Yesterday's hike also included some other interesting features.
One of the neatest things is that a large interpretive panel has been added to that section by the Forest Service. It seems that the ancient shore of a pre-Great Lakes lake used to be almost that far inland (about 20 miles). It's pretty difficult to take a picture that really shows the landform, but this was the best I could do.
The hill slopes off gently to the west. I took this picture looking east and you can almost see that there is a much steeper drop at the eastern edge of the hill.
![stabilized sand dune](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgtRVYfhHDSWlRlDg7tYEzt0pbyssVFVFsY23IlN7CVktFRPMJAzyEb3Wklc1LtiGXs3uJw1ZFTWhCC1pKcvl4lmnrqicvjM0WCofi7ZEE3LWDNBegglNgov8wQDWAJNGie-57_4OPzStY/s280/NCT-SandDunes01+-+Copy.jpg)
Here's how that works. This is a portion of the interpretive panel. The wind moved the dunes eastward and then the sand dropped off the leading edge. They are now covered with forest vegetation. But beneath a very thin layer of soil, there is pure beach sand.
![stabilized sand dune interpretive panel](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjj45Uz1VVIoJSOboMVeY9Cky_426P3KzdgUY7RrxxXHYSI9mXcs7Jw3HL5i0POjc_AhhpOzIJMHk8lL56bj7f4hJHiMQHfm05xKLuKYGeIWUJVnG-p6Hr2KJ_PlE9Upm0NuDHrprJ8ecM/s280/NCT-SandDunes02+-+Copy.jpg)
That sandy soil makes several kinds of blueberries really happy. The early ones are gone. Those were probably Vaccinium pennsylvanicum; the plants are under a foot tall. But the slightly taller ones that grow all in the same places were fruiting. Some people call these huckleberries, but an awful lot of blue-fruited things get called huckleberries. At any rate, I think these are Vaccinium vacillans (now V. pallidum). Whatever you want to call them, they taste good!
![wild blueberry](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-JzABiUzyN8GHij-ns1SGNHtMUSMr2F6c8i9oh_pNokKeqqBLo48HdGuv4a-9nm1DFyrFTzvKbevDTKjOKtsn7R3aA7TBiyXzv3g2K2uf0NSq28fKWL6lreEqo7ZepKIIFfqC29JR0Z4/s280/blueberries01+-+Copy.jpg)
Here's a plant I usually show you when it has little red berries instead of little white flowers. These are wintergreen flowers.
![wintergreen flowers](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEigDuwvN6fYWfC4UJgVDKAtYSrx0nSChIre6RiywZsOFdTLB7C1Cmlj9BXtk0jI6x-QUHXiy2jgYDFxKf6WhZPMhh_juSNZhVqMeApnzQ2QcQsdVGvFGrKpATUEBhqTC59KE3AI3HEGX54/s280/wintergreen01.jpg)
What was red this week is the red russula mushrooms. Russula emetica, which is a descriptive name. Don't eat these unless you are a snail or a slug! But they sure are pretty hiding under the wintergreen leaves.
![red russula mushroom](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWX80JRZGdqHF5c-T_-gabsD9n-fceebGqOrcLjJ0khxHE-V7jx9Ndc1Ks4wlqadu9P4fIaZMgeTY9U8FgeOCHW1rzOfBmZqvFO64EbNTtL0JMRuBBeVvAVgZkMHOAf7naNlVYMiNF-nI/s280/russula01.jpg)
I also liked this fungus. Probably just an artist's conch. I didn't want to disturb things to turn it over. I think the bands on the edge are classy.
![shelf fungus](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzybaj-0PF_QHBT8QBBYrwDuuGbl0SBc4VtYJy7XmSHrozBSP5dxFISqAeezkKEhzo4FKEqB74rkPNVhjyvVIM69nSFFadXEKjGE2h73ShTl78j1VNo-_bTZGcnXAlW0Y-ImaXocykRj0/s280/fungus01.jpg)
In other news: I didn't manage to do much today, sadly. I did write a chapter in DMS Mistletoe, so the day was not a complete waste. And I watched the original Pink Panther (1964) so you don't have to. Although I remembered it as being very funny, it's really slow by today's standards.
![]() | See Dead Horse Marsh Walk |
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The Relict Sand Dunes are rather fascinating and I've never seen a mushroom like that red one before. Even though I sometimes feel like a slug I'll refrain from eating any of those mushrooms
ReplyDeleteAnn- I was a quintessential slug yesterday! But I also am not eating those 'shrooms!
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