urbpan: (dandelion)
[personal profile] urbpan
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Then we went and found Six Mile Cypress Slough, not far away. It's all boardwalks through cypress swamp. This great egret was right by the gate, sort of a wildlife emissary for the place.


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This sign was encouraging--there must be alligators here if we are forbidden from feeding them!

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This track showing where a big gator dragged its belly through the mud was even more encouraging!

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While everyone else was looking around for alligators, I noticed a lichen species we don't get up north. This is Cryptothecia rubrocincta, the "Christmas lichen" or "Christmas wreath lichen," due to the red pigment--an unusual color among lichens.

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The boardwalk allows visitors to see a terrain that would be difficult to hike otherwise, and protects the habitat from our destructive footsteps.

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A bromeliad grows from the crotch of a tree. Bromeliads are "epiphytes" meaning they grow from other plants without harming them.

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Another great egret allows a close-up photo I could only dream of in New England.

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A leaf of palmetto as its own graceful beauty.

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A lone wildflower pokes up from the duckweed and dead cypress needles.

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A leaning dead tree bears a pair of old rotten polypores and some dry (but living) resurrection fern.

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A brown anole has a perch near a convenient hiding place.

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Another "friend from home," red maple, putting some fall color into the tropical winter.

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Back at the nature center they encourage bicycling with an alligator-shaped bike rack, unfortunately the only alligator we saw here.

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The great blue herons here seem bigger than the ones at home.

Date: 2014-01-01 10:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] just-ann-now.livejournal.com
Those were great!

Date: 2014-01-01 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
Thanks! :)

Date: 2014-01-01 10:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] plantmom.livejournal.com
Sapsucker Woods in Ithaca NY has boardwalks all through it, not because it would be hard to walk, but to protect the woods themselves.

Date: 2014-01-03 03:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] drhoz.livejournal.com
is that wildflower a bladderwort? the aquatic carnivore?

Date: 2014-01-03 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
Hmmm, not sure. I'm not finding anything similar with my google-fu, maybe I'll try a facebook plant ID group.

Date: 2014-01-03 04:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urbpan.livejournal.com
First two guesses are Alisma and Sagittaria

Date: 2014-01-04 01:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] drhoz.livejournal.com
actually looking up Bladderwork myself seems to indicate the same - bladderwort flowers aren't even remotely similar. Now why did I think that white one was carnivorous?

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