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Showing posts with label Loda Lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loda Lake. Show all posts

Monday, May 16, 2016

Practically Perfect in Every Way

 
Ester is already home now, but before she had to leave we packed the day to the max. And after a slow start the weather turned out to be drop-dead gorgeous.

First we went to Loda Lake Wildflower Sanctuary in White Cloud. It's about an hour away and I will write about it for this month's newspaper column. I arranged for a tour for us from the Loda Lake Garden Club president. She was able to point out some of the plants that I might have missed.

Loda Lake sign

This is the only Wildflower Sanctuary in the entire National Forest system. It is 77 acres which used to be private. Here's Loda Lake, itself.

Loda Lake

I last had a tour of the area in 2012, and the link below shows you some pictures from that trip. This time, we did not see some of the special plants we saw that time, but did see others. Of course, to really see wildflowers, you have to keep going back to the same area over and over. A one-day excursion is nice, but it's a complete crap shoot as to what might be blooming.

Some of my pictures are good, some not so much. So today you'll get to see one common flower, but I finally got a good picture. This is starflower, Trientalis borealis.

starflower

And one that isn't so common. This has been planted as part of a prairie restoration they are working on. The land was donated by a family who had a farm and summer home on the property in the early 1900s. The area around the old barn foundations is open and perfect for starting a small prairie area. This is prairie smoke, Geum triflorium.

prairie smoke

Dogs are allowed on leash, so Jade got to walk with us too. We spent about two hours exploring and taking tons of pictures. Maybe I'll feature a few more another day.

After that, we got some lunch and then treated ourselves to Jones Ice Cream in Baldwin. I had lemon custard, and Ester had black cherry. Outstanding!

ice cream

When we got back here she left so she'd make it home before dark. So I spent some time weeding my flower beds.

Wonderful day! Tomorrow, it's back to work.

See Some Special Plants from Loda Lake
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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Great Lakes Hikes Gathering

 
Almost 20 years ago, a friend began an online forum called Great Lakes Hikes. I was an early member, and soon after that the group began having a weekend outing once a year in the fall. I'm embarrassed to say that I've never made it to any of them, even though they hold it only an hour from where I live.

So today, I finally joined them for the last hike of the weekend. They meet at the North Country Trail Birch Grove School.

Birch Grove School

This building was the first NCTA headquarters. It was rescued from near ruin by volunteers, and now it serves as a hostel/meeting place. It makes a really nice location for groups with plenty of camping space outside (floor space inside), a small kitchen and bathroom.

For the hike today, they chose a relatively short walk to Diamond Lake. The trail was built by NCT folks through land that was purchased by the Nature Conservancy from a private owner, and then transferred to the Forest Service. This is very near where we hiked in April at Loda Lake

hikers

The destination was a county park at Diamond Lake. The day was mild, and occasionally sunny. Couldn't ask for a nicer time in November! I met several people I had only known on line, and some totally new folks too.

Diamond Lake

I have two favorite images from the day. We passed a particularly nice bog (acid wetland), and walked out on a fallen white pine to get pictures. This photo isn't about the plants (although you might recognize the leatherleaf from a couple of days ago). The "sparkles" are cotton grass. Maybe I'll feature that another day. But the picture is more about the light and the impressionistic image.

bog

The other favorite is completely different. There were three children on the outing, and we came across a lovely little garter snake catching that same late-year sun as we were. You can see the snake was much appreciated by its audience.

child with snake

I even dried clothes on the line today! Then the wind picked up, blew in a new front and it's raining now. Might be snow tomorrow!

See Leatherleaf
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Thursday, April 26, 2012

W is for Wildflowers


  You didn't expect anything else from me, did you? These are just a few beauties from the past week or so. First, a common one, the wild strawberry, Fragaria virginiana. Do I need to say more about that?
wild strawberry Next is one that isn't so often seen. Some may recognize it as a cress, a member of the mustard family. However, look closely at the basal leaves. See how deeply lobed they are? This is the lyre-leaved rock cress, Arabis lyrata. Ellen and I found it along the White River. Yes it's a cousin of the many Arabis which are used in rock gardens.
lyre-leaved rock cress Finally, here's another one that the Forest Service is working to restore to the Loda Lake Wildflower Sanctuary. It's a prairie plant, and they are restoring an oak savannah in the old barnyard area. This is Geum Triflorum, prairie smoke. It gets its name because the seed pods are a feathery gray plume that looks smoke-ish.
lyre-leaved rock cress Almost done with this A-Z thing. It's worked out fine, but I have some goodies that haven't fit to show you when we are done.

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Sunday, April 22, 2012

Some Special Plants from Loda Lake

 
Since we get Sundays off from the A-Z Challenge, I'll bring you some special plants from Loda Lake. I think I'm holding out some more for "W" day, too.

There is a natural diversity of plants at Loda Lake, and the Forest Service is working hard to restore some plants that were recorded in the area in historic records. The area was clear-cut around 1900-- most of Michigan was. Then homesteaders came and tried to farm, but the soil was too poor. Most of the farms failed. The land was bought by the relatively new U.S. Forest Service. Think of a forest with no trees! It was all very different from what we have now.

Loda Lake was acquired in 1939. There are remnants of a large estate and two smaller tenant farms. All the buildings have been removed, but the foundations remain. Around the two small farms, oak savannah is being restored, including prairie plants.

So, our first little treat is Hill's Thistle, Cirsium hillii. This plant is completely new to me, but with the distinctive basal rosette, I might remember it. Of course, late in the summer it will have purple tufts of blooms. It is a rare species, requiring open sandy soil.

Hill's thistle

Next, here's a new fern. I didn't put this one on my photo pages, because I'm taking the botanist's word for it that it is Goldie's Wood Fern, Dryopteris goldiana. To be honest, it doesn't have some of the features noted in the field guide, so I'm just not certain. But, it's a pretty little thing.

Goldie's wood fern

Finally, the hit of the day (with me, anyway). There is a genus of ferns called moonworts. I've showed you one of them before. None of them is common, but the most often seen is Grape Fern, because it does get larger than the rest. I've only seen them a couple of other times. Yesterday, we must have seen two dozen!

All were just beginning to unfurl. That "tongue" in the middle is the fertile frond, the one that bears spores.

If you do follow the link below, you'll notice that it's very different from that moonwort. These look more like other ferns, but they are all in the genus Botrychia. This one is Botrychia virginianum

grape fern

I do have pictures of this fern when it's mature, but I'll have to hunt them up and show you another day!

See Moonwort, But Which One?
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Saturday, April 21, 2012

S is for Spirit of the Woods

 
Today was the monthly hike for the Spirit of the Woods Chapter of the North Country Trail Association.

After the hike, some of us went on to Gale's Pond for a while, and then I had a meeting tonight. I'm too tired to do this post justice, because we saw a number of rare plants. I'm going to beg off for now, and hopefully bring you some of those in the future.

The hike was at Loda Lake Wildflower Preserve. It's about an hour from where I live. It's the only Forest Service Wildflower Preserve there is! It turned out to be too early to see a lot of things in bloom, but I learned a lot, and saw some plants I didn't know very well.

Here's Loda Lake itself.

Loda Lake

A Forest Service botanist met us there and gave us a guided tour. That tour also included some history of how the area came to belong to the forest, and past land use, which included two small farms. Here are some members of our group inspecting a display about that history.

Loda Lake

I probably drove everyone crazy jumping around and ooohing and aaahing about plants, but hey.... it was a wildflower hike!

I promise you pictures in the future, but I want to be able to tell you about the plants, and I'm falling asleep!



See Trail Work Day
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