Thursday, May 31, 2012

Broom In Bloom


Day 231: Scotch Broom (Cytisus scoparius) is a common sight in the Pacific Northwest, often covering vast expanses of open land. In the lowlands, it is regarded by many as an invasive, although it is not presently on a list for eradication. It resembles Gorse (another invasive) but does not have the sharp spines for which that plant is noted.

According to Pojar and MacKinnon in "Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast," Scotch Broom was introduced to Vancouver Island (British Columbia) in 1850 by Capt. Walter Colquhoun. Three of the seeds he planted in Sooke germinated, and all Broom in the Pacific Northwest can be genetically traced back to those original bushes. The color variations shown here are but a few of the natural hybrids to be found in western Washington. Several sterile varieties (generally bearing smaller flowers) are available for domestic gardens.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Red-flowering Dogwood


Day 230: When a friend gave birth to a daughter fifteen years ago, she was living in a small apartment and realized that it might be a long time before she had property of her own. She wanted to plant a tree to mark the occasion of her daughter's entry into the world, and wanted it to be somewhere she could revisit as the child grew older, a place where she could point to it and say, "That's your tree. It was planted when you were born." She asked me if she could put a Dogwood in my yard and I said yes.

She and her husband arrived one drizzly morning with a Red-flowered Dogwood in a ten-gallon pot fresh from the nursery, explaining that they had not been able to find a white variety (the original plan) and we set to work. The old saying goes, "If you buy a five-dollar tree, put it in a ten-dollar hole." We took turns digging earth from the "ten-dollar hole" with shovels, pry bars and my PhD (Post-hole Digger). At last with a small ceremony, the sapling was bedded in a rich mix to give it a good start.

For several years, it bore nothing but leaves with a slight reddish cast to them. Then it made a few flowers one Spring and I thought we were on the road to success. The following year, it again only produced greenery. It has been an on-off situation from that time, and finally this year, it came into full flower. The family situation precludes a visit, so I've taken this photo for the young lady who shall always be "The Dogwood Child" to me.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Protected Species


Day 229: This photo is dedicated to those of you who have been following the story of the Calypso Orchids in the Longmire Volunteer campground from the time of their first budding through the moment when the blossoms began to open to the final, glorious flowering of both color variations. This morning, I was given a roll of caution tape and permission to mark off the areas where this delicate species abounds. It was a happy time for me, even moreso because in my campaign to protect the Calypsos, I made the acquaintance of one of the Park planners. He was present today as I taped off two zones of protection with two more to come, applauding my determination on behalf of these sensitive plants. It made me feel good to know that my voice, quite literally in the wilderness, had been heard.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Jeremiah Was A Columbia Spotted Frog


Day 228 (another special!): On my first circuit of the pond in Cochrane Park, I ran into a little girl with a net who was searching for frogs. As I was talking to her, her brother yelled out, "You gotta see this! It's huge!" By the time the three of us had stormed into the cattails, Frog had taken a powder. The kids went home and I continued on my circumlocution.

A quarter of the way around the loop, I stepped off the trail intending to go in amongst the reeds. My heavy tread startled another frog basking on the bank, so effectively camouflaged that I had not spotted it. Obviously, frog-chasing was going to take more finesse than I'd been using. Opposite the first frog non-sighting, I again entered the cattails by means of a series of large rocks. Again, I heard a splash without seeing the frog. Drat.

By the time I got back to the original spot where the kids had seen their huge frog, it had come out of hiding. I tried to creep up on it carefully. I didn't succeed, but I stopped well short of the second location and managed this capture of what I believe is a Columbia Spotted Frog.

Emboldened by my success, I made several more circuits of the pond, each with the same result. I'd spot a frog in one of the known hangouts, only to have it leap into the water before I could get it in the viewfinder. I am really going to have to hone up my frog-stalking skills.

