urbpan: (dandelion)
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This is my favorite picture from today's Urban Nature Walk in Forest Park, a huge city park in the third largest city in Massachusetts, Springfield. I grew up two towns away from here, but had never explored it quite like this. Here's my favorite picture from the walk, from about halfway through. But let's see how we got there!

lots and lots of photos )

A great walk! If you'd like to get in on the action go here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/68443835849/
urbpan: (dandelion)
This month I want to make up for missing an Urban Nature Walk in February by having an extra one in March. That extra one is today, an easy stroll through the Arnold Arboretum, our local tree museum. The next one is March 31st at Quincy Quarry.

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A friend asked me beforehand, what's in bloom at the Arboretum? Well, it's very early in the year still, but the skunk cabbage is blooming!
more arboretum )
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Taking a look around the Stony Brook Reservation we noticed it was unusually dry: the little swamp I usually photograph was a mud puddle. Here what should be a lush carpet of moss is cracking as the soil below it dries and splits.


Here's something I haven't seen before: turkey tail mushrooms (apparently fresh, from whenever the last rains were) emerging from a burnt log.


Winter is gone, cry the pussy willows as they explode into flower.
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The wild turkeys left their mark under the Longwood Ave. bridge.
Read more... )
urbpan: (cold)
Urban species #074: Pussy willow Salix discolor


Macro photos by [livejournal.com profile] cottonmanifesto

If an award were to be given for "most charismatic shrub," I'd have to cast my vote for the pussy willow. Few others have buds (which have the adorable name "catkins") which have soft grey fur to pet. The fact that they develop these flower buds just as us northerners are desperate for a sign of spring makes it all the better. The fur, as it turns out, provides the same function for the developing flower as it does for mammals: it keeps it warm. Pussy willows bloom early in the spring (or late in the winter, depending on your view) to take advantage of the few pollinators available this time of year. Those pollinators that are active (and here I'm talking about a few kinds of bees and other insects) have few other flowers that they can visit and draw nectar from.

Pussy willows are shrubs (or sometimes small trees) that like swamps and water margins, and may be planted in city parks in such locations. Salix discolor is native to North America, and S. caprea is its European relative. Cuttings of either species can be readily transplanted by simply sticking a cut branch into the ground. Willows of all kinds are favored by herbivores, including urban species like muskrats.

closer up, and two full images )

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