365 Caws
365Caws is now in its 16th year of publication. If I am unable to post daily, I hope readers who love the natural world and fiberarts will seize those days to read the older material. Remember that this has been my journey as well, so you may find errors in my identifications of plants. I have tried to correct them as I discover them. Likewise, I have refined fiberarts techniques and have adjusted recipes, so search by tags to find the most current information. And thank you for following me!
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Mushrooms A La LEGO
Last week, a mysterious package arrived on my doorstep. The return address gave me a clue, and I hoped to find a gift card inside, but when I opened the box, there was nothing to indicate who the benefactor might have been. I had a couple of ideas, one of which dominated the list of possibilities, but I wasn't 100% certain, and I didn't want to thank the wrong person based on an assumption. After posting an inquiry on Facebook, the person came forward in a private message and asked to remain anonymous. Respecting that, I promised to post a photo when I had finished building the kit.
Now, y'see, I love LEGOs. I haven't built many kits...two before this, to be precise (Doctor Who and a cute little ranger cabin)...but I have been impressed by the quality of LEGO products. I've never been missing a piece. In fact, there have always been a couple of "spare" pieces which I had to assure myself weren't remaining because I'd missed a step in the assembly. In this case, there was no question with respect to one spare part: I got two ladybugs instead of one! The instructions placed one on the stump. I put the other one on one of the Amanitas, red on red camouflage. This was certainly the most complex kit I've built (806 pieces), divided into seven bags which I carefully rationed out over the week. I only had to backtrack twice, and both of those were minor errors and easy to fix. LEGO provides the clearest instructions I have ever seen in a product. So, let me say "thank you" again to the Junuary Faerie who brightened my day/week with this delightful exercise in patience!
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Gotcha Day
Two years ago today, I brought home a little "teacup cat" whose feet and ears seemed disproportionately large for his body. I knew from those indicators that he was going to be a big boy when he grew up, but I never expected him to weigh more than 12 pounds, and certainly not 17.4! By anybody's standards, that's a lot of cat. And it's impressive when at high speed, it tackles you around the knees from behind. Very much still a kitten with regards to his behaviour, he loves to play (especially with me), and he's full of mischief and curiosity, opening cupboards to look for food, following me everywhere I go and supervising whatever I'm doing. As important as his birthday, Merry's "Gotcha Day" is cause for celebration.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Silene Latifolia
Among my finds yesterday were a geocache in bad need of TLC (which I provided), a trail I had never been on before, and Silene latifolia (White Campion), an introduced species which nonetheless occupies a soft place in my heart. Why? I don't really know, except that it was one of the first plants I learned to identify. As for the trail, I only went up it far enough to find the geocache because I was actually on my way home, cold and tired following a caching CITO event, and because from that point on, the track began climbing Osborne Mountain on a sharp incline I didn't feel up to tackling. It was on my way back that I found the Silene, its slender, long leaves telling me "latifolia." I like it when the Latin is informative. All in all, I'd say it was a nicely productive day, and the Osborne Mountain trail and I will have to have another discussion in the future.
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Candy Canes in June
Today was the annual geocaching CITO in which we set up the platform tents in the volunteer campground at Longmire. I always watch for the mycoheterotrophic species here, and was rewarded with a lovely cluster of Allotropa virgata, aka "Stick Candy," which looks like peppermint sticks. I don't think the handful of people I collared en route back to the picnic pavilion were expecting a botany lesson, but y'know, I just couldn't help myself. This plant is among my favourites, not only because it's pretty and unusual, but because it survives in spite of incredible odds. First of all, it requires the assistance of a specific fungus for breaking down soil components into something it needs, that fungus has its own set of requirements. Some mycoheterotrophs are more "sociable" than others, which is to say they rely on a wider range of fungi, but in my experience, the rarity of a plant seems to correspond to the number of fungal partners it is willing to accept. Ah, to be fifty years younger, and to have it to do all over again! Mycoheterotrophy fascinates me like nothing else.
Labels:
Allotropa virgata,
CITO,
Longmire,
mycoheterotrophy,
Stick Candy
Monday, June 1, 2026
Garden Cart
I've had this garden cart for several years, and it only just occurred to me that instead of lugging plants in and out of the house morning and evening, I could just put them in the cart and wheel it into and out of the garage while I'm hardening them off for planting. I'm going to take a chance and put them out later this week, although our nighttime temperatures are still dipping into the low 40s. If I have to, I'll put protective covers on them if there's a threat of frost. What you see here includes two Sungold tomatoes (a friend calls this variety "tomato candy," and I have to agree), one zucchini (no one needs more than one), an eggplant (experiment!), and four peppers (two sweet and two jalapeno). Given how well my other plants are doing, this year may well be the best garden I've had in the 35 years I've lived here!
Labels:
Eggplant,
garden cart,
hardening off,
jalapenos,
sweet peppers,
tomatoes,
zucchini
Friday, May 29, 2026
Columbine Collection
The flower bed beneath my east window is the prettiest it's ever been this year with many plants in bloom all at once. Even though the peonies are past their prime and the delphiniums having retired of their own volition after 35 years of service, the whole bed is a live with colour as displayed by the columbines. This old-fashioned favourite provides a backdrop of foliage even after the blooming season is over. Trim the flowering stems back, leaving graceful mounds of leaves, and save the seeds! I've never managed to sprout them successfully indoors, but several have re-sown themselves in the garden. There's no such thing as too many columbines.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Sculptured Pine Borer, Chalcophora Angulicollis
There are times when discovery gets a little too exciting, for example, when you come in the house after working in the yard, scrubbing at an ear because a gnat is tickling you, only to find a much larger...significantly huger and ginormouser bug walking casually around your neck! This Sculptured Pine Borer (Chalcophora angulicollis) was easy to identify because of its size: a full 30mm by actual measure. That's one big bug! After knocking it off me and taking photos of it on the hearth, I contained it in a lidded petri dish long enough to assure myself of the identification. I think I must have disturbed it yesterday when I took out some old cedar fencing. There are no pines in close proximity, and it was not designated invasive or introduced, so after Merry had thoroughly investigated the petri dish and was contemplating releasing it himself, I let it go outside.
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