Showing posts with label Nature Walk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nature Walk. Show all posts

Friday, July 28, 2017

Flowers at Willis Creek Ranch


I should probably rename this post.  True, all these flowers are technically on Willis Creek Ranch - it's just that none of them are at MY house.  Marvin and I do NOT have a green thumb.  We joke that we are the only people we know who plant annual perennials.  But, that is just who we are.  However, my dear sister, Julie, is an incredible horticulturalist!  She is known for her beautiful wildflowers and gardens.  And we get to enjoy them at her house!  Definitely a win/win.  :)











Mama and Daddy have beautiful flowers, too.  Daddy took these photos just the other day.  Summer is such a pretty season out here.  










Friday, February 15, 2013

Eagles!

The boys and I (and their buddies) went to see the eagles in Canton last week.  This is something we always look forward to.  I had heard that there were a lot of eagles spotted there just a few days prior and was hopeful, but nothing prepared me for what we found when we got there.  There were eagles literally everywhere!  There were even multiple Golden Eagles!  Tons of Bald Eagles were flying around, mixing in with lots and lots of lovely seagulls.  Truly, there were more birds and more eagles than we have ever seen there before.  It was incredible!

We spent some time watching them fly and dive into the Mississippi River then decided we were all pretty hungry and went to eat at our favorite little buffet place, Saints Avenue Grill.  After lunch the sun had come out and the sky was turning blue so we went back to the riverfront.  Wow!  Even MORE birds were active!  We spent another hour or so just mesmerized by all the birds.  What a terrific day!  Well worth the drive over there.

Below are some photos but you can see more by clicking here.


Bald Eagle



Golden Eagle


Golden Eagle


Love this photo Jackson took of a Seagull.

Jackson, Adrian, Zack and Jonathan

Jackson and Adrian

Jonathan and Adrian distracted for just a moment...  :)

I think this is cool... Golden Eagle on left, Bald Eagle on right.  Those Goldens are HUGE!

2 Bald Eagles


Do you see all those Bald Eagles in the trees in the background?  Just look for the 'baseball' head and you'll see that they are EVERYWHERE!


He wasn't moving from his perch in the middle of the river...

Even when a 'friend' joined him on his perch!


Zack and Jonathan

Here is a compilation of little video snippets we took.



Sunday, February 5, 2012

Trees


February 5, 2012

Every year we attend the Missouri State Fair.  That is certainly an event that we all look forward to.  One of my favorite places at the fair is the Conservation building.  Each day there is a presentation given by one of the conservation agents in their area of expertise.  One of the fellas I most look forward to each year is the young man who talks about trees.  (I believe his name is Chuck Conner)  He is very knowledgable and engaging and typically ends his talk with a nature walk around the fairgrounds looking at the various types of trees.  This year it was pouring down rain so we weren't able to take the walk, but it did allow me to pull out my notepad and try to take notes on what he was saying.  I missed a good deal of it (he talks fast!!) but managed to get some scribbles down.  I have been planning to post them here to the blog ever since August...

This past week the boys have been doing a closer study on trees for Biology and I was reminded of my notes in my little notebook.  Although most of the notes are about tree identification with tips that are more useful in summer, I thought it would still be appropriate to post them.  So, here are my frantically scribbled notes from the MO trees presentation given at the fair last summer.   :)

When trying to identify trees by their leaves, keep in mind two important distinctions.  'Alternate' vs. 'Opposite' and 'Simple' vs. 'Compound'.

Opposing leaves form directly opposite each other on the stem or branch.  Examples of Opposite leaves include Maple, Ash, Dogwood and Buckeye.  (He gave the acronym of MAD Buck to remember those four trees.)  Alternating leaves go in step fashion... alternating.  :)  Tip to remember... poison ivy has alternating leaves.

Simple leaves have one point or shape.  Compound leaves bear multiple leaflets in a variety of patterns and numbers.  Look for the bud to help determine simple vs. compound.

Varieties of trees...  (all photos from the MO Conservation website unless otherwise noted)

Maple trees - Silver Maple - deep cut, white underside.  Not a good yard tree.  The 5 point Canadian maple is the Sugar Maple.  The 3 point maple is Red Maple.



Oak leaves can be so different, even within the same tree.  Look for acorns.  They have cluster terminal buds at tip of branch (that is a sign it is an oak).  If leaves are rounded it is in the white oak group.  If leaves are bristled tip, pointy leaves, it is in the red oak group or family.  Red oak trees take 2 years to flower to acorn crop.  White oak trees take 1 year to flower to acorn crop.  Both are good trees for wildlife management.  Pin Oak is in the red oak family.  A pin oak grows down (as you know if you have to mow around one!).  Peeling oak bark on a white oak indicates a Swamp Oak.  Swamp white oak has a long stem attached to the acorn.



American basswood - good tree.  Has long fruit bud.  Brings in bees.  (good thing!)



Sweet gum - favorite tree to have in your neighbors yard.  :)  This tree drops the big ball pod thing every time the wind blows, but it is a lovely tree.



