Saturday, September 5, 2020

Labor Day Weekend

The kids have left;  we loved having them!  Arthur said his favorite Nantucket activity was paddling with me in the kayak in Polpis Harbor.  Noa liked the monkey hanging from our chandelier and Frankie was always eager to dig.  And of course the bubble machine was a success!

Now the roads are lined with sweet everlasting (Gnaphalium obtusifolium)  and Slender-leaved goldenrod (Euthamia tenuifolia).  The tupelos are turning mahogany.    These were the predominant flowers at Norwood Farm when I hiked yesterday.  There was a NCF sign that the St. Andrew's Cross (Ascyrum Hypericoides)  which is so common there is unique in New England.   The winds are more frequently from the North and northwest.  Today is 69 degrees at 1:30 pm with winds from the north.

Asters are starting.  I saw the perennial saltmarsh aster (aster tenuifolia) this morning at Polpis harbor  (along with sea lavender and salicornia)  when we went clamming. 


Sea Lavender (Limonium Nashii)



Arthur & Noa at Coskata

Bushy Aster ( Aster Dumosus)


Kettle Pond at Norwood Farm

Favorite Norwood Farm Oak

Bush Clover

More Ladies Tresses at Norwood Farm

Sunrise, September 5

Sunrise

Noa and Frankie

 

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Shorebird Migration

For many shorebirds,  Nantucket is their waystation on the long journey south.  I've seen many of the visitors during my kayaking in Polpis Harbor to Pocomo,  and on my hike with Libby Buck of the Nantucket Conservation Foundation at Eel Point yesterday.

While the oystercatchers and least terns do breed here,  the semipalmated plovers,  black terns and Laughing Gulls do not.  There is a big nesting colony of laughing gulls on Monomoy and they are pushing into Nantucket.  The semipalmated plovers breed in the artic.  


Willet

Young piping plover

Semipalmated plover

Piping Plover

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Black bellied plover

Semipalmated Plover


Oystercatcher

Black Terns with Common Terns



Black bellied plover


Short billed dowitcher





"Tour De Ponds"

 I set out today to find some beach plums on the Middle Moors...but the bushes I checked out were bare!  Did the plums not grow,  or did the birds or people get there first?  The blossoms were glorious during the spring....

My bike ride turned into a Tour de France-  but a tour of the Middle Moors Ponds.  It's the time before what looks like fall... with the golden sickle-leaved asters on the roads,  the sweet everlasting and downy goldenrod opening,  and the first asters popping.  The Sweet Pepper  (Clethra Alnifolia) is gone.


Stump Pond with Osprey

Almanac Pond

Norwood Farm Pond

Pond at corner of Pout Ponds Road  and Wigwam Ponds Road


Fourth Wigwam Pond



Gibbs Pond

First Wigwam Pond

Second Wigwam Pond

With Lily Pad and Pickerel weed

With Blue Darner

Third Wigwam Pond

Fourth Wigwam Pond




Thursday, August 20, 2020

Late August

The month has been flying by...the sweet pepper is now almost done and the goldenrod is out. Joe, Amy and Frankie have been with us for almost two weeks and will be staying until August 31.  What fun to get to know the little one!  Going to the playground with her is a trip,  watching all the children interact.  And Frankie is not yet 20 months old!  "Play"  and "Please"  figure in the kid exchanges.

I took a Bike ride on August 16  to check out Jewel Pond, Stump Pond and Windswept Bog.

Morning Beauty meadow in Windswept Bog,  near Almanac Pond Road

Morning Beauty at Windswept Bog, Rhex Virginica, Aug 16




Pickerel Weed at Jewel Pond...RedTail Hawk at Windswept Bog

Bush Clover





Saturday, August 8, 2020

Sweet Pepper

While the yellow warbler's "sweet, sweet, sweet,  I'm so sweet"  is a sign of June and July,  the smell of the sweet pepper,  Clethra Alnifolia is the sign of August for me.  The sweet pepper is now out in force,  and the scent is my favorite Nantucket scent,  bar none.  Charlie and I took a walk at Norwood Farm today, August 8,  and reveled in the aroma.   Another treat was seeing a stand of the  white fringed Spiranthes orchid,  Ladies Tresses.  The bird highlight was a merlin being chased by a kingbird.


Been waking up early to see the sunrise and kayak at Polpis Harbor.  So many shorebirds!  Always common terns and oystercatchers, yellow legs and willets,  but short-billed dowitchers and whimbrels, too.  And the fun of discovering a wild Turk's Cap Lily on the Land Bank walk to Swainsen's Neck.


Ladies Tresses Orchid,  Spiranthes tuberosa

Pout Ponds... August water level

Checkerspot on Sickle-Leaved golden aster, Chrysopsis Falcata

Signs that fall will come



Sweet Pepper,  Clethra Alnifolia

Swamp Willow Herb at Squam Farm, August 4. Decodon Verticillatus

Wild Turk's Cap lily, Lilium Superbum at Polpis

Sea Lavender is out!  Polpis Harbor August 4.  Limonium Carolinanum



Water Pennywort, Hydrocotyle umbellata, at Pout Pond August 7


Monarch on Verbena Bonariensis in our garden, July 27

St. Andrew's Cross, Ascyrum Hypericoides,  mats all over Norwood Farm