Monarch Update

Spring migration - old & young adult Photo:http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

Spring migration – old & young adult Photo: http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

I recently posted on the plight of the Monarch butterfly and things we can do to help. Mary Holland shared an awesome website that uses citizen science to track northward migrations of not just Monarchs, but other migrants as well. I love this site! For those who are curious as to when to expect visitors to your yard and gardens, check it out!

First Adult Monarch Spring 2014

First Adult Monarch Spring April 10, 2014 http://www.learner.org

Yesterday, I was able to get funding from our local Garden Club (thank you ladies!) to plant 200 milkweed and coneflower plants at our Grammar School. Parents have volunteered their backs and minds to the project and teachers will use plantings to teach kids about nature.

A home-schooled neighbor, along with her younger sister, has been inspired to do a study on the plight of the Monarchs.  Her dad, who owns an orthodontic practice, has generously donated funds for packets of ‘butterfly garden’ seeds, which will be given away at local outlets by the girls to educate the public. Win-win-win all the way around for insects, plants, nature, kids and adults!

Who says that one small person can’t make a world of difference?

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Froggy Love

The suitors line up.

The suitors line up.

Two males 'practicing'?

Two males ‘practicing’?

Two days ago, I posted on the frogs in our garden pond. Yesterday, we had five wood frog males competing for one female in our little pool. At one point, I worried they would drown her – poor thing! Froggy love can be rather brutal!

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Three males attached left, right & center to female wood frog with fourth one about to get on board!

My spouse was scandalized that I was taking pictures of their mating. “Give ’em some privacy!” Really, I think the concept of modesty is limited to humans. Animals don’t seem to be distracted from their urges to reproduce. My interest is purely scientific! I am naturally curious, like my fellow WordPress blogger Mary Holland, a naturalist who explores nature and all its wondrous goings on. Every day there is some new amazement to explore.

There are plenty of snickers and rude talk, or at least inference, going on around here from those less interested in the science and more in the sex part! However, I mush on undeterred, displaying for all the world to see, my study of ‘froggy porn’ as my spouse calls it!

Wood frogs (Lithobates sylvanicus)

 

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Wood Frogs

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“Oh baby, be mine!”

Wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) have found their way to my little garden pond next to the front steps. There is still snow in the yard, but they are announcing spring is here. To hear their mating call, click here. They sound a bit like ducks quacking.

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Kind of cute, isn’t he?

These little critters are about 2-3 inches long and live in wooded areas, hunting in leaf litter for prey. They are so well camouflaged that one only sees them when they jump, making a fast getaway. They overwinter under the leaf litter and curiously, can freeze completely, even enduring repeated thaw and freeze cycles. Wood frogs only come to water, usually vernal pools, to breed. Frogs prefer vernal pools (which are ephemeral, lasting only a month or two), for breeding because they lack fish, which will prey upon eggs and tadpoles. I’ve come to the conclusion that they are a delicacy because everything eats them, including other amphibians.

Can you spy four frogs?

Can you spy four frogs?

We cover the pond over winter to prevent it from filling with leaves and debris. On Saturday morning my spouse uncovered it and it had a 2″ layer of ice covering it. Sunday I raked the garden bed surrounding the pond and was startled to uncover one of these little frogs – yikes! The ice was melting pretty fast, but seeing that we already had a tenant waiting to take up residency, I removed the rest of the ice with a rake and scooped out what leaves that had found their way in under the cover. The pond always smells a bit off at first, but the sun takes care of it after a few days.

"Your eyes are like deep forest pools."

“Your eyes are like deep forest pools.”

It only took two days to attract four frogs and more will come. The spring peepers will be next. My favorite, they are are only 1 inch long and cling to the shrubbery around the pond. They drive my spouse crazy since they incessantly “peep-peep-peep” all night long into June, especially if it rains! We will eventually also get green frogs that find their way up from the river. It’s quite a party out there some nights – all in this tiny  3 x 4 foot pond!

To learn more about wood frogs and their life cycle, click here.

 

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Soft

Soft

A beautiful soft pink tulip at the bulb show. I neglected to get the cultivar name (possibly Darwin Tulip ‘Ollioules’), but I think its color is lovely!

