Always good to see the first flower of the bananas.
Gretchen and the first banana bloom of the year
Bananas are not trees, you know. They are very large bulbs.
Gretchen has several varieties of bananas.
-jsq
Always good to see the first flower of the bananas.
Gretchen and the first banana bloom of the year
Bananas are not trees, you know. They are very large bulbs.
Gretchen has several varieties of bananas.
-jsq
Update 2024-05-30: Blueberry Scacrecrow 2024-05-24.
Maybe the scarecrow will keep the critters off the okra and the yellow squash.
Also known as straightneck squash, the Abelmoschus esculentus is producing quite a bit.
The okra, Abelmoschus esculentus, hasn’t bloomed yet, but maybe it will soon.
Got a few more taters to dig, too, adding to the many we already dug.
-jsq
This turtle was in the middle of the road as I drove home. It was in Quarterman Road, near Redeye Creek, which runs to the Withlacoochee River.
Turtle in road and on the other side
So I carried it to the other side. It was about a foot long.
What kind of turtle is it?
My guess is river cooter, Pseudemys concinna.
Could be the subspecies Suwannee cooter, Pseudemys concinna suwanniensis. Or the subspecies Eastern river cooter, Pseudemys concinna concinna first described by my cousin John Eatton LeConte Jr. in 1830.
Or maybe a Florida cooter or some other species.
What do you think? Continue reading
Update 2024-05-30: Blueberry Scacrecrow 2024-05-24.
Maybe this will keep the birds from eating all the blueberries.
The dogs spotted this snakeskin along the driveway. Gretchen carried it to the blueberries.
-jsq
This Butterfly Milkweed is growing where pine beetles, hurricanes, and thunderstorms have left few trees standing.
Two clumps of butterfly milkweed
Asclepias tuberosa attracts butterflies with its color and its nectar. It is native to eastern and southwestern North America.
-jsq
A tiny spring that is almost always at least damp.
The concrete marker is a property marker. Gretchen bought the small tract beyond it.
-jsq
A bolting longleaf pine tree.
Longleaf pines, Pinus palustris, have an interesting life cycle, from big seeds with wings that only sprout on bare soil, to grass stage that looks like a clump of grass 18 inches in diameter and can stay that way for years if not weeded while a root goes down, to this bolting stage with the trunk extending, to sapling and then tree stage.
The furry-looking stuff up top is the candle it grew just this spring, about two feet long.
A mature longleaf can grow 100 feet tall in about 100 years, and can live more than 300 years.
You don’t see many mature ones these days, because while they used to be the main forest from southern Virginia to eastern Texas along the U.S. coastal plain, 98% of them were cut down for ship masts and lumber.
In the few scraps of longleaf pine forest that are left, such as on my land that my grandfather bought in 1921, species diversity is greater than anything outside a tropical rainforest.
Most of the diversity is in the undergrowth such as you see in this picture.
Yes, this area needs to be burned. Weather and time permitting, it will be this winter.
-jsq
A yellow squash bloom with another tiny squash below.
We’re getting quite a few squash to eat, despite the wlidlife snacking.
-jsq
A turkey egg is somewhat larger than a chicken egg.
One of our dogs brought it to us. We couldn’t find the nest to put it back.
No, it wasn’t that dirty when we first saw it. We were digging potatoes, so that’s garden dirt.
-jsq
Two pomegranates with a bloom behind.
Maybe we’ll have some Punica granatum to eat this year.
-jsq