Friday Farm Day

Diospyros virginiana, American persimmon, we just noticed this new persimmon coming up out front near the roadway.
Phylloxera caryaeglobuli, Hickory leaf stem Gall Phylloxera, an insect creating the distinctive galls. They do not damage the hickory trees. This was found in the bottoms near main waterway.
The underside of the pignut hickory leaf with the gall showing a little hole where the insect exits.
Aplectrum hyemale, Putty root orchid, open a bit more than the day before.
Seedlings that look like this get our attention because we are on the lookout for Tree of heaven, Ailanthus altissima, which has thumbs on the leaves. It’s a fast growing invasive that attracts spotted lantern flies and grows in thickets of dense trees that fall over quite easily. Happily, it has no thumbs, so this is Juglans nigra, eastern black walnut which grows primarily in riparian zones and is native to eastern North America. Asimina triloba grows well with eastern black walnut. However the tree produces juglone that can inhibit growth of plants that are sensitive to it within their root zone. Juglans nigra has dark strong wood and nutrient dense bold tasting nuts.
Blurry Rubus pensilvanicus, Pennsylvania blackberry, found along SAFF south set back line. We found a couple clusters of these native berries flowering.
Ferns and Mayapples, Podophyllum peltatum, in the old clonal colony of Asimina triloba.

We went over to Buckingham to get some jobs done at Saint Andrews Forest Farm. It was a gorgeous day here in Virginia with crisp cool overnight temperatures and warm sunshine heating everything up throughout the day. The rain gauge registered .1 inch. Virginia and most of North Carolina are in a drought. Before we left to drive back to Staunton, we took a walk around the forest. It was quiet except for the birdsong and our footsteps crunching along on the dry leaves. We plan to spend most of the weekend working on our Pawpaw project and taking down the bridge our neighbor to the south built on our property a few years ago.

Top of pic shows the bridge we will dismantle this weekend.
Yesterday in the clearing up top beginning with the start of this season’s meadow of crimson clover on the hillside.

5 thoughts on “Friday Farm Day”

    1. Thank you for these kind words. I got 6 blurry blackberry pics yesterday. lol. They were out of reach and kept swaying in the wind. Nevertheless, we were excited to discover they were native and not the invasive Himalayan blackberry. 😻πŸ₯³

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