Category Archives: Flowers

Ash

When talking about the lichen that I’ve discovered growing on “the big tree in the back yard,” the question again came up – what kind of a tree is it, exactly?

I’ve tried a couple of these free phone apps that will try to identify plants, but they’ve never gotten beyond “tree” before, except for one that got as far as “olive.” Since I don’t see any olives on it (and there are olive trees all over SoCal – this ain’t one of them!) I thought that was useless information.

Actually…

I downloaded the PlantNet app. It looks at various things like the bark…

…and leaves…

…and thought that it might be a green ash tree. But it’s not feeling super confident about that analysis, maybe one in four odds that it’s correct.

Then I tried the Seek app. It takes a look at the whole plant and as you move the camera around it starts trying to tie the pieces together (bark, size, leaves, flowers, etc) to come up with an estimate based on plant taxonomy. Remember that from sixth grade biology? Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species? (Neither did I, had to google it. I mean, I knew the concept, but the order and so on? Pffft!)

It pretty quickly established that our subject was part of the Olive Family. WHO KNEW??!!

Then things clicked!

I’m not 100.000% sure this app is right, but I think we can conclusively say that it’s some sort of ash tree! So where does that clue take us on the Interwebs? Here!

Looking through the various types of ash trees, I’m not 100% sure either the green ash or the velvet ash description is perfect. In particular, my tree gets some odd new growth every spring, and I don’t see anything that looks like that. And most of the descriptions in the article show seed pods that are unlike anything I’ve seen on this tree.

So, an ash tree of some sort, 99.99% sure. PROBABLY a Velvet Ash, about 90%+ sure, possibly a green ash.

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I’m Lichen It! Day Two

It’s not moss.

It’s lichen.

Does it have or will it have fruiting bodies?

This section here is like a power coating, but up close and blown up (click on the image) there are shades of green unseen before.

Here there’s some sort of structure that I didn’t see before, especially across that ridge of bark in the middle. It looks like little circles or pox marks.

More of it here, along with some yellow patches.

Lots of yellow here, along with clusters of those circular, pox-mark like areas.

Another bright yellow patch along with some of the green stuff. I wonder if the “pox mark” areas here were brighter green when wet but are now reverting to brown and/or clear as they dry, but leaving that structure visible?

Speculation. But if I get a chance I’ll go take some close ups tomorrow of the non-lichen covered section to see if it’s all over the tree bark or just where the lichen is.

Junior botanists of the world – UNITE!

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I’m Lichen It! Day One

After pointing out that the deluge had brought out a green covering to the big tree in the back yard, and after foolishly referring to it as “moss,” I’ve been told that it’s more likely to be “lichen.” My thanks to my high school friend James on FaceBook (dude, do you realize that it’s been almost fifty years?!) and Jemima Pett here for the information!

The sunny side of the tree. No lichen (or moss) seen.

This is what I thought ALL of the bark looked like until earlier this week.

Rough texture, but… brown. (BTW, if anyone can help me identify what kind of tree this is I would appreciate it. I’ve tried a couple of those “plant ID” apps but they’ve just said, “Huh? What? Moi?”)

The green color of the lichen on the shady side is still obvious, but the color has started to fade from when it was soaked. I did find this article from the US Forest Service, which has a line that indicates that my initial guess might not be totally out of left field when I speculated about the color change and appearance being “activated” by the rain.

When a lichen is dry, its color is usually gray or colored like the fungal cells on the upper cortex. When a lichen is wet, those cells become transparent, and the algal cells underneath get a chance to show their vibrancy.

Green algae generally give the lichen a bright green color when wet…


I wonder how much of the color difference might be due to lighting and how the iPhone’s camera sensor tries to “help” by making some processing decisions with the raw data.

I also wonder about the “fruiting bodies” that Jemima asked about. I tried doing a Google image search for “lichen fruiting body images” – that was a mistake. I got one or two lichen pictures and hundreds of rather graphic and disturbing images of a skin condition called “lichen planus.” 🤮🤢

However, on closer examination of the green spots above…

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Not NaNoWriMo, 11/08/2023

The light at the end of the tunnel, indeed. Somehow the audit questions have all been answered and the backup documents provided. (IYKYK!) The October financial reports have been finalized. Of course, there are a gazillion things that have been pushed off onto the back burners that will need to be dealt with, but none of them are at an “Oh God! Oh God! We’re all gonna die!” level of priority.

I always forget what this feels like. Sort of like that cool down period when you’ve just finished a marathon. Perhaps the proper response is to have a couple of bananas and some Gatorade.

Most of the post-deadline balance disruption is mental. Spend enough time where every single minute is so tightly focused on deadlines and priorities and you find yourself a bit adrift when you have options, including the option to sit on your butt and watch the hockey game. (The Kings are winning by the way, 3-1 over Las Vegas with 4:00 left.) Surely there must be something critical and high priority that I’ve forgotten! WHY AM I NOT WORKING?!

That’s the tiny animal brain talking. The more sane portions of the cerebelum know that we’re good. There will be more times for stress and panic. But tonight is not one of those times.

Maybe I’ll write a few words and jump back on that horse after three missed days.

2015, Duke Gardens in Raleigh, NC. Wowsers!

 

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Fleeting Indeed

Just three days ago it was a botanical symbol of defiance against the winds and weather.

But beauty is fleeting and the winds are relentless.

You can see a few wisps of spider webs attached now – they seem to be everywhere in the last few days.