Western Washington Wildflowers


Day 228: With the exception of Iris tenax (Toughleaf Iris) in the lower left corner, the remaining wildflowers shown in this composite photo are common in most of western Washington. Iris tenax is a prairie habitué and appears both in shady forest and dry grassland. It is a native plant, and the fibers of the leaves were used by the indigenous peoples to make nets and rope.

In the upper left corner, California Poppies (Eschscholtzia californica) make a showy appearance. Often found in drifts, they spread readily. After they are fully dry, the pointed pods burst with force, scattering seed for several yards. Contrary to its misleading name, it is also native to the region. If anyone ever asks you to think of a word with six consonants in a row, "Eschscholzia" will do the trick.

The upper right corner is occupied by Oxeye Daisies (Leucanthemum vulgare), a non-native species familiar to most children as a science project. Add a little food coloring to water, stick a bouquet of daisies in it, and in a few hours, you'll have tinted blossoms.

In the lower right is another non-native, Yellow Flag (Iris pseudacorus). Beautiful though it may be, it is regarded as an invasive species which chokes ponds and waterways. Oddly, these were deliberately planted by the planners of a city park. They must have missed the memo.

All of the flowers shown here were photographed today in the Yelm-Rainier area of Southwestern Washington.

Arctic Skipper, Carterocephalus Palaemon


Day 228 (special edition): My general rule for 365 Caws is that my post photos should be taken on the day of the post. I always post at least one "by the rules," but occasionally I have to make an exception for something I think is noteworthy or otherwise interesting. Such was the case for this photo. I've been waiting for a confirmation of identification from the experts at BugGuide.net and today, these two photos were moved into their main database.

Arctic Skipper is a colorful but rather tiny fellow measuring approximately 5/8" from wingtip to wingtip. To gain a greater appreciation for his size, please observe that he is perched on a chive blossom. He was quite intent on exploring it in preference to any other available flower, only once flying off to investigate a columbine and then returning.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Planting Time


Day 227: It's time. A tray of seedlings has been sitting beneath fluorescent lights atop my washer and drier for almost two months from the time I planted the first seeds, and now the time has come to harden them off for the garden. Today, petunias and ageratum moved into hanging baskets, the orange Non-Stop begonia shifted to its larger and permanent accommodation, and Nigella, Physalis, Gazanias, Rudbeckias and more Ageratum await transplanting to the flowerbeds. Sweet Million cherry tomatoes will move into a ten-gallon tree tub sunk to the waist beside my kitchen door where I can snack on them as the mood strikes.

The growing season is short here near the Mountain. I've had a killing frost as late as the 22d of June. While events such as that are not common, it's wise to remember that they can occur. I'll be keeping an eye on the weather forecast, bubble wrap jackets at the ready to protect tender starts.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Black-Headed Grosbeak, Pheucticus Melanocephalus


Day 226: The story began when I lived somewhere else, and it began quite literally with a bang. When Mt. St. Helens blew her lid in 1980, the Evening Grosbeaks were smack in the middle of their migration and were thrown off their flyway by the eruption. They arrived on my porch by the dozen; burned, blinded, injured. I nurtured them as best I could by providing food and habitat, and those which survived led their kinfolk back to my door the following year. They became known as "Porch Parrots" in our household, owing to the heaviness of their beaks and their friendly nature. I inducted a neighbor into helping bear the financial burden of hundreds of pounds of black-oil sunflower seed, and when I moved to my present home, she took over their care and feeding.

I missed them terribly the first few years I was here. I longed to hear that distinctive and somewhat querulous, "Churp?" of their voices, longed to see their bright yellow colors and scowling "eyebrowed" faces. I put out black-oil seed, hoping that one might find the feeders and spread the word among his friends, and was delighted when it finally happened.

