If a tree falls in the forest, does it land on a boat?
But if it didn’t make a hole in the hull, I bet the boat will still float.
-jsq
If a tree falls in the forest, does it land on a boat?
But if it didn’t make a hole in the hull, I bet the boat will still float.
-jsq
Not a common sight anymore: native wild honeysuckle.
Lonicera sempervirens L., Coral Honeysuckle, Trumpet Honeysuckle, Woodbine
This Lonicera sempervirens L. is also known as Coral Honeysuckle, Trumpet Honeysuckle, or Woodbine.
It is native to the U.S. Southeast, with some found farther north, possibly as garden escapees. Continue reading
This canebrake rattlesnake was too close to the farm workshop at Okra Paradise Farms, so I used a hoe to put it in a cardboard box and took it far away.
How? I show the snake a hoe. It either gets in the box with a nudge from the hoe, or it gets in the box in two pieces.
Here’s a
video playlist:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLk2OxkA4UvxPbeykZkfos36dRbcvIIeu Continue reading
The native wild azalea, Rhododendron Canescens, keeps blooming on more bushes.
Native wild azaleas and dogwood 2022-03-09
And we have a few blooms of dogwood, Cornus florida. Not as many as usual; we don’t know why. Continue reading
Weeding season is here.
After the recent rains, more potatoes coming up and growing seems like and inch a day. Followed closely by nutgrass.
-jsq
Two months after a January burn, these 21 acres of planted longleaf pine in the Conservation Reserve Program look like most of them are dead.
But look closely: almost all of them are candling. New growth rising up in inch-thick white candles. Continue reading
Down at Agri-Supply they said the old disc was well worn.
I wonder why?
-jsq
Native wild azalea Rhododendron canescens and huckleberry blooming.
Wild Azalea and Huckleberry @ OPF 2023-02-24
Another successful prescribed burn at the end of 2022.
This was actually the burn of the area in which the Treat’s Rain Lilies have since come up, six weeks later.
There’s more to do if we ever get good conditions again, as in dry for enough days after a rain.
For those who are not familiar with prescribed burns, they are necessary to the health of pine forests. Pine trees, especially longleaf pine trees, are more resistant to fire than other trees. So burns favor pines, and without burning, oaks, sweetgums, etc. take over. And burning temporarily cuts back the gallberry, blackberry, and Smilax vine thickets that get too thick for wildlife. Quail and other birds have already moved into areas of previous burns.
Here’s
a video playlist:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLk2OxkA4UvyyTZYEfjLstI_3DK0QDieb