Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Looking for the Green


Looking for the Green
March 17, 2019





St. Patrick's Day bore intensely bright sunlight (not easy for photography), a sky so vivid blue it almost hurt my eyes, and contrasting soft, pure white clouds.




As I approached the edge of the woods, I heard bird songs and calls echoing throughout, and my eyes kept catching the flitting and zooming of birds among the trees and across open spaces. Both sights and sounds were colorful.

The general landscape, though, was overall gray and brown.


Woodland slopes, lowland and Creek, looking southeast from above Cottonwood Pond


Stairsteps of light and shadow accentuate changes in the terrain of Cottonwood Pond

I lead a Second Sunday Nature Exploration Walk every month at Ouabache Trails Park, here in Knox County, Indiana. Every March, the theme is “Lookin' for the Green”, as it was again on March 10 this year. Myself and the eight people who joined me were hard-pressed to find anything green that day, but the search was fun and enlightening, and the finding of any tiny green thing was thrilling.

I thought I would use the same theme for my solo March adventure to Cottonwood Pond. Would seven days' passing, and a different woods, yield more green?

There was, indeed, some more green, though I still needed to keep my senses sharply alert to find it.

The upland slopes were where I found the green plants most familiar to me, and the ones more progressed in growth, including some in bud or bloom.


Young Waterleaf plants rising from the duff on the slope



Harbinger-of-Spring in bloom on the slope - first wildflower to bloom in our area every year


Spring Beauty about to bloom and …


Spring Beauty in bloom!


Cut-Leaved Toothwort in bud


Down in the low areas, right by Cottonwood Pond and farther, but not much farther, away were various plants just showing their leaves. Some I remembered. 


Baby Honewort plants next to Cottonwood Pond


Throughout the lowland, and in some upland areas, too, new Elderberry plants were growing - the tall ones next to Cottonwood Pond also had new leaves, higher up on the old stalks - quite an adaptive and versatile plant!


The tiny beginnings of Dwarf Larkspur, in the lowland northwest of Cottonwood Pond - before we know it, that area will be full of deep purple blossoms

Others I didn't remember in this early stage. How quickly I forget, from year to year!


Cute little round leaves

Grasses poking up





Rosettes near Cottonwood Pond - destined to become tall plants of some kind - perhaps Tall Blue Lettuce?

Grasses poking up


Another kind of rosette has appeared in the flooded Swampy Spot


And yet another kind of rosette


The beginning of Cleavers?


I found buds opening on the young green Boxelder saplings.








Unfortunately, some invasive plants were also displaying green growth. They had already gotten a head start on the native plants, flaunting their unfair advantage.

Star-of-Bethlehem has been quickly taking over more sections of my woods (and are also quite prevalent in the yard and garden areas). I've never seen so many before, and they are very difficult to control. Mainly they need to be dug out - but I have way too many of them! I have even found some in the Cottonwood Pond Root Ball. If I could get to them, I would remove them so they don't spread.

There is also an abundance of Asian Bush Honeysuckle in our woods. We have controlled a number of them (many more to go yet), but some, like this one next to Cottonwood Pond, defied our efforts and re-sprouted.

Some plants, both old, brown ones and new, green ones, were bent or flattened in the direction of recent, strong water currents.


At Creek's edge

A Great Convergence, where water had been rushing through the Inlet into Cottonwood Pond


Water had been widening and gouging out the Seep, especially near the Creek end.


Looking up the Seep, from the Creek to Cottonwood Pond (with Silas)

This action, plus the high rushing of the Creek, had scraped away at the Creek's edge, exposing roots. I wondered how those plants would be affected.




There were those which were yet to bud and leaf out, such as the tree saplings growing from the Cottonwood Root Ball.




And then there were the potential future plants, yet to take hold somewhere and sprout, being pushed and redistributed by water currents.


An exploded Sycamore seed ball, and some Bitternuts, near Cottonwood Pond and the Creek


Very early spring was also bringing signs of increased animal activity.








Worm trails on a pile of Creek mud (and, check out that beautiful semi-skeletonized Sugar Maple leaf!)


Holes in the Creek bank, uncovered by receding water


A fresh Crawdad chimney









Raccoon tracks - the animal appeared to have come right out of the puddle















Spring was beginning to progress at Cottonwood Pond and the area around it. From this point on there would be increasing changes and greening-up, and blossoming – exponentially. I would need to be ever watchful.

There had been so much change to the area over the winter, mostly from heavy water flow pushing through, gouging new paths, redistributing sediment and plants, sculpting new routes and designs. How would this affect the plant life I have observed over the years around Cottonwood Pond?












Looking down the Cottonwood Trunk to "little pond" and the Root Ball Top


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