Then one year, I noticed an oddly colored bird I was certain was a grosbeak, but it was not one of my Porch Parrot Evening Grosbeaks. I checked my field guides and discovered that another species of Grosbeak (Black-Headed) is common to our area. The two breeds get along fine together, and now each year, I can expect both to arrive in numbers, their gusto for black-oil seed undiminished.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Siberian Irises


Day 225: One of the most rewarding "volunteers" in my yard is Siberian Iris. I was given a small clump of it when I first moved into my home over twenty years ago, and it quickly spread in the flowerbed to the point that I determined to root it all out to allow other plants breathing space. Lest you think this was an unkind punishment to inflict on such an amenable species, be assured that I simply moved it to a new home where it could proliferate to its heart's content. Today it lines approximately twenty feet of wire fence and provides me with all the bouquets I care to pick. I am not sure how this smaller clump came to be alongside my garage, but it is welcome to stay there.

Son Of No Man - Towel Day 2012


Day 225 (special occasion): I have to admit that when I first read "The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy," I was not particularly taken with it, but I am not one to condemn a book on one reading. I forced myself through it a second time and then it began to grow on me. Eventually, I joined the vast number of fans who delight in Douglas Adams' clever and often cheeky series, and in these last few years it has been my custom to reread them in honor of International Towel Day.

As for the photo, it is a nod not only to Hitchhikers everywhere, but also to René Magritte's painting, "The Son of Man." To me, the two themes go hand in hand, the Son filling the same metaphorical niche as does Arthur Dent. Dent is Everyman and no man, the last human. All the poor sap wants is a honest cup of tea. He is thrown into a surrealistic series of events through no fault of his own, yet manages to maintain his identity even while being forced to accept that he is no more than a flyspeck in the Universe. His dilemma is one which addresses us all as we each try to find some point of stability in the confusion of our lives. Magritte's Son is faceless but unique, his identity firm but obscure. He too is Everyman and no man, conflicted by his own vision and what others see of him.

Thus the logic of my composition. I am the Son of No Man because I am a woman. I stand on a boundary between two states of matter, faceless, with the Universe behind me, and I cannot see forward.

Happy International Towel Day! And Pangalactic Gargle Blasters all around!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Nap In Tan


Day 224: My Boy gets to be the star of the show today...little black cat snoozing in a sunspot. He is such a happy, gentle kitty who loves to play soft games with his mama, never putting out his claws, never biting hard, following after me to tag me on the foot with a soft tap, ready to run into his tunnel where he rolls over on his back to have his tummy tickled. Having been shuffled around from foster home to foster home until he was old enough to leave the rescue facility, he is still uncertain about visitors. Most of my friends have never seen more of him than the glint of his eyes under the bed, but when it's just the three of us (Skunk, my older cat, is undeniable mistress of the house), he is a bundle of love.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Alaska Violet, Viola Langsdorfii


Day 223: Tiny Viola langsdorfii is a lover of wetlands and bogs, and as such, finds itself at ease in Longmire Meadow among the Skunk Cabbage, Devil's Club and other moisture-loving plants of Mount Rainier National Park. Its pale flower is easy to overlook even when many plants are grouped together. Langsdorfii, commonly called Alaska Violet, may be distinguished from other similar Viola species by a sac-like spur at the rear of the lower petal.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Enough To Go Around


Day 222: You would think they'd realize I'm not going to let them run dry, but as I am typing this, there are nine birds at eight feeder ports and it sounds like a beehive out there. I can hear the hum of their wings even through the closed window. We're running about 12:1 females to males in a population of approximately two dozen, and I suspect some of these may be newly hatched this year. Breeding season is late April to early May. It's the greatest population of Rufous Hummingbirds I've had here, and they are sucking down the nectar like they don't believe there's enough to go around.

Bird-watching helps fight global warming | Video | abc7news.com

Day 222 (extra! extra!): I've been participating in a Citizen Science project since March 2009. It is a very worthwhile endeavour and today, got recognition on ABC News.

