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Springing

johngregsite Posted on 17-May-2015 by john17-May-2015
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The rare sighting of lady slippers at the beginning

We are stepping through the woods with a spring in our step now. For the first time since our move to Maine and the almost daily patrols through the back woods, we have found lady slipper orchids right after sprouting. Here is (at right) an even usual sight: a pair of lady slippers. What is so exciting here?

Lady slippers are an orchid; orchids are typically rare plants growing in warm, humid climates. However, the existence of lady slippers in Maine is not unusual and I have seen them in the woods here ever since we moved to Maine (twenty-four years now). With their presence not a mystery, they are still quite unusual to see. The typical population is sparse and scattered randomly among the woods in single plants. One year I remember counting
d7k110872z as many as twenty-one plants among the mile-square area I usually patrol. The beginning of the lady slipper’s life is the small green broad leaves as shown above. This matches a host of small green-leaved under-forest plants. Without knowing exactly where a lady slipper grows, it is almost impossible to identify it among the thousands of other green plants during their initial growth stage.

The lady slippers are not only sparse but almost never, ever, grow together; finding a pair is a rarity built on rarity. Did I mention that the usual lady slipper flower is pink? Finding a white lady slipper flower is another level of rarity (I have seen two or three over the last few years).

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We cannot let you go without the obligatory close-up of an airliner flying overhead (this one Europe-bound). This image is interesting technically because the contrails seem to be in front of the tree branches on the lower right (except for the larger sized trunk in the extreme lower right). The focus field is the jet and contrails, putting the branches out of focus; however, the branches are still in front of the contrails relative to the viewer and camera lens.

Birds around the house

johngregsite Posted on 11-May-2015 by john17-May-2015

D81_0704_150510_94This is a persistent woodpecker who has been working the trees arrayed around the back deck. It may be the sapsucker, or a compatriot, we have already spotted. It may be a downy [hairy] woodpecker – it has a large beak which would distinguish it from the hairy [downy] woodpecker which looks very similar. [edited 5/17/15]


D81_0711_150510_95Later in the afternoon, a squadron of these small birds flit around, sometimes noisily, and do whatever they do. They are not woodpeckers and do not appear to be eating. We have no birdfeeders on the property (for fear of luring birds into the clutches of our four cats), so they must be seeking natural seeds or other organic material for food.

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