These are just some of the other pictures I took on my walk yesterday.
First is some bark from a fallen quaking aspen that has weathered and is being colonized by a fungus. In the gray and brown month of March, my eye is drawn to anything that shows some color.
![aspen bark with fungus](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTHvwE-6WiUNb-Vky3Jx86-FlDCY8pwCyj0cm14DLN6nImeARMPZiZblMeovRcUCCtDx7jnKK3qnXO1VI5bX8EXTi5_wxvp8KjG7mpxE4-EYWhyHv84Mna_L2lbesM9kXYQZE9N_g274Rc/s1600/AspenBark01.jpg)
The interesting thing about this apple branch is the lack of bark. Someone's been having a feast. My guess is a rabbit. No, not a tree-climbing rabbit. The tree had broken and this branch was on the ground although still living (maybe not for much longer).
![chewed apple bark](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuoUwOOs6RL9sjVT7N3MoPNeTckXJB5Ry9Y89U_rUXm2rQ7r0tAzL454H1s1WfW-ssh4Ow3mhGg3DeMd16YS0MXtY-8p5eaSw8Y6GkSQzJ_YKtTi1zQAgymfV9kaxEyvpy9Xe9r8psrLSb/s1600/AppleBark01.jpg)
Finally, I love the bark on this white cedar. This single tree should be in my series of polka-dots and stripes.
![white cedar tree](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIwCYltDdmD3fhDqHK6p21Vk8mXxW_ajqFkK86H_6Zzd_rGDLSTiyCWiHs5eFAD1turTigh9B4HT1kbgvZsgLVeGQyLCqWJA6PI7Uv7oWftRWS7ypmf7Ml65KHDD8iGmv2Y61DM4szMUHn/s1600/WhiteCedar01.jpg)
How about those stripes? Wonder what caused them.
![white cedar bark](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhg0SRYQuUXXkL3wg6KjciFBjLPFzcoNlMo9AjZrdFBx01VKwepzIBbfljSy7eubwi4RmZhueee-hImIYX_u5rz82J6Oo195mZ4Abpbf0lDrYFEyC6MI2zDUNBd4uyWjMAsrlkxcxXQ8oyt/s1600/WhiteCedarBark01.jpg)
![]() | See Six Miles, No Car, No Roads See Polka Dots and Stripes 3 |
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1 comment:
Interesting set of teeth marks left by the apple-bark eating rabbit.
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