Bird-watching helps fight global warming | Video | abc7news.com

Cleavers, Galium Aparine


Day 222: The common name of Cleavers is very apt for this plant. The leaves and seed pods are both covered in fine hooked hairs which for all intents and purposes could be referred to as Nature's Velcro. When they attach themselves to socks and shoelaces, they are very difficult to remove. This habit contributes to the spread of the species. Also known as Sweet Gale, Goose Grass or Bedstraw, the young shoots are edible. The sap is said to be effective in removing pitch from hands and clothing, the trade-off being that you'll spend the next two hours picking Cleavers out of your socks if you've waded into a patch of it for harvesting. Thanks, I'll stick to Crisco.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Remembrance


Day 221: Had my father lived to this date, he would have been approaching the century mark. He did not. He was deprived of life by diabetes when he was merely 39 years of age.

A competent and intelligent man who worked in a military office, he was born into a farming family and never lost his love for working the soil. It was he who first associated his black-haired daughter with the crows who later gave her her nickname, a girl who delighted in the poem he recited as he would place four kernels of corn in each hill in his garden.

"One for the worm,
One for the crow,
One to die
And one to grow."

For the most part, he grew the vegetables which my mother canned for winter use: asparagus, green beans, corn, potatoes and peas, the last of which I refused to eat once cooked. He grew enormous Hubbard squash and delicate Patty-Pans. He grew rhubarb with leaves the size of umbrellas and stalks as thick as his daughter's wrists. He grew fruit, an orchard of apples, cherries, pears and peaches, and strawberries, raspberries and dewberries which bore so lavishly that the birds were allowed to enjoy those remaining after the larder was full of jars of jam and the freezer packed with bulging bags.

In its way, his garden was his daily labour, a job which callused his hands, made his back ache and left him tired in that rewarding way only honest toil can do. He loved it, yes, but he also loved the lighter work to be had in the flowerbeds. He loved irises and calla lilies, and wantonly pulled Oriental poppies, convinced that they were some sort of thistle, but of all the blooming plants, he loved none so much as a blood-red peony.

When my father went into the hospital to live out his last months, he predicted that he would not see the light of Spring. He did not. He died an hour before sunrise on the first day of the season. But it is not that day when my heart visits his spirit. It is when the peonies bloom.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Rainier Rocks


Day 220 (bonus edition): I was playing around with post-processing tools a few days ago and came up with this artistic rendering of Mount Rainier as seen from Longmire. I thought I'd toss it in here for my viewers to enjoy.

Lily-of-the-Valley


Day 220: Sometimes I wonder what we humans miss because our eyes and brains perceive color. In the case of these Lilies-of-the-Valley, the greens of the foliage almost overpowers the blossoms, making them less dramatic than they are when viewed in a monochromatic scheme. The whites become more brilliant, the shadows of vein and stem intensify, and the overall sense of depth becomes more profound. Is our ability to perceive color truly a genetic improvement? As I study monochrome images, I am coming to believe color vision disadvantages us over species which see the world in shades of grey.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Confirmed Bachelors


Day 219: This old-fashioned plant is one of my favorite flowers. Some call it Montane Knapweed while others refer to it as Cornflower or Bluet, but it is most commonly known as Bachelor's Buttons. Scientifically, it is called Centaurea montana.

In the olden days, young gentlemen advertised their availability by wearing a single Cornflower as a boutonniere, hence the popular name. Some versions of the story say that it was used instead of a Carnation because the latter was too expensive for men just starting their careers. In any event, its lacy delicacy might win the heart of any fair maid.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Believing Is Seeing


Day 218: They say that seeing is believing. Believing is also sometimes seeing.

As a delicate shower of petals fell on my hair and shoulders while I was photographing plants in my fishing buddy's yard today, I had the sense that I was being watched. No one was in evidence on the street. No one was at a window and in any event, I was down behind bushes and truly out of sight from any residence. Yet as I focused on a rhododendron, the feeling grew stronger. Then I turned my attention to the flowering cherry so lavishly in bloom above my head. As I brought the lens to bear on one particularly lovely cluster of blossoms, I spotted a face in the viewfinder. The Cherry Faerie tossed a final handful of petals in my direction and disappeared. I believe, and so shall you. See here evidence that the faerie folk exist!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Creature Of Air And Magic


