Mar 06
Early March
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, bird behavior, native plants, photography March 6th, 2010
The thicketing plums in full bloom–this thicket began with a few stems of plum stuck in the ground.
Mar 06
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, bird behavior, native plants, photography March 6th, 2010
The thicketing plums in full bloom–this thicket began with a few stems of plum stuck in the ground.
Feb 26
Posted: under photography, Plantlife.
Tags: beauty, native plants, photography February 26th, 2010
The earliest native plum is a thicketing bush plum that’s spread in what we laughingly call the orchard. First bloom opened yesterday; this morning I found these, with many more to come.
Feb 25
Posted: under photography, Weather.
Tags: beauty, photography, snow, Weather February 25th, 2010
We get snow so seldom (and enough to take pictures of, even more seldom) that I feel several posts of snow pictures are justified.
This is on the trail north from Fox Pavilion to the north fenceline.
Feb 24
Posted: under photography, Weather.
Tags: beauty, photography, Weather February 24th, 2010
Early morning, 22F, snow has crunchy crust…the little Eleocharis there in the wet area are ice-coated but they don’t mind. What a difference a day makes. I took different trails than yesterday and have over a hundred images–here are some of my favorites.
Feb 17
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, butterflies, insect, native plants, photography February 17th, 2010
Elbowbush, either Forestiera pubescens or F. angustifolia (we have both species), is the first of our woody plants to flower in spring, and yesterday the first of the elbowbushes on the north fenceline west of the dry woods was opening.
Feb 11
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Water, Weather, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, native plants, natural water, observation, photography, rain, seasons, Weather February 11th, 2010
Feb 05
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Water.
Tags: beauty, native plants, natural water, observation, photography February 5th, 2010
At the end an hour slogging around a very wet, running-water-wet field as the sun gets low, you might wonder why you didn’t go back before now. Then you look down and there it is…the first one this spring. The sheer audacity of it–that determined stem, those leaves reaching for sunlight, and then that fragile, pale pink flower.
Jan 27
Posted: under photography, Plantlife.
Tags: beauty, native plants, photography January 27th, 2010
A little rain, after the hard freeze…a week of warmer weather and some sun…and more plants have burst into bloom or begun to pop buds. Here a rusty blackhaw viburnum’s buds have lengthened and changed color and texture, reaching out for another year’s growth:
Jan 09
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Weather, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, freeze, photography, Weather January 9th, 2010
The cold front that hit central Texas between midnight and dawn Thursday certainly did change things…yeah, we’d had that 15 degree down-spike back in December, and some other overnights in the 20s (good for knocking the ticks back) but this was a serious Arctic blast like we used to get every winter 30 years ago and haven’t had for the past decade. Of course we wrapped pipes in advance, put on the hose bib foam-thingies, blocked the air vents under the house, all the usual things you do.
Sometimes the magic works and sometimes it doesn’t….yup, that’s a pipe that burst–not where it’s sawed off, but at an elbow just underground. Read the rest of this entry »
Dec 30
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, bird behavior, census, great blue heron, LeConte's sparrow, native plants, photography December 30th, 2009
During migration and winter we have a lot of birds in the grass–birds that fly up and dive down a little distance away, birds that fly up and perch in bushes, birds that fly up and away and dive down over there. Most of them are sparrows of some kind. Today one of the “divers” posed long enough for me to note salient characteristics and even get some slightly blurry pictures–good enough for an ID: