Friday, May 04, 2007

Full Many a Flower

This little bit of Ohio woodland was aglow with blossoms. I couldn't believe the richness. How had it escaped overgrazing, timbering, erosion--how had such a rich seedbank built up on this one bit of hillside?I felt like a pirate, running my hands through a treasure chest. Riches!!

A carpet of wood betony. My God!
Virginia waterleaf, not blooming, but with those leaves, who needs to bloom?
Blue phlox and red trillium, or wakerobin, or toadshade. Take your pick. They're all wonderful names.

As Trillium grandiflorum ages, it blushes.Thomas Gray's “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” sprang into my head, as fresh as it was in 1751:

Full many a gem of purest ray serene
The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear:
Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,
And waste its sweetness on the desert air.
For me, that was just it. I couldn't let this sweetness go to waste. Unseen flowers. It was too hard to bear, not to be able to share it. I started hatching a plan.
Speaking of flowers, blooming...Phoebe came running to see me when I finally came out of the woods.
She'd been hanging out with her friend Taylor, but she'd missed me. Oh, beautiful. Tried to frame out the darn portajohns, managed to in the first shot, but just had to get that smile in the second one..
There are always vultures around this churchyard. Here comes one now. I love this shot!
There's a big vulture roost--upwards of 60 birds--in a sycamore just across the road. Phoebe enjoys watching them from the school bus. Nobody seems to mind. Lord knows there are enough dead possums on the road to feed one to each bird. On our way home, we stopped and watched them gathering for the evening's socializing and slumber.

And I thought wildflowers were a hard sell...wonder if I could get the other moms over to see this? A girl can dream.
Writing from the New River Birding Festival at Fayetteville, WV, where I've been awake since 4 AM. I'll be helping a bunch of people try to spot their life golden-winged warbler this morning. Taking the kids on the field trips. They agreed they'd get up at 5 last night...it's not looking so good this morning. Chet Baker's along, but he gets to sleep all morning, rolled in blankets. He met many of the festival participants (including Katdoc!) at the talk Jeff Gordon and I gave last night. There was a cookout. There were hamburgers and hot dogs, and dozens of people to meet and greet. The little Mayor of Opossum Creek was in his element.

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12 Comments:

At 6:57 AM, Blogger Mary said...

Phoebe is a beautiful flower - so happy to see you! Sweet.

Vultures make me stop and look. Their faces don't appeal to me but I adore them on take-off. Breathtaking, aren't they?

So Chet made the social scene last night with hot dogs and hamburgers as a bonus! Such social beings...entertaining and engaging.

 
At 8:59 AM, Anonymous Janeyms said...

Loved the walk through the woods. Brings back memories of my childhood and the woods behind our house in Glen Este, Ohio. I now have a very small sliver of trees to roam when my foot allows and in it are May apple and Solomon seal and Jack in the Pulpits, but sadly no Trillium, Dutchman's Breeches, or wild Phlox. Thank you for sharing nature's bounty and your lovely daughter! Mary is right, she is a flower!

 
At 12:14 PM, Blogger catbird said...

Thanks for the Phoebe fix!

Vultures often congregate in the trees across the road; once, I counted 22 TVs. I'm always glad to see them, and find them oddly beautiful and endearingly bashful. I especially like their see-through nostrils.

 
At 2:16 PM, Blogger Lynne said...

I really find turkey vulture faces quite pretty. Big eyes, red cheeks and that big ivory colored beak.
But your Phoebe- she's just lovely.
We're a bit behind you on wildflowers but I'm looking foreward to seeing what I can id at Hasty Brook this spring.

 
At 4:17 PM, Blogger Wanderin' Weeta said...

If I were one of those moms, I'd be over to see the vultures in a flash.

Everybody I ever knew thought I was weird, too. (Except for my S.O., which is why he is my S.O.)

Love your blog!

 
At 4:57 PM, Blogger Mary Richmond said...

oh how i envy you your trilliums...there aren't many here on the Cape though when I head to Western Mass. or up to NH, VT or Maine I get to see them. Our flowers and birds are so far behind what you report it's like getting a little spring preview every day! Come check out what we are seeing in my neck of the woods if you want, though...get a little peek of the ocean, too.

 
At 9:01 PM, Blogger littleorangeguy said...

Beautiful flowers, beautiful daughter, beautiful (in their way) vultures, beautiful description of Chet Baker rolled up like a sausage ... but no picture?

Sigh.

 
At 9:58 PM, Blogger Dorothy said...

So happy to see the lovely wildflower pictures from your herding adventure over the fence and into the woods. The vulture convention is interesting too.
It's easy to see how much Phoebe loves her Mom by the expression on her face! Priceless.
Wish we lived closer..the birding festival sounds like such fun.
Thanks for the recap..wish I were there.

 
At 10:01 PM, Blogger Susan Gets Native said...

Lynne is so weird. She has this THING for TV's. She actually requests pictures of our TV, Earl.

Oh, yeah, Julie. Those lemming women would totally have come with you to see ugly carrion eaters.

Phoebe is just a bright ray of sunshine. That smile!

 
At 11:21 AM, Blogger kevbosnafu said...

I've been obsessed with our resident turkey vultures at the Taunton, Mass. landfill lately. We have five of them and I love watching them soar on thermals on sunny afternoons. (not for too long, though, due to the smell).

Timely post, indeed (for me, at least!).

 
At 3:48 PM, Anonymous katdoc said...

Just a quick note as I recover from my week at the New River Birding and Nature Festival. The unpacking and laundry had to wait till I caught up on Julie's blog and read all your comments.

If you are interested in birds, wildflowers, and Julie Zickefoose, you must attend this Festival at the New River Gorge in West Virginia. I'm sure Julie will post more about it, but we had a wonderful time. I got to meet and bird with Julie, Bill and Jeff Gordon, as well as many other excellent birders, both guides and guests. I got to meet the gorgeous Miss Phoebe (though didn't get to visit with her as long as I would have liked) and I got to spend the day with the coolest boy on the planet, King Liam.

But, best of all, when I came in for dinner, a black and white dog raced over to me. As I bent down to greet him, he leaped up to kiss me. I had opened my mouth to say hello just as he went to lick my face. Yup, you guessed it - I was French-kissed by Chet Baker!

Betcha'll are jealous!

~Kathi, who is pretty much birded-out right about now

 
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