Day 217 (bonus edition): I set out to do some hummingbird photography today, the window open, the screen slid back, watching cats out of the corner of my eye with the camera on my knee, lens trained on the leftmost feeder port which was in shadow. I had a rather long exposure set and knew the background would burn out a bit accordingly. I keep one-inch black plastic netting across the window as a measure to keep grosbeaks from knocking themselves silly on the glass, and this I'd gathered and clothespinned to the edge of the screen. In the viewfinder, it made some interesting bokeh. I wasn't sure how that would translate in a larger view, though. When I got the photos in the computer, I was amazed at the effect created by the netting. While this isn't a field-guide shot by any means, I think it's one of my best hummer images.

Cat Contemplating


Day 217: A formal portrait of milady Skunk contemplating the mysteries of the Universe as revealed by morning light.

I feel certain that she, like most Cats, knows secrets we mere humans lack the mental prowess to comprehend. Cats are not aloof as many people will assert; they are philosophers occupied with far greater things. The distance in a Cat's gaze speaks of the depths of thought occurring behind the eyes, thought which embraces the concepts of physics without necessity for verbalization, thought which requires no mathematics to define Nirvana. Ask any Cat for the meaning of perfection. As it walks away to curl up in a ray of sun, you would do well to let go of the silly words which clutter your brain and simply follow the lead Cat offers you.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Calypso Resplendent


Day 216: They are out by the hundred, and I spent my entire lunch hour on my hands and knees, crawling around in damp moss and forest debris and returned to the office with my hair full of foresty bits. The Calypso Orchids are in full bloom at Longmire, and I was fortunate to be able to find the white mutation as well as the parent variety.

A moisture lover, these delicate plants like to have their feet wet and therefore grow only in close proximity to a small stream which runs through the center of the volunteer campground. They prefer "sun-fleck" forest where shade rules over the transient glimmers of sunlight which penetrate the canopy. They are seldom abundant, and I have never seen a population as dense as that which has emerged this year.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Scilla, Common Bluebells


Day 215: Scilla is a somewhat overlooked flower in my garden except for those occasions when I say, "I thought I pulled all that stuff out of there, darn it!" and for that, I owe it an apology. You see, my mother insisted that it was invasive and difficult to get rid of in the way that lily-of-the-valley (although lovely) tends to take over flowerbeds given half a chance. I see Scilla and my first instinct is to go for a shovel. That is decidedly unfair to a lovely and reliable plant. I will say that my mother's attitude was justified to some degree. I've tried to uproot this particular clump half a dozen times or more, relocating all the bulbs to a spot where they could multiply to their heart's content. I must keep missing a few, because it returns faithfully every spring, its sweet blue bells rising above the lily-of-the-valley which has also failed to defeat its resilient nature.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Photography Gods At Work


Day 214: There are a lot of things I would have done differently if I'd had more than a nanosecond to react, but I'd only gone out to take a picture of the upturned faces of the columbine in the morning sun and didn't have time to tweak the settings as this Rufous Hummingbird darted into the frame. She took one quick sip and buzzed out of sight. The occasion brings to mind a few bits of personal philosophy: Keep your expectations low-key and you'll never be disappointed; take what you are given and be grateful for it.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Tree Swallow, Tachycineta Bicolor


Day 213: The Swallows arrived late this year and now nesting activity is to be seen everywhere, and since I removed the screen, the best view is from my kitchen window. Both houses on the north side of the garage are occupied. Despite the species' normal preference for more space between nesting sites, the availability of afternoon shade makes this a desirable location. Here the female will lay 4-6 eggs, incubating them for 13-16 days. The young will be tended by both parents until they fledge at approximately three weeks of age. The parents will continue to feed the young on the wing until they're able to fend for themselves.

Some field guides list this species as Iridoprocne bicolor. I have chosen to refer to it based on David Allen Sibley's "Field Guide to Birds of Western North America," arguably one of the most comprehensive guidebooks since Roger Tory Peterson's "A Field Guide to Western Birds."