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Life out of balance

photo-5koyaanisqatsi (coy-on-iss-COT-see) Hopi
Life out of balance.
The fast paced harried world of heart pounding intensity that we inhabit often reflects a deep sense of loss and confusion. As individuals we can easily become distracted by the various roads or choices in our lives, simultaneously attached to wanting more, and fearful of losing what we have. There are times when each of us turns our back on our true self, and then frantically begins to search for clarity elsewhere. The greater disharmony we experience on the a planetary scale lives in intimate relationship to personal imbalance. This vital connection is what the Hopi term koyaanisqatsi, and represents a whole species careening about in a maze of chaos and desire in direct proportion to the confusion of millions of individuals. Rather than depressing us, this notion creates a deeper understanding and sense of hope. By focusing upon the microcosm of our individual existence and living with as much balance and integrity as possible, we are contributing to a lessening in a small way, of the greater confusion. To move toward harmony within ourselves is to help heal the greater whole.

Excerpted from Worldwords – Global Reflections To Awaken The Spirit by Victor La Cerva, MD, HEAL Foundation Press, Cordova, Tennessee

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Snowdrops

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Snowdrops boldly announce the end of winter! While they have gladly self-sowed themselves around my yard, these next to the foundation come up while most of the yard is still covered with snow. Sweetly fragrant, they perfume the air near my front steps where I sit in the sun, gathering Vitamin D into my sun-starved body. I inhale deeply the rich scent of musty-sweet, thawing earth. In a rush, I am transported back to childhood when I lived close to the earth and played all day in the fresh air, inventing games with tiny troll dolls in little streams that formed from melting snow. It was a sweet time, when there really was no ‘time’, only the present moment in which to indulge my senses in the pungent smell of earth, feeling the kiss of the sun while listening to the songs of birds heralding the coming of spring.

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Maple Sugaring – Rite of Spring

Spring is here with the calls of red-winged blackbirds, melting snow, muddy roads and buckets hung on maple trees, tapped to collect sap. New Englanders wait a long time for spring to arrive. Michael Kelly, a blogging friend from L.A., recently commented, “I like the Northeast very much, but I’m astonished that people can maintain such patience and appreciation in living where winter has been so long & harsh.” I had to laugh because I myself often wonder about the state of my sanity living in this climate! Yes, we are a bit crazy, but we are rewarded come summer when most of the U.S. is sweltering, we live comfortably with temperatures in the upper 70s and 80s (F). We have only a few hot days in the 90s, but most days are tolerable and not too humid.

I realized that it is the long deprivation we endure in winter that heightens our appreciation when the warmer weather finally does arrive. Walking about yesterday I was quite ecstatic! Like Maria singing, “The hills are alive with the sound of music!”

I drove past a local sugarhouse and saw steam billowing out of the roof vent, pleased to note another official sign that spring is truly here.

The Boyden's Sugarhouse Boiling Maple Sap

Boyden Bros. Sugarhouse boiling maple sap.

I stopped in to buy some melt-in-your-mouth maple sugar candy and thought I would check out the process of boiling sap while I was at it.

Howard and Jeanne Boyden, along with their two sons and an army of helpers, have been collecting and boiling sap to make maple products for most of their lives, as have several generations of Boydens before them. (Howard’s ancestors were among the founding fathers of this town back in 1767.) They are some of the nicest folks you could ever hope to meet.

The process of turning maple sap, which comes out of the sugar maple tree (Acer saccharum) at 98% water and 2% sugar, into maple syrup which is 33% water and 67% sugar, is a lengthy one. It requires a lot of work and sometimes very long days. The season in which sap flows at its tastiest is a short one, occurring at the end of the winter when the weather turns to spring.

Maple Buckets and Mud Season

Maple buckets line a road during Mud Season.

Sap is Running!

Sap is running! Drip, drip, drip!

Trees are tapped with special spigots that drip sap into buckets or through a series of tubing that empty into holding tanks. Here’s where the army of helpers come in, driving pickup trucks with larger tanks strapped on, they empty the buckets and siphon out the holding tanks, then transport the sap to the sugarhouse. On days the sap is really running, they may make several trips a day.

Using a specially designed evaporator, the sap is boiled through a series of channels until it reaches 219.5 degrees, the right consistency for maple syrup. It takes roughly forty gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup.

Howard tending the evaporator - the humid air smells sweet!

Howard tending the evaporator – the humid air smells sweet!

Adding wood to the fire.

Batch adding wood to the blazing fire beneath the evaporator.

The syrup is then put through a filter and bottled.

Freshly made syrup goes into the filter press.

Freshly made syrup goes into the filter press.

