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Gerardia, agalinis tenufolia, at Milestone Bog |
Summer ‘s tail is showing. The sweet pepper scent is spent and the Tupelo is turning mahogany, the ferns mix brown dead with green, the grasses and sedges sway. Some fox grapes look like they will be extra juicy. The sickle-leaved silk grass fills the sandy roads on the moors and the sweet everlasting stands alone or in shining white gray stands. The bush clover is leaning and flowering…both white ( lespedeza capita), and pink ( lespedeza Virginia).
Today, August 22, I saw the late summer flower, common gerardia( agalinis tenufolia), also known as slender false foxglove, in three places at Milestone Bog. And the little ladies tresses( spiranthese tuberosa) also popped up in two places. I get a thrill and feel like the walk is “productive “ when I see a special plant or bird.
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Little Ladies Tresses, spiranthese tuberosa |
The kingbirds were out in force , and have seemed very visible in the last weeks - flitting about in groups and hawking for insects. But a small sharp-shinned Hawk stole the show, leaping out of the bog and flying off. And a group of juvenile Turkey vultures had me guessing … without those telltale red heads. And it was unexpected, too, to find three least sandpipers eating in a muddy ditch.
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Eastern Kingbird |
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Least Sandpiper |
I am starting to appreciate how the grasses make our landscape so beautiful. The bluestem in particular is colorful, and the switchgrass in the wet spots is stately. Something new to learn about!
I have observed more and more posts of the various conservation landowners, kind of like dogs leaving their marks. Riding along the Polpis Road it seems like a marker a minute! So much for wild Nantucket.
The marshes are reddening, too. The spartina alterniflora cordgrass (now called sporobolus alterniflora) is fruited in Pocomo Meadow. Island Creek is alive with black-bellied and semipalmated plovers, whimbrels, willets, oystercatchers, yellowlegs and Great and snowy egrets. The birds range in size from osprey to least sandpiper, with 3 kinds of gulls and 2 terns thrown in.
This year, I am ready for the change and look forward to starting as a Visiting Fellow at  |
Norwood Farm Oak |
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Norwood Farm Dried Up Kettle Pond |
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Island Creek, Pocomo Meadow |
Harvard Graduate School of Education again. I am working at the intersection of AI and education.