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Alas, Poor Onion


Day 212: Alas, poor Onion! I saw him, my friends; a fellow of infinite possibility, of most excellent taste; I have borne him in my kettle a thousand times; and now, how perfected in my imagination it is! My appetite growls at it. Here hang those layers that I have tasted I know not how oft. Where be your flavours now?

With apologies today to the Bard, Onion #1 has not yet outlived his photographic potential. Part of a 100-image theme-oriented project, he might be nice with a little ham...cough!...Hamlet on the side.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Tentative ID: Orange-Crowned Warbler


Day 211 (bonus edition): On the advice of a colleague, this lovely and elusive little lady is being identified as an Orange-Crowned Warbler. She was seen in the company of a male with a bright spot on the top of his head, but I was unable to get a shot of him or even a full view of his body so that I could pick out other identifying features. I have seen a number of different warblers around Swofford Pond and particularly in the area where these were today.

Warblers are a birder's nightmare. Many of the species are difficult to tell apart, and to further complicate matters, they love to hide. You will often hear them (many birders learn to identify them by song), but you seldom get to see more than a flash of movement. I suspect this may have been a young bird and therefore less wary of me. I feel fortunate to have been able to get a photo of her at all.

To date, this is my only "mystery bird."

Leafy Mitrewort, Mitella Caulescens


Day 211: The Mitreworts are frequently overlooked by hikers for two reasons. The first is that they are green and the second is that they are generally tiny. The individual flowers you see on these stalks are no more than half an inch in diameter. Seen in close-up, they reveal such complexity that it would be easy to do an entire photographic essay on them.

These were growing along the South Swofford Wetland Trail, one of my favorite "secret" nature walks. The trailhead is easy to find, but often hikers find themselves cut off by a large swampy area less than a tenth of a mile in. Unless you know where to access the trail from above, your hike is likely to be a short one. If you do know how to circumvent the bog, you'll be rewarded with a mile and a half walk which stays largely in the forest to the south of Swofford Pond, and there you'll find all sorts of treasures from wildflowers to warblers.

As for Leafy Mitrewort, it is distinguished from other members of its species by the fact that the flowers open from the top of the stalk down, and occasionally a small leaf will occur along the stem. Mitella caulescens is one of the more common Mitreworts in Pacific Northwest wetlands.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Pink Petticoats


Day 210: When I first moved into my home over twenty years ago, the flowerbeds were little more than extensions of the weedy yard, untended for many years. Since it was the beginning of the growing season, a friend volunteered to help me clean them out. We dug and sifted, raking through the dirt with our fingers to eliminate as many grass roots as possible, and every now and then, we'd come up with a clump of something which, if not immediately identifiable as a cultivated variety, bore promise of producing a blooming plant of some sort or another. We replanted them with the thought that if they turned out to be weeds, they could always be removed later.

As the year progressed toward summer, delphiniums sprang up, peonies leafed out, foxglove emerged, Oriental poppies raised fuzzy heads and columbine spread its lacy foliage above the bare earth. Having been on exotic (read "invasive") plant detail when I was a ranger, I descended on the foxglove with a will to destroy. The rest were allowed to remain, and over the next few years, I shifted them to permanent locations in the bed.

One thing distressed me, though. The columbines (a plant I love) were all pink. My readers may recall my sentiments toward that color, but nevertheless, I couldn't bear to weed out anything which bloomed so willingly. I tried unsuccessfully to plant other colors, longing for the blue shades seen in the wild in the Rocky Mountains or even the red-and-yellow species native here. Nothing took. It was as if Nature was determined to force me into an appreciation of pink despite my protests.

Columbine reseeds freely, and these pink petticoats have popped up unexpectedly in the strawberry jar, a spot which will not allow them space to put down permanent roots. I suppose I might as well resign myself to finding a spot for them because I cannot in good conscience toss them out as weeds.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Calypso Rising


Day 209: Today I took advantage of my lunch hour to make another circuit into Calypso's grove. I found a few just beginning to open, their heads still nodding, looking somewhat like miniature lobster claws rising above the moss.

