Jun 112014
 

There are two more flowers in bloom in my neighborhood, though I haven’t found examples yet along Piney Woods Church Road.  The first is the Slender Ladies’ Tresses Orchid (Spiranthes lacera), which has been appearing in my front lawn for the past several years.  I do the best I can to mow around them when I see them; typically, there are half a dozen of them scattered across my yard.  Then, just across the road from my house, beside Rico Road and in the shade of a forest edge, I saw a single blossom of what I am nearly certain is the Carolina Wild Petunia (Ruellia carolinensis).  This lovely flower looked like it had escaped from somebody’s garden.  However, if my ID is correct, it is actually a wildflower native to much of the Southeast.

 

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Jun 112014
 

In addition to the all of the still-blooming daisy fleabanes (on their way out, at last), two other flowers are currently in bloom along Piney Woods Church Road:  a lone daylily, and a small number of Carolina horsenettles.

I photographed this daylily plant just two days ago; however, today’s image is of a different bloom.  Each one lasts for only a single day, as the name suggests.  Since there was only one bloom, I again resisted the urge to pluck it.  As I noted in my earlier post, the petals taste like sweet lettuce, adding a splash of orange to a salad.

 

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On the other end of the spectrum is the Carolina horsenettle (Solanum carolinense), also known as sand brier, radical weed, bull-nettle, tread-softly, apple of Sodom, and the devil’s tomato.  As several of these names suggest, the Carolina horsenettle is not edible — in fact, it can be quite toxic, due to the presence of solanine.   Ingesting any part of this thorny plant can make one quite ill; eating the tomato-like fruits can be fatal.  Ironically, unlike the daylily, the Carolina horsenettle is native to the Southeastern United States, though it has now spread across the country.

 

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Jun 112014
 

After rainstorms, I enjoy walking Piney Woods Church Road and photographing droplets of water, clinging like jewels to leaves and stems.  But what I glimpse as a thing of beauty can become a deadly snare to a small insect.  This morning, I glimpsed a small flying insect on a greenbrier leaf.  It had accidentally stepped onto the edge of a large drop of water, breaking the surface tension.  As a result, it was stuck as if to gloue, flailing about like a tragic figure in Shakespeare.  I took several photographs if its valiant efforts to break free.  Then, in an act of Deus ex machina, I intervened, offering a dead leaf as a lifeline, freeing the insect from its watery doom.

 

Trapped!

 

 

Jun 102014
 

Nature will bear the closest inspection; she invites us to lay our eye level with the smallest leaf, and take an insect view of its plain. She has no interstices; every part is full of life.

               — H.D. Thoreau, “A Natural History of Massachusetts”

 

Below:  Leaf of an unidentified shrub, illumined by the afternoon sunlight, 10 June 2014.

 

The Closest Inspection

 

Jun 102014
 

At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;

Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,

But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,

Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,

Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,

There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.

                    — T.S. Eliot, “Burnt Norton” from The Four Quartets

 

Below:  A fallen bit of red cedar lies on a leaf of air potato, Piney Woods Church Road, 10 June 2014.

 

Still Point

Jun 102014
 

The Road goes ever on and on

Down from the door where it began.

Now far ahead the Road has gone,

And I must follow, if I can,

Pursuing it with eager feet,

Until it joins some larger way

Where many paths and errands meet.

And whither then? I cannot say.

— J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings

 

Below:   Piney Woods Church Road illumined during a sunshower, 10 June 2014.

 

The Road Goes Ever On and On