Jewel Pond |
Saturday, July 4, 2020
Foggy Dewy July 4
Watching Hamilton, the musical, and reading Frederick Douglass for this July 4. And, biked in the morning to see the dewy Middle Moors. Later on, hiked with Josh in the Serengeti. Nice to have Charlie and Kelsey here for the weekend.
Early July
We've taken some more great hikes during this time of maximum viburnum bloom. Josh and I did the Folger's Hill Hike on June 30, which has some great vistas of Polpis, Sesachacha and Gibbs Ponds. The St.Johnswort (Hypericum perforatum) are starting to bloom along the bike path, as the ox-eyed daisies (Chrystanemum leucanthemum)
wane. The common mullein (Verbascum thapsus) stands are up
Swamp Candles: Lysimachus terristris |
Pout Pond, June 23 |
Pasture Thistles June 23 |
Pasture rose, Rosa virginica |
Field of Ox Eye Daisies near Altar Rock |
Sandplain Blue eyed Grass |
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Rockrose, Helianthemum majus |
I fleetingly saw a yellow swallowtail butterfly in Norwood Farm. The pond there is choked with lilypads. The pink milk wort (polygala polygama), remnants of sandplain blue-eyed grass and toadflax are also out in Norwood Farm. Almanac Pond is still flowing over the road into the Stump Pond swamp.
The rockrose (Helianthemum majus) are out on the moors, in the roads and on the roadsides. Yarrow (Achillia millefolia) is on the edges of the road, along with hawkweed. . I found the hawkweed hieracium venosum, with its purple veins in basal leaves on a hike in Serengeti.
I saw the first swamp candles (lysimachia terrestris). The rosa virginiana, the low wild rose is dotting the moors.
I saw the first swamp candles (lysimachia terrestris). The rosa virginiana, the low wild rose is dotting the moors.
Mullein, verbascum thapsus |
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
June 24
Here we are...watching the sunrise and sunset move south over the sea and over the moors. We love actually being able to see the planetary motion from the equinox to solstice and now to the autumnal equinox.
The plump and juicy pasture thistles are popping; the first yarrow are blooming on the moors. Viburnum is starting along the Polpis Road.
Cirsium Pumilum, Pasture Thistle |
Blue-eyed Grass |
The Bluff with fog bank |
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Norwood Farm oak |
The weather pattern as the land and sea warms has been foggy in the morning and evening, and fog banks on the sea when the sun heats up the land. I've had a couple of beautiful hikes, on the Milestone Bog and on the Middle Moors to Pout Ponds and Tapashaw Bog in which wisps of fog sweep over the landscape...while it is sunny.
Found a new footpath around the Donut Pout Pond which is now filled in. It is even mowed!
Tapawshaw Bog |
Donut Pout Pond- now filled in |
Pout Pond |
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Summer Solstice
We've been so lucky to see the days grow longer. After today, the shortening of daylight begins.
It's turtle time: 2 at Windswept Bog earlier this week! And rubrus species dewberries are blooming all over. The fox grapes have moved from their pink unfurling to wide green leaves and even some fruiting. The grasses are high and the scrub oak is leafed out. Summer! Those Quaker Ladies, houstonia caerulea, are still blooming in the shady places.
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Pasture Thistle: Cirsium Pumilum at Squam Farm |
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Cinnamon Ferns as big as me in Squam Swamp |
White Thistle: cirsium pumilum |
Eastern Painted Turtle at Windswept Bog |
Dewberry: Rubus flagellaris |
June 20: Walking to Sconset on the beach |
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Rosa Rugosa on the BluffWalk |
Summer
I went off-island for what was supposed to be 2 days but wound up being 5. When I returned a week ago the wild cherry were blooming and the Rubus dewberries were blooming along the Polpis Road. The ox-eye daisies are going strong.
On June 18, Josh and I walked with Alan Reinhardt and the Nantucket Conservation Foundation at Massasoit Plains. Nice to discover a new part of the island where we haven't hiked. We hiked through the woods to the Plains and then over to Clark Cove.
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Massasoit Plains |
The next day we headed to Windswept Bog and Stump Pond, where the sandplain blue-eyed grass and blue flag iris were abundant.
Blue Flag: Iris Versicolor |
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Blue Flag |
Sandplain Blue-eyed Grass: Sysyrinchium fuscatum |
Stump Pond |
Thursday, June 4, 2020
Early June
I miss the gannets. During the winter and early spring, they and all three scoters, loons, long-tail ducks and eiders were always outside our windows. Now they are off to the north. We still have the herring and greater black back gulls with us. And, it seems, thousands of common yellowthroats.
The ox-eye daises are opening, the rugosa is starting to bloom. The wild geraniums (geranium maculatum) are in the shade places and the Quaker Ladies continue to bloom. Yellow iris are in bloom at Reyes Pond, and scotch broom is ablaze in yellow. The blue-eyed grass has started. But most beautiful is the golden heather that is carpeting the middle moors.
We thought the water was high earlier in the spring...but now many of the ponds on the middle moors are flooded into each other, and the stretch between Pout Ponds Road and Almanac Pond roads is more flooded than I have ever seen it. And speaking of that, every time I go on the moors I see people walking and biking now. And it's only the first week of June!
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Wigwam Ponds, June 4 |
Wigwam Pond, June 4 |
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Golden Heather, Hudsonia ericoides |
Golden Heather on the Middle Moors, June 4 |
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Iris Pseudacorus, Yellow Flag, at Reyes Pond, June 2 |
Scotch Broom, June 2, Cytisus Scoparius |
Sheep Laurel, Norwood Farm Bridge, June 2 Kalmia Angustifolia |
SpottedTurtle on the Middle Moores, June 2 |
June 2, Middle Moors |
Oystercatchers at Coskata May 29 |
Eastern Kingbird on the road to Coskata, May 29 |
Rosa Rugosa on May 29 |
Ruddy Turnstones at Coskata, May 29 |
Egrets in the lee at Coskata Pond, May 29 |
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