Spring is in bloom or fruit.
Beautyberry (Callicarpa americana)
This bread was so beauteous that Gretchen wouldn’t let anybody eat it for several days.
Then it was very tasty.
-jsq
This gopher tortoise ran out of the back driveway into this thicket.
Gopher tortoise in the briar patch
This Gopherus polyphemus is hard to see in there. Continue reading
This rat snake was stuck on the sticky traps.
Fortunately, vegetable oil softens the glue and the snake writhed free.
Didn’t seem in any hurry to go anywhere. Continue reading
A flock of split-tailed kites wheeling above where I just cultivated the okra.
Here’s a movie of these Elanoides forficatus, also known as swallow-tail kites: Continue reading
It’s that time of year.
In the spring, pine pollen settles on the solar panels like yellow mud. A strong water spray loosens it up, and scrubbing removes it. Continue reading
Never saw them bloom before.
“It takes at least 4 years to go from a just-pollinated flower to a mature, blooming plant.” Growing Sarracenia from Seed, International Carnivorous Plant Society (ICPS).
These pitcher plants grew naturally in our woods.
We do have bumblebees, so maybe they will pollinate. Then maybe seeds in August or September.
Dug out of its winter cocoon, with tractor blade and hoe. Then planted by hand in rows made by the planter, later covered with dirt by tractor cultivator. Later this year: more cane syrup.
Continue readingIf you want a southern pine forest, you have to burn every few years to keep the other trees back, and to keep the vines from climbing to the top as ladder fuels.
This was a burn around the house, also to reduce the likelihood of wildfires or our other burns getting to the house.
Might be prudent to do it in less than five years, since there was a lot of raking to be done this time. That’s why we took two days to do this five acres.
But we did it with one match. No gasoline or diesel to spread the fire. Just flaming pine straw on rakes. Continue reading