Monday, August 9, 2010
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Trout Brook Valley, Easton
The park is depressingly overgrazed by deer, although the average person probably won't realize it. Most patches of green are alien plants that deer won't eat. But here was a big patch of Naked-Flowered Tick Trefoil, a native plant in the pea family. The leaves look a little like Poison Ivy.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Milkweed at Osbornedale
Friday, July 9, 2010
Asiatic Garden Beetles
Here are some of the Asiatic Garden Beetles I found buried in the soil and roots when I dug up my half-eaten basil. They're about the same size as the Japanese Beetle. Everyone at Shelton's Community Garden seemed to be losing their basil to some mysterious insect, but the bug was nowhere to be seen. Until recently at dusk, that is, when I discovered the brown beetles emerging onto my basil. That's because the Asian Garden Beetle is nocturnal. They are attracted to light, so you may have cleaned these out of your light fixtures in the house or heard them whacking into your screens at night.
The beetles not only eat the leaves and flowers in gardens, but lay eggs in the soil which hatch into larvae that eat the roots of your favorite plants.
As always, we know much more about how this invasive species effects lawns and garden than our natural areas. Are there any native plant species in the forest this beetle is favoring?
The beetles not only eat the leaves and flowers in gardens, but lay eggs in the soil which hatch into larvae that eat the roots of your favorite plants.
As always, we know much more about how this invasive species effects lawns and garden than our natural areas. Are there any native plant species in the forest this beetle is favoring?
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Swamp blooms Along the Rec Path
The leaves you see are Jewel Weed.
the similar-looking but unrelated Poison Hemlock.
Taking a detour onto a side trail where Means Brook and the Far Mill River meet, is the delicate Enchanter's Nightshade, growing perilously close to the Stinging Nettles (*%^&$!!). This spot also floods from time to time, but is usually dry.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
New Camera
OK, folks, I finally got an amazing replacement camera for the high-end Canon point-and-shoot I lost in the parking lot at Sleeping Giant last fall (after dropping it repeatedly while hiking, I confess). I've been using an old, malfunctioning point-and-shoot, and just had enough of it. Soooo, here's the Panasonic G-2, one of the new-fangled Micro Four Thirds camera that is basically a very small, light SLR without the interior mirrors. Wow, so I can take pictures in the shady forest now without a flash. But I don't have to lug around an SLR. It's about time! This camera is amazing. I had an SLR as far back as High School, before cameras were digital, but held off on getting a DSLR because they were too expensive and snobby (no video, for starters, because "real" photographers wouldn't want to take video).

The camera has interchangeable lenses, but they're expensive. The only disappointment has been adapting to the stock lense that can only go from "normal" power to a 3x zoom. The point-and-shoot camera I had last fall went from super macro to 10x at the touch of a button. But I am finding I'm getting just as good pictures by using the computer to zoom in and crop.

The camera is way fun. It has a touch screen -- touch the part of the view you want to be in focus, or scroll through your pictures like an iTouch. The intelligent mode is good for lazy photographers like me, identifying faces and locking them into focus even as they move around. Here's a video that shows how that work.

The camera has interchangeable lenses, but they're expensive. The only disappointment has been adapting to the stock lense that can only go from "normal" power to a 3x zoom. The point-and-shoot camera I had last fall went from super macro to 10x at the touch of a button. But I am finding I'm getting just as good pictures by using the computer to zoom in and crop.
The camera is way fun. It has a touch screen -- touch the part of the view you want to be in focus, or scroll through your pictures like an iTouch. The intelligent mode is good for lazy photographers like me, identifying faces and locking them into focus even as they move around. Here's a video that shows how that work.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Mouse Nest
My son found a mouse nest wedged in the canoe he was cleaning, with three babies and a mother mouse running back and forth. He set the nest aside and the mother hauled off two of the babies into the woods, leaving this on unattended. Hopefully she'll come back.
What kinds of mouse? I couldn't begin to say. In this area we have the White-Footed Mouse (which can go up in the trees and use bird nests), the Meadow Jumping Mouse, and the Woodland Jumping Mouse (which can jump 6 to 8 feet). Then there are the voles and several species of shrews, which the average person would also call a mouse.
Tea Party on the Powerlines
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Where's Waldo, the Wood Frog?
So, can you see him? Look closely. Here's a tip, he looks just like a dead leaf ;-). Try clicking the photo to enlarge...
Monday, June 7, 2010
Strawberries!!
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