Showing posts with label Juniperus virginiana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juniperus virginiana. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Adventures in the Polly Mobile 2: Hanging out near Kingston, RI (aka a Summer Town in Winter)

It was a cold, dreary day in Kingston, Rhode Island, as you would expect for this time of year. Not yet the bitter cold of January, but definitely getting grumpy.

https://plus.google.com/photos/111347412005630173979/albums/6088416425308338161?authkey=CLKw2fOD4fDw2QE
East Matunuck State Beach
 
(Click above for photos)

I had to get up super early in the morning to get a parking pass to save my car (and my wallet) from the college parking Nazis. Once I was up I just decided to go post up at Hope Student Center to catch up on some work and get a super reasonably-priced coffee. As the morning zombies filtered in, I realize I blended in, but also didn't. There were people pouring over flash cards and staring blankly at their computers, hopes that the information they needed would beam into their sleep-deprived brains. I was just hanging out. There was only a slight tinge of urgency to my work, but I was spared the future-crushing pressure of being under the academic wire.

Tessa let me know when she was done and we met at the Horridge Greenhouses (here's their blog). I took a quick jaunt through the grounds of the botanical garden to check out the collections. It was a modest offering and came complete with signage! I've really developed a taste for the need to have tags on plants and I was happy to see them (and the Magnolia grandiflora 'Bracken's Brown Beauty').

It was a low-key afternoon and evening exploring southern Rhode Island. Not much was going on and Tessa and I were reminded of the California Dreamin' Mad Libs fiasco that occurred on the way back from the Woody Plant Conference because it was definitely a 'Califonia Dreamin'' day as we were standing on East Matunuck State Beach.

We ended up walking through a forest of Juniperus virginiana that looked like something out of a horror movie and to take the edge off of the experience we contemplated what kind of monster we might encounter. Apparently people with chainsaws were the first thing she thought of. What an irony.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Adventures in the Polly Mobile 2: Fairhaven and New Bedford, MA and Aquidneck Island, RI

Honestly, looking back on this day, it hardly seems like it could fit all of what happened in it.

https://plus.google.com/photos/111347412005630173979/albums/6088414452211163521?authkey=CMrmzY2v2KzbaA
Brenton Point, Aquidneck Island, RI
I woke up in Fairhaven, MA; visited sites in Fairhaven and New Bedford, MA; and then made my way to Newport, RI and got the grand tour of Aquidneck Island, RI; and finally rested my head in Portsmouth, RI. Whew! Not as much horticulture today, but goodness did I get a sense of place. Check out the photos for more adventures (click the photo above).

Friday, February 21, 2014

Day of the February Thunderstorm

The weather has been so unusual this week. Last week was a snow and ice storm that shut Raleigh down for a few days. Now this week we have almost 70 degree days and a thunderstorm, complete with thunder and lightning. But, that is North Carolina for you. We have just learned to roll with it. I will say this is the first February thunderstorm I can remember.

Anyway, keeping my eyes open, there were a lot of things taking the cue from the warm weather. Check out the photos (and links!) below for details.

Links for more information about plants and animals in the slideshow:

Cricket Frog- Herps of N.C. profile, EOL profile
Herps of N.C.- List of Frogs and Toads of N.C.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology- Hawks Listing that includes calls
Narcissus ssp.- anatomy, Brent and Becky's Bulbscool "Close-up View" project, cultivation fact sheet from Purdue University
Blueberries- cultivation fact sheet from N.C. State, nutrition fact sheet from the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council, N.C. Blueberry Council
Ericaceae- Oxydendrum arboretum profile, dense botanical description from eFloras,