The only thing that never changes is change itself. I guess the heat death of the universe will, by definition, finally end that. But I suspect I won’t be here to see it.

But I will be here the next time this rose, or any of the others along the driveway, or in the neighbors’ yards decide to blossom and amaze the world with their own individual, spectacular, fragrant explosion of beauty.

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Favorite Rose

First of all, a wind storm about two weeks ago stripped all of the roses of all of their petals.

But this favorite rose of mine, the one with the magnificent color, basically said, “Up YOURS!” to Mother Nature’s more malevolent side and burst out with two magnificent blooms.

Maybe it’s not just the color that makes these my favorites. Maybe it’s the attitude, especially when I can use the reminder.

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Change Of Seasons – LA Backyard Version

First of all, a note on yesterday’s post. I apologize to my tiny lizard friend for assuming that he was “lousy at hide and seek.” In fact, I’m apparently not one of the cool kids in the backyard (big surprise!) and didn’t know that the game being played was actually peek-a-boo, and I was being skunked by a grand master. The editorial management of this site regrets the error and we’re looking into sacking the offending staff. Or at least flogging them.


While SoCal does have some trees (all imported from places far more temperate and moist, I assure you) which turn fall colors, they’re pretty much non-existent in our yard.

We have one fruit tree (peach, maybe?) which has never borne fruit in the 5+ years we’ve been here, but the leaves do turn yellow and fall off in the fall.

Compared to seeing whole valleys and mountain sides in New England covered in flaming red maple leaves, or miles upon miles of sunburst yellow aspens in the Rockies, this is a little short on the spectacular.

But you take what you can get. It’s not this tree’s fault, it’s doing its best. It would be nice if it could produce an actual fruit someday so that we could know what kind of tree it is, but that’s beyond my job description.

Happy Autumn from the land of pine trees, palm trees, and cactus!

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Detritus

The winds are back, and they were howling last night and this morning.

On the far (upwind) side of the driveway you can see some of the rose bushes planted there. Yesterday I noticed that several were starting to bloom again, including the spectacular pink & white one.

On the near (downwind) side you can see hundreds of rose petals. Red, pink & white, yellow, that amazing favorite shade of orange/red, all covering the grass. The rose bushes have all been stripped of every petal.

The lawn looks like there was a wedding here and some precocious (and cute) four-year-old had scattered a bushel basket full of rose petals everywhere. Which is actually what happened, if your cute four-year-old angel was actually a 40 knot wind coming through like the Avenging Angel of Death.

Po-TAY-toe, po-TAH-toe?

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Pictureless

There was a truly spectacular ISS pass tonight, the station rising in the northwest just as it got truly dark and sailing about 80%+ across the sky before fading into darkness in the west. It was amazingly bright, something like Magnitude -3.9. I noticed the time just a minute before it was set to rise, so I didn’t have time to grab my camera and tripod and gear and get it set up in time. So I went out into the front yard and simply watched. It was wonderful.

The red-shouldered hawks were at it again, something like the 7th or 8th day in a row that they’ve been in the pine trees below us on the hill. I wonder if they might be building a nest nearby. For much of the time they were being raucous outside I was on a Zoom meeting and couldn’t go out to take pictures, but I listened to them from inside. They were loud enough so that the rest of the staff could have heard them if I hadn’t been on mute. I enjoyed listening to them, even if I didn’t see them or get any pictures.

I saw several lizards in the back yard, but never when I had my camera with me. I had my phone, but they weren’t that close, so I just let it go. We had a nice conversation about how warm it was getting again, nearly 90ºF today and getting even warmer for the week ahead. They enjoyed that news quite a bit, but I had to remind them to watch out for the birds. I’m not sure the hawks would bother with something as small as them, but the scrub jays and mockingbirds most certainly would.

The hummingbirds were out, starting to complain that the feeders are getting low. I was too busy today to clean and refill them, but I promised to look at it tomorrow. They’re fine for today, but they do get nervous. No pictures were taken.

The rose bush that had given me the one fantastic pink and white bloom a few weeks ago has decided to cough up a handful more. For some reason when I went out to get the mail I didn’t have my phone with me to take pictures. Huh! That almost never happens. But it did today. The blooms will wait for their closeups another day.

I happened to be out just before 17:00 when I caught the UPS 757 banked over right over our house to turn to final approach for Burbank Runway 08. It’s a regular flight, but sometimes they turn inside of us to the east, sometimes swing in more from the Porter Ranch area. It’s a honkin’ big plane (that’s an official aviation term) and when they cross overhead they’re just extending their flaps so it looks even honkin’er bigger. I just watched, enjoyed the way it floated through the air, listened as those two big engines spooled down as the power was pulled back.

All of these things happened without any photos to share or other proof that I experienced them. I simply experienced them and held onto the memories.

Which brings me to one of the two or three best scenes ever filmed:

Today, no rain. There might still be tears.

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A Rebel Out Of Season

The rose bushes near the driveway always bloom in the late spring, April and May generally. (For example, here, here, here… plenty more to see as well.)

It’s nowhere near spring, closer to the start of fall, but for some reason this plant decided to pop one really late or really really really early, amazing, stunning bloom.

The colors and shading were exquisite.

In a row of dormant plants, this one stood out like a beacon.

It’s started to fade and wilt already, victim of the late summer heat. But it was gorgeous in its time! Even as unusual as that time was.

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