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| This is a view up through the leaves of the linden tree in front of my house. It is covered with flowers that smell like honey and lime. Click to enlarge. |
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| Linden blossoms. One of the nicest things about June. |
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| This is a view up through the leaves of the linden tree in front of my house. It is covered with flowers that smell like honey and lime. Click to enlarge. |
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| Linden blossoms. One of the nicest things about June. |
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| Welcome to the neighborhood, little groundhog. |
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| These are the first wild yellow lady's slippers I've ever seen. They are not just a yellow version of pink lady's slippers; they are a different species. |
| Then this! It's a jack-in-the-pulpit. A shade specialist and very exciting to stumble across. |
From a 19th century poem by Clara Smith: "Jack-in-the-pulpit preaches today, under the green trees just over the way."
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I was wildflower hunting in the spring woods of Pennsylvania this week. Here are some of the pretty things I found. Click to enlarge.
Great white trilliums. |
| Yellow trillium, also called yellow toad shade. |
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| Purple toad shade, also called little sweet Betsy. |
| And the lovely trout lily, or yellow adder's tongue. |
| This spring I am monitoring nest boxes at a local county park again. For the past several years, I've watched tree swallows like the one above, build nests and rear young. Click to enlarge. |
| Before settling in, birds investigate the nest sites. Today this one landed on one of mine and then flew away. And then... |
| This eastern bluebird showed up! Bluebirds also use these boxes, but I haven't so far had them use my boxes. I would love to photograph them nesting. |
| Which will it be? Swallows or bluebirds? We will find out soon. |
| Pine warblers! They are back. It's easier to hear them singing than to see them, but this fast moving busy bird stopped moving long enough for a photograph. Would you like to hear the song? Click here. Or go take a walk in the woods. Click to enlarge. |
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| New pitchers on the famous purple pitcher plants! |
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| The new one is bright red. They persist through winter sometimes; the white papery one on the left is last year's. Click to enlarge. |
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| Each pitcher is a modified leaf. They form tubular cups that fill with rainwater.. |
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| It's a uniquely Pine Barrens sign of spring. |