Black gum (tupelo) - small bluish fruit that birds really like.  BEAUTIFUL fall color. Medium to large size - multi color - 40 feet tall.


River Birch - perfect tree to plant in wet areas.  Fast growing (but brittle wood).  Never buy multiple stem ones - ONLY buy single stem ones.



Sycamore - fast growing, strong tree.  Bark falls off as it gets older.  Plant at the back of your property.  It likes wet ground but can also handle dry ground.  Messy tree, but pretty and large.



Mulberry - good tree for wildlife, but not your yard.  It draws in birds (and bird droppings) so don't plant near your house.  A soft mass tree - means the food can't be stored by animals.  They must eat at it like a buffet, they can't take it with them.  (the opposite would be a hard mass tree with acorns that animals can store for a future time)



Smoketree - flowers in June, later than other trees.  Ornate and pretty.  Not very long lived but fast growing.  More like a shrub.



Eastern red bud - fruit looks like snow pea pod.  Heart shaped leaf.  Alternating leaf.  Won't do well in too wet an area.



The Ash tree has an Opposite Compound leaf.  Green Ash vs. White Ash - green ash grows closer to water.  White doesn't like wet roots.  White ash more purple in fall.  Green ash is more yellow in fall.  You can look at the leaves to tell the difference.  Look at the bud scar - a green ash should be more straight across and the white ash will cut down at the top of the bud scar where the bud comes off.  (clear as mud... I know, but it is what I wrote down)



Tree of heaven - this is the tree that is in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.  He said it is actually terribly invasive and it should be killed!!



Here are a few links to the Missouri Department of Conservation tree identification pages.  Just as an fyi - this is a tremendous website that you might enjoy browsing through.  There is much useful information about plants and animals that would be applicable even to folks who don't necessarily live in Missouri.

Identify Trees by Characteristics

Trees, Shrubs, and Woody Vines

Missouri Department of Conservation

I have long been a fan of the books and magazines put out by the MO Dept. of Conservation.  Some of my favorite field guides and books are their publications.  You can see the entire selection here.

If you are a Missouri resident you can receive two free magazines.  Missouri Conservationist and XPlor (for kids).  We get both and they are wonderful.


Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Nature Study Resources

Just a quick post to highlight a few nature study resources that we have found to be helpful or interesting.

I have enjoyed the following book this fall.  It is written largely as a narrative and is filled with numerous sketches from the authors nature walks with her own children.  She also has a blog that I had actually run across awhile back - only recently connecting it to her as the author of this book.

Link to book
http://www.rfwp.com/series/nature-study-by-laurel-dodge#book-nature-study-for-the-whole-family

Link to blog
http://naturestudyforthewholefamily.blogspot.com/

Also, here is a link that we have found very helpful in identifying birds.  It has definitely gone into our 'Bookmarks'.
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birding/backyard-bird-identifier/

Finally, here is a link to an article that I first ran across several years ago.  It hit me like a ton of bricks then and I find that I like to (need to!) re-read it every so often.  :)  It just backs up the 'aha' moment that I seem to have every single year (will I never learn??).  In fact, Jonathan did his best work yet on his nature study page when I just got completely out of his way, let him go off to the pond dam alone with no 'instruction'.  He came back excited about what he had seen, looked up all the information himself and had a sketching done before I even got back home.  Read this article... it is a good one.  :)
http://www.homeschoolingboys.com/hsboys/articles/10.html

Monday, September 26, 2011

The walk

I have been walking each day for the last few weeks and am enjoying this perfect fall weather.  I know that eventually I will have to move my walking inside to the treadmill or a Leslie Sansone DVD, but in the meantime, I love being outside here at Willis Creek Ranch.  I have a 'loop' that I walk a few times a day and I find that I am becoming more aware of even these very familiar surroundings.  This goes along well with the boys Biology class this year which has an emphasis on nature walks and observation.  I, myself, am becoming more observant of the nature right under my nose.

Here are some photos I took recently on my walk.  I plan to take more photos throughout the year to compare.

Pretty sunflowers by the fence


I love looking out over the field full of wildflowers, grasses (and weeds!)

so pretty this time of year



Ah, my old nemesis... ragweed

hay bales ready for the horses this winter

They didn't pay any attention to me...   :)


One of my little 'finds'... the driveway that I zip up and down all day long.  From my busy car I never notice this small burst of beauty amidst the gravel...

stubbornly blooming where it lands - even in a most difficult location

turning onto the main road

heading up to my sisters house


Julie has a green thumb for sure... her native wildflower beds are lovely all year long.

I love these grand old trees in my parents front yard.

I do not have my sisters green thumb.  THIS is what my front flower bed looks like...  :(

something else I noticed for the first time....

Can you spot a deciduous tree growing in there?

Look here - two trunks!  The pine is on the right.

looking up into the trees - intermingled
I'm going to have to take my tree book out there and try to get a good look at the leaves to determine what kind of tree it is.  I think it might be an ash...