Friday, November 26, 2010

crow




Job 38:41 Who provides food for the raven when its young cry out to God and wander about for lack of food?

Sunday, October 17, 2010

This Blog will Move

I will be moving to a different bog company shortly.

4 Sep2011
As you can see I stayed with Blogspot. The room for photos ran out but I now post them on photobucket and link this blog to them.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Advanced Regeneration

 In an Oak forest the theme has been on our watch (modern forest practice) to stop fires. This change in the normal events of nature has led to a problem for oaks. The hole you see is because of a Shumard oak dying. I came here to see what tree will take its place.
 The mighty shumard oak has fallen and now decaying after a few years. Click on the Shumard oak link below to see earlier posts of this tree.


Trying to get a photo of the tree most likely to take its place is a maple. Maples are not as valuable as oaks and are further along the progression of a forest moving from a vibrant stand of oaks to more modest trees that come up under them without any disturbance.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Bitternut Hickory

 Here is a Bitternut hickory tree that is growing in the open in a park. I live near here and I know for at least 17 years this tree has grown in the open. So this tree has an opportunity to be a wolf tree. A wolf tree has a short bole and wide branches. They grow this way because of no competition. But this tree has not taken advantage of this freedom of growth.

 There is some dark growth on the twigs of this hickory. You can also see the terminal bud which ID's it as a bitternut hickory. Long fuzzy yellow/orange bug.

 Here is a photo of the hickory nut. Notice the ridges on the end of the nut. This ID's it as Bitternut hickory.

Saturday, October 09, 2010

Boxelder Maple


 Unusual Boxelder maple with twisted bole. This tree has recently been damaged by a wind storm.

Friday, October 08, 2010

Pawpaw

I don't see Paw paw trees growing tall often. These are over 15' tall. This is usually an understory tree. The diameter of these trees were all under 2". It is reported that the tree seldom reaches a height of over 20'.

Thursday, October 07, 2010

Shingle Oak

 Here is a Shingle oak I measured:
height 82.8'
Canopy 63' one way and 67' the other
Circumference 7' 11 1/2"
Total points of 194.6

Here is a list for the champion trees in Missouri.

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Northern Red Oak

 Hiking at the edge of the woods I saw this dominate stem. I went into the woods to investigate.


 I measured the diameter as 8' 3 1/16"


 The tree height will have to come later. It had grown as tall as trees uphill from it.



Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Mulberry Branch

 Here is an example of a Mulberry (red) branch that is growing sideways to get light. I thought the tree was over topped and had sent this lateral to acquire light. As I backed up to see what was overtopping the tree there was nothing above it. So it is a riddle. There may have been a tree there that had died in the past.

Maybe the tree has recently gained dominance in the forest  and sent out this branch before that happened.

Monday, October 04, 2010

Chinese Elm

 I ran across these Chinese elm during my lunch hike. The soft color green is due to the small leaves also the trees have been ravaged by bugs that have eaten parts of the leaves. These trees are still going strong.


Sunday, October 03, 2010

Pin Oak


The acorn cap just covers the top of the acorn.

I got some photos of Pin oak the other day. Notice the acorns have pin stripes down the side.  The bark is unusually smooth for a mature tree. The lobes are extra wide and the leave lobes are thin.



Saturday, October 02, 2010

Friday, October 01, 2010

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ageratum, White Snake Root / Ageratina altissima

Ageratina altissima

Names this plant has been called.

Ageratum, Snake root, White snake root, White Sanicle , Tall Boneset

 Started running into Snake root yesterday. These 2 photos were at the bottom of a cliff in the open sun.



 Here I found Snake root in a draw. The leaves were narrower but the flowers were exact. Maybe a different race?
The leaves are opposite and rotate 90 degrees at each rank.

Here I run into it again in the Missouri river bottoms.


Tremetol is toxic. When cattle eat it, it gets in the milk and passed into humans will poison. Also called milk sickness.

Nancy Hanks Abraham Lincoln's mother died of this. Thousands died in the 19th century before they realized what the plant was.



Early settlers thought the bitter rhizomes were beneficial in the treatment of snakebites. That's where the snakeroot name came from.