When I got back to the office, I remembered my self-appointed mission and asked Kevin if there was anyone I could talk to about closing the campsite where the greatest number of these tiny orchids grows. We talked about it at length, and since it's one of only two group sites in the Volunteer campground, it would seem that the most viable option is to sign the area to warn people not to walk where these sensitive plants are grouped.

At the conclusion of our talk, Kevin went out to see the grove for himself. When he came back to the office, he told me, "At first, I thought you must have been imagining things. I couldn't see any Calypsos in that site. But then I knelt down and looked more carefully and...they were EVERYWHERE!" I restated my point by responding, "That's what I mean. They're hard to see, and they just get stomped. And," I reiterated, "if the flower stalk is broken, the root dies. They rely on the blossom for photosynthesis."

If nothing else comes of today, Calypso has a stronger friend in Kevin, and his voice is more likely to be heeded than mine.

Rallying for Calypso!

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Odd Onion


Day 208: It should come as no surprise to anyone that my favorite artist is Salvador Dali (an odd onion if ever there was one) and of course this shot was inspired by his unique vision. It also has its roots in the amazing photographic collage work of Ted Joans, colleague and friend of Jack Kerouac, and creator of "The Hipsters," published in 1961 as the Beat Era was reaching its end. Sadly, Joans' work is now out of print and I was unable to locate any examples of it on line.

Surrealism according to Webster is "the principles, ideals or practice of producing fantastic or incongruous imagery in art of literature by means of unnatural juxtapositions and combinations." That definition barely scratches the surface. I would add to it a large helping of metaphor and layered meaning, and a fair sprinkling of simply wanting to confuse the hell out of your viewers. Lemme know when you figure out why I'm wearing a silk jabot with hiking pants, will ya? I really need to know.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Serviceberry (Shadbush), Amelanchier Alnifolia


Day 207: Serviceberry is known by several different names, depending on where it occurs in the United States. On the east coast, you're more likely to hear it referred to as "Shadbush," a name which derives from the fact that it blooms concurrently with the spring shad runs in the rivers. In the midwest, you'll find it spelled "Serviceberry," although in pronunciation, it's said "Sarviceberry" instead. In British Columbia, it is often called "Saskatoon." Some field guides refer to it as Amelanchier florida.

The plant is a bushy shrub with multiple stems, and bears a berry resembling a blueberry in size, color, shape and taste. The fruit is excellent in jams and may be dried to add to trail mix or muffins. Here in Washington, it blooms slightly ahead of the arrival of the shad, but it serves as a heads-up for fishermen who know to look for signs from Nature.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Roosevelt Elk, Cervus Canadensis Roosevelti


Day 206: Roosevelt Elk are quite common in my area, but you seldom get close enough to them for a clear shot. Add to that the fact that they prefer to graze in the protection of shadows during the dusky hours of morning and evening, and they become difficult photographic subjects. This morning, I entered the pasture at my customary access point and found them browsing west of me rather than to the east. The low sunlight lit them up like beacons. A very recognizable animal in any case, the pale rump fur is characteristic of the species.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

If You Know Where To Look


Day 205: I braved light showers following the Volunteer Brunch today to walk down to the bottom of the campground in the hopes of finding emerging Calypso Orchids. I was not disappointed.

The lower campsites see little use compared with those closer to the community building, and in my opinion, one of them should be retired, the better to protect the colony of this somewhat rare plant growing there. It is not the only spot where they flourish, but it holds a significantly denser population. These small beauties are subject to death by footfall. If the flower stalk is broken and the plant's photosynthetic processes are disrupted, the root will die. At this stage of growth, they are difficult to see, so much care must be taken in entering the areas where they are known to occur. This photo was taken as a zoom from a picnic table, a previously scarified spot where nothing grows except the sturdiest moss.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Mt. Olympus' Younger Wife


Day 204: Although I am not related to the First People, I grew up hearing many of their legends on a regular basis. I would share with you one of my favorites now.

