Ready to go!We looked around behind Lake Dahlgren. Here is all I put on iNaturalist. I put a few of the prettiest ones here in the post directly too. I recognized Seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia) from its fun pods! We have some in our garden. Liverworts!Dog for scale next to moss. The clouds came and went. It was cool and breezy but I did okay with just one layer of long sleeves. Splitbeard bluestem is so pretty with its tufts. I think this picture would be a fun puzzle. Nodule habitat Close upI found some nodules in the sandstone!Blackberry stemMaybe not lichenI thought this blackberry stem had lichens, which would have been unusual, but I think maybe it was a fungus.
The blackberries have been ripening for a while but I’ve just snacked. Today I went out with a container to pick!The Chef added a cookie and Braum’s vanilla ice cream. Yum!
Paula’s Escobaria vivipara cactus continues to bloom beautifully in the daytime. It was cloudy. I’m not sure if that matters for it to bloom. A very frilly summer iris begins… I think this one is from Judy?The standing cypress is really going now with multiple plants in full bloom!The Chef made a delicious pizza with fresh basil and oregano from the yard. I believe this is a safflower that sprouted from the bird seed. I believe these are our two different sunflowers species. The one on the left has narrower and wavy edged leaves; we think/hope it’s Helianthus petiolaris (both Mom and another friend have given us seeds). The one on the right has big broad leaves and I think is an offspring of the Helianthus annuus that volunteered last year. Ironweed is starting to bud. Greeneyes is about to bloom!The blackberries are starting to ripen! These are wild volunteers dug from Mom and Dad’s house. Last but definitely not least, on Tuesday morning I woke up and emerged to find Gram happily snuggling the Doggie. Briar seemed to understand she could not move as is the cat rule. She was not unhappy though. Eventually he got up to look out the newly opened window so she was released so she could scratch an itch haha.
We got even more good steady rain this morning and there’s a bit of standing water in what we are calling Leon’s prairie to distinguish it from the original prairie block. Leon is the late great gray tuxedo cat who now has been reincarnated as an aggressively thorny blackberry plant which is adjacent to this meadow.