 

Jeanne changes the filters periodically through the day.

Jeanne changes the filters periodically throughout the day.

Jeanne adjusting newly changed filters.

Jeanne adjusting newly changed filters.

The syrup is graded by its translucence. There are two grades, A and B. Grade A, which is divided into three categories – Light, Medium and Dark Amber – is considered the finest, what we put on pancakes, for instance. While B, darker with a heavy maple flavor, is used for cooking and baking. The first run of the season is very light and each run generally becomes darker.

Each daily run is graded.

Each daily run is graded.

Weather, particularly temperature, affects the run and length of the season. If the temperature does not rise above freezing, the sap doesn’t flow. So the gaps in dates you see above may indicate cold periods. Best flow is achieved when the temperature rises into the 40s (F) during the day and below freezing at night.

The delicious finished product!

The delicious finished product!

The Boydens also make maple cream, which is made by further boiling and whipping the syrup (OMG, if you’ve never tried maple cream, you are seriously missing out on one of the world’s most amazing treats!) as well as candies shaped like maple leaves and hearts. At Christmastime, they offer ones shaped like little conifers and stars. Their prices are very reasonable, given all the work that is involved, and they accept mail orders. They may be reached at boydenmaple@gmail.com. and are a CISA member.

For more information about maple sugaring in Massachusetts, visit the Massachusetts Maple Producers Association.

For a brief history of maple sugaring, originally introduced by the Native Americans to European settlers, read here.

Related article (in depth explanation of current sugaring technology): Sugaring 2013 – The New Evaporator

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River Batik

River Abstract

Reflected trees and sky look more like a painting than a photograph.

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Bring Back The Monarchs

Does your yard provide good habitat for wildlife? Although my town has acres of wild land and most of us here have seen wild animals roaming through our yards, nationwide 6,000 acres of wild land are being lost every day to development. As humans move in, most wildlife is forced to move out and unfortunately, sometimes they have nowhere to go and perish.

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Monarch during fall migration photo:http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

One example is the Monarch butterfly. Habitat destruction along its migratory route has impacted its numbers critically. Scientists estimate they’ve declined 90%. It saddens me to think of the world without this splendid creature which evolved a complex survival strategy over thousands of years. Migration is rare in the insect world. Every autumn,  adult Monarchs born that summer in northern states fly 2000 miles along migration corridors to wintering grounds in Florida, Mexico and southern California.

Spring migration - old & young adult Monarchs Photo:http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

Spring migration – old & young adult Monarchs Photo: http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

In spring, Monarchs fly north a few hundred miles, breed, lay eggs on Milkweed, then die. Their larva feed, pupate and emerge as adults to continue the journey taking four generations en route to reach summering grounds. Since Milkweed is considered a noxious weed and poisonous to livestock, farmers have launched a very successful campaign to eradicate it from their fields. Milkweed is no match for Roundup. Monarch larvae feed only on Milkweed. No Milkweed, no Monarchs.

The survival of the Monarch is in the hands of people like you and me all along their migratory route. If you have friends or family in any state in the continental U.S., urge them to plant Milkweed. Put up educational posters, contact your local newspapers and agricultural representatives. Support the creation of mow-free areas of Milkweed along the interstate highways and public land. Teachers, along with students and parents can create Monarch gardens at schools and recreational areas. Urge farmers to allow swaths of wild land along their borders that include Milkweed.

Summer adult on Tithonia Photo:http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

Summer adult Monarch on Tithonia Photo: http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

Our collective action in the next few years will determine the survival of this critically declining species. Devote a large section of your yard to several species of Milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa, A. syriaca and A. incarnata) for larva as well as nectar plants for adults such as Indian Blanket (Gaillardia pulchella), Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea), Joe Pye Weed (Eupatorium purpureum), Scarlet Sage (Salvia coccinea), Mexican Sunflower (Tithonia sp.) and Zinnia, ‘Dahlia Mix’ (Zinnia elegans). For more information on how you can make a difference, check out www.monarchwatch.org. They offer ‘Monarch Waystation’ seed kits that consist of nine packets of the above species along with planting and care instructions.

The need is urgent and I implore you to take action now before this marvelous species vanishes from the earth forever.

Above photos courtesy of Robbie at http://palmraeurbanpotager.com

monarch

MonarchWatch.org

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You are creating the universe at every moment

What can I add, except watch and understand this Truth?

Spiritbath's avatarSpiritbath

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