Many years ago, Mount Olympus (the highest peak in Washington's Olympic Mountains) had two wives. One was younger than the other, and she was very jealous of the older wife. One day, she decided she would leave Mount Olympus and set out on her own. She packed a basket for the journey, carrying with her a supply of edible roots and berries. She walked south because to walk north would have meant reaching the end of the peninsula, and she could not walk east or west without encountering the ocean or Puget Sound. After several days' walking, she reached the open prairie country at the end of the Sound. She was tired and hungry, so she rested for a while and ate a meal of Camas roots. When she again set out, she left behind a few of the bulbs. When she at last came to the place where she wanted to spend the rest of her days, she spread out her skirts and became Mount Rainier, and today, the prairies of Southwest Washington are filled with the descendants of the Camas bulbs she left behind.

This story is told by the Nisqually People as well as members of other groups on the Olympic Peninsula. When Camassia blooms, think of Mount Rainier.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

In Grandmother's Day


Day 203: This dresser belonged to my late husband's grandmother and came with the pioneer-family home when we inherited it, along with several other pieces of furniture of the same vintage all faced with a dark oak veneer. As new marrieds, we were grateful for anything functional, and although Bruce would have preferred to modernize, I loved the antiques, scarred and damaged as they might have been. Surface flaws aside, the locks on this dresser are still functional. The mismatched keys were those Grandma had placed inside the drawer, and both open the simple locks. One has to wonder how much of today's chipboard furniture will still survive a century? I suspect this dresser will be around to take the census.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Carnivore


Day 202: I went in town today hoping to find a Venus Fly Trap for another photo project, but when I arrived at Watson's Nursery and asked the staff if they had any carnivorous plants, they said no, none were available. As I chatted with the woman stocking the racks, I told her that I'd been hoping to photograph one. She said, "Well, we do have one pitcher plant in the back room, but it's not in very good shape."

In the next chaper of the story, you will find me on my hands and knees on wet brick, the subject set in front of a moss-lined basket, the camera propped up on an overturned plastic flower pot and the clerk patiently responding to my instructions to "turn it just a little more this way...can you pull off that one dead leaf, please?" After each shot, she stepped behind me to review the photo over my shoulder. "Oh, I like that one! That's a nice camera. I like how you can zoom in!"

Watson's has often furnished floralia for my photostream, both in the store and with plants I purchased and photographed at home. I am a familiar sight in their aisles, but today marked the first occasion I was invited into the inner sanctum. The pitcher plant was not for sale, so I came home with two tomato vines and an orange tuberous begonia. Thanks, ladies!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Concealment


365 Caws, Year Two, Day 201 (bonus edition): Three deer were browsing in Longmire Meadow as I walked around the Trail of the Shadows this afternoon, their brown colors dark against the yellow of grass and mineral-stained earth. To a predator lacking color vision, they could have been nothing more than heavy shadows thrown by trees. They moved slowly and with irregular hesitation, an instinctive camouflage of motion concealing any hint of purpose or path. The survival of their species has been dependent on factors which render them almost invisible in their environment as is demonstrated here in this black-and-white rendering.

Forest Silk


Day 201: With Mount Rainier rising steeply above the surrounding foothills, spring freshets such as this one on the Trail of the Shadows are common as the snow level raises and meltwater begins its inexorable voyage to the sea. Tumbling down hillsides, filling narrow defiles, cascading over root and rock, the backcountry is now a paradise of ebullient water. It sings, it laughs, it whispers, and it brings life into the meadows and forests it touches in its passage. One cannot take this enthusiasm for granted. It beckons you to pause and listen to its life story, once a snowflake, once a chip of ice cast off by a glacier. It is a celebration, jubilating in its seasonal travel; it is alive, the blood of the Earth Mother, and surging through her youthful, springtime heart among the green and mossy crevices of the Pacific Northwest.