So, everything that enters
Cottonwood Pond creates its own changes, large or small, which have a
“ripple effect” through the food chain and Cycle of Life.
Remember the Jewelweed
plants from Mud Pile #2 that had drooped over, fell in the pond and
rotted? They would be playing their part, too, by changing nutrients
in the water and providing substrates, however ephemeral.
The recent creation of Mud
Pile #3 and a much higher Berm in front of the Cove , caused by much
dirt having fallen (and continuing to fall) from the Root Ball Bottom
has been working as a small “levee,” keeping main Pond water from
flowing into the Cove, and water from the other side from flowing
into the main Pond.
September 14 - seen from the south/southeast
September 14
September 27
September 27
But, water from the
“little pond” side could still be viewed through the Cove, helped
by the reflection of sunlight.
September 27
Sunshine.
The most striking
difference between the two visits was not any lack of sunshine as
Summer moved into Autumn, but a distinct difference in the slant of
light.
Summer light - the front slope on September 14
Autumn light in the bottom of the woods on September 27
It is amazing how some
degrees difference can change the whole atmosphere. After a summer of
glaring, overhead, seemingly vertical rays, here was light
penetrating the woods and Cottonwood Pond in a more relaxed,
coming-from-the-side manner. It gave everything a golden glow an
seemed to illuminate places more selectively.
Between this change of
light and the dip into consistent coolness, I felt Autumn deep within
myself and the woods. I felt the shift was complete, and I reveled in
it.
Even the wildlife seemed
to be calmer and quieter, beginning to settle down. I sensed and saw
less animal activity, in general, on the 27th. A few
butterflies lifted from the vegetation an fluttered away, but too
quickly for me to clearly see them. I only knew they weren't the
large, colorful, brightly patterned ones of late Summer.
September 14 - fresh Crawdad chimney next to a white Polygonum plant
On September 14th,
there were many Crawdad holes from slope to Creek to Pond area. Some
were only holes where mud chimneys had washed away during storms.
Some had chimneys, either new homes or revived tunnels. There were
plenty of Raccoon prints in the mud around pond edges.
September 14 - scattered Raccoon prints between Pond water and Inlet, with three deep cat paw prints net to the stick
A Pileated Woodpecker
sounded off in the woods to the west. A Hummingbird buzzed past me,
landed on a twig of the Two-Trunk White Ash and flew off to a place
not visible to me on the other side of the Root Ball. Hummingbirds
love the Jewelweed blossoms in the bottom of the woods, but would
soon be on their way south.
A large spider web was
stretched out over the Pond, and a Woolly Bear caterpillar (those
mainstays of September) hung out on a dry grass seed head over the
Isthmus.
I heard a frog squeak and
jump into the Pond.
I was startled by the
windy, squeaky snort of a Whitetail Deer just to the north/northeast
of where I stood. I remained still, not knowing why I seemed a threat
(if I was, indeed, the threat) and hear it dash through the
vegetation toward the west.
The woods north of Cottonwood Pond
The plants of September
(of those that prefer moist conditions) were flourishing and
blooming.
Orange Jewelweed was still
blooming profusely on both days, though I noticed more early, green
seed pods on the latter date.
September 14 - Orange Jewelweed blooming near the Swampy Spot
September 27 - Orange Jewelwee growing on Mud Pile #1
September 27 - Orange Jewelweed starting to drop blossoms
September 27 - new green Jewelweed seed pods
Late Summer and early
Autumn are the time for Asters, and a small one was in bloom near the
pond, with its scattering of small, many-petaled white flowers.
Virginial Knotweed was in
seed by the 14th and hard to spot at all by the 27th.
The white Polygonum (I am not sure of the species) was persistently
blooming into late September, as well as a plant with miniscule white
flowers.
September 14 - a white Polygonum (species not determined)
September 27 - a white Polygonum among Orange Jewelweed and grass
September 27 - another white Polygonum in the Pond water below Mud Pile #3
September 27 - miniscule white flowers, not yet identified
White Snakeroot was having
its hayday, with bloom and bud on the 14th and full bloom
on the 27th – some of the brightest white flowers that I
ever see in the woods.
White Snakeroot in bud on September 14
Wood Nettle was getting
ready to fade off, but not before effectively propagating itself. It
was going to seed on the 14th, but had dropped almost all
of its seed by the 27th.
Another plant in seed near the Pond, not yet identified
And the Great Blue
Lobelia? It was in its glory. There was more of it in September, and
the increasingly slanted sunlight reached behind the blossoms and
created a periwinkle -blue glow.
September 14
September 27 - next to Creek
September 27, near the Inlet
By September 14, there was
absolutely no sign of Elderberry fruit, and by the 27th I
was even hard-pressed to find any remnants of the fruit head
branchlets.
Autumn had arrived in our
area, encompassing Cottonwood Pond. But, tree leaves had not started
changing color yet (with the exception of a few Sassafras leaves here
and there) an some were only beginning to float down in a light
drizzle, none into the Pond.
There was that iconic
“fall,” yet, to look forward to.
September 14 - seen from the southeast
September 27 - seen from the north
September 27
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All of that wetness brings
forth fungi:
Tiny red mushrooms on the Very Rotten Log, with moss and leaves of Hornwort - September 14
Turkey Tail fungi on log near the Trunk and "little pond" - September 14
Fleshy, gilled mushrooms on top of the Cottonwood Trunk - September 14
Wood Ear Fungus on a rotten tree near the Swampy Spot - September 14
September 27
Looks like you got a lot more rain than we did.
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