Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH.
Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH.
Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH.
Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH.
Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH. @j_berard Thanks to Jason Berard for alerting me to this population. The last photo shows the habitat view (with this rose in the bottom center). @arthurvgilman
Mapping occurrences of Rosa sherardii, scattered along a 300+ meter stretch of the power line corridor in Lyman, NH.
The species is doing very well with numerous plants at this Franklin County site.
Along the Cross Vermont Trail (old rail trail)
@arthurvgilman I found another one!
Happy to see three individuals at this location, where I had found one in 2020: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63735774
(observations of other two individuals to be posted later)
extremely tentative. Maybe too hairy for the hybrid? Both parent species present. @thilokrueger
A wetland in West Mountain Wildlife Management Area
Keyed out with Newcolms. A new one for me. Very very sticky foliage, kind of like bedstraw.
I can't tell if it's I. capensis or I. noli-tangere.
Photos taken 7/7/2015 in a Northern White Cedar Seepage Forest. Noted a dozen plants
See plants in the same population (perhaps one of the same plants) in flower on June 7, 2024:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/221187067
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/221181292
*This observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/126901616 inspired me to look for genus Isoetes at the same location.
*in about a foot of water at edge of pond -- probably I. echinospora (based on habitat)
Swamp Azalea? Hidden amongst the more prolific Clethra, or maybe it’s more common than first thought! Hopefully I can find more. At very edge of a woodland stream, quite shady, though under an opening where morning sun would be expected. Roots are almost certainly inundated seasonally.. the stream is almost vernal-pool esque in nature- rarely ever has water after June, & if it does then it’s shallow, but at very beginning of Spring it floods half the surrounding forest floor.
Pink and white flowers on a clump of Trifolium hybridum, with each flower attached to an upright leafy stem. For a comparison with Trifolium repens, see: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/221521630
Pink and white flowers on a patch of Trifolium repens, with each flower connected to a horizontal runner at ground level. For a comparison with Trifolium hybridum, see: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/221521593
Date stamp on these photos should all be 11/10/16. I somehow had punched some buttons that mistakenly set the camera to October rather than November.
flower stalk hairs not glandular and abaxial leaf hairs restricted to midrib
On the RiverWalk to Salmon Hole (Burlington)
Robust population of plants with variously-colored petals
It still appears that there are five hatchlings.
A happy bird - found a hard-boiled egg.
*very small butterfly in a small black spruce and sphagnum bog with lots of Vaccinium oxycoccos, Rhododendron groenlandicum, R. canadense, Kalmia angustifolia, K. polifolia, Chamaedaphne calyculata, Sarracenia purpurea, Maianthemum trifolium, etc.
*possibly the same individual as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/52075143
*very small butterfly in a small black spruce and sphagnum bog with lots of Vaccinium oxycoccos, Rhododendron groenlandicum, R. canadense, Kalmia angustifolia, K. polifolia, Chamaedaphne calyculata, Sarracenia purpurea, Maianthemum trifolium, etc.
*possibly the same individual as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/52075140
*rhodo is at least nine feet tall (man is six feet tall)
*last two photos show seedlings near large plant (reproduced from seed, not layering)
White form of Cypripedium acaule
This is a scan of an old print from film. I don't have the exact date, but I believe the year was 1997, and the month was June.
Groundhog day came early this year !
Actively feeding AM and PM.
CAPTIVE — late July 2023. ex-ova larvae.
"Pocahontas” form of female — capture location mapped.
After wide grass blades became scarcer within the terrarium, the larvae created shelters by folding up Glechoma hederacea (Ground-Ivy) leaves, then emerging nightly to feed on the grasses (and carex).
major surprise to see this little bird foraging in the yard today
Despite time difference in photos, this is the same bird in all photos - it took us a while to move to a different location for seeing it from a different angle without disturbing it.