Willow Catkins

People seem to notice the willow catkins when they are small and fuzzy, but this stage is essentially just a bud of a flower that has not yet opened. They are not quite what one thinks of when thinking of flowers; they don’t have petals, and they don’t look like they are trying to attract insects. But they are the part of the plant that produces its pollen and its seeds. Unlike many flowers, though, the pollen is produced on separate catkins on separate plants from the seed producing catkins.

The small fuzzy buds are generally more appreciated for their appearance, and they are pretty, but I actually find their later stages to be even more fun to photograph. There is a surprising amount of variety in the opened willow catkins (even of the same species of willow), and I took more than fifty photos of the opened catkins this spring; most of them seem distinctly different from each other. The catkins are very attractive to pollinators since there’s not a lot flowering yet, and the insects give even more variety to the pictures of the opened catkins.

It occurred to me, while taking pictures of insects on the seed producing (female) catkins, that if willows were wind pollinated, as most plants with catkins are, then the pollinators should have no interest in the female catkins. Since many pollinators eat pollen, as well as nectar, it wouldn’t have been surprising to see them on the male catkins only, but they were just as excited about the female catkins. It seemed that willows must actually be insect pollinated, and a little bit of research confirmed my guess.

The fuzzy unopened stage of the willow catkins
Unopened pussy willow catkins
Close up of the pussy willow catkins
Pussy willow catkins just starting to open
Another type of willow just starting to flower
Honey bee collecting pollen from willow catkins
Willow with female catkins
Fully opened pussy willow catkins
Flowering willow with female catkins
More fully opened willow catkins
Close up of willow catkin with pollen
Willow catkin opening at the tip
Close up of willow catkin with pollen
Flower fly on female catkin
Willow catkin just starting to open
Willow catkin mostly opened
Willow catkin mostly open (close up of pollen)
Pussy willow catkin just opening
Ant on willow catkin
Pussy willow catkin just starting to open

Miniature Wildflowers

When we first moved here, there were two tiny flowers that would bloom when the weather was beginning to warm, but before it really looked like spring. They were draba verna, and bittercress. It occurs to me now, that one of these is a common name, and the other is a scientific name, which strikes me as slightly inconsistent. It is how I usually refer to the plants, though. The common name of draba verna (whitlow grass) seems harder to remember and certainly seems less descriptive of a tiny, early flowering member of the mustard family. Bittercress is also a member of the mustard family, and seems very much like a miniature version of a garden cress that I grew in the hoophouse the winter before last. Both were extremely cold hardy, both tasted about the same to me, and they looked very similar except for size; the garden cress was much larger. The flowers look a little different too. The garden cress also doesn’t shoot its seeds at you if you brush up against a ripe seedpod. Before I identified the bittercress, I called it the ‘seedshooting mustard’.

Draba verna flowers
Draba verna flowers are only slightly larger than a poppy seed
Bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta) flowers
Bittercress flowers
Draba verna plant
Draba plant – this one is actually fairly large; sometimes the cluster of leaves at the base isn’t much larger than the clump of flowers
Bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta) plant
Bittercress plant
Speedwell flower
Speedwell flower; another extremely small wildflower that usually flowers a bit later than the bittercress and draba plants. This plant, though, is flowering a bit early.

Miscellaneous Macro Photos

I recently figured out how to use the ‘manual focus’ mode on my camera, which has been handy for making good use of my macro lens. Here are some of the little things I found to photograph.

Thorns on a wild rose
Ice patterns at the edge of the creek
Rue seeds
Moss on a log
Sedum – this variety was planted last fall and has emerged much quicker than the variety we had before. We got this one from a plant swap so I don’t know what it is exactly.
Bittercress is one of the first flowering plants in the spring, though it usually is unnoticed due to its minuscule size.
Sedum
Dead aster flowers – even though they are from last fall and have lost their petals, they still look like flowers. The part that looks like petals is the remains of the bud.
Milkweed seeds
Sedum
Mushrooms growing out of a dead giant ragweed stalk

Ice Storms

We had a couple of freezing rain storms over the past week, which provided me with a rich source of photography opportunities. Here are a few of my favorites.

Hazelnut catkins
Autumn olive bush
A plant that I have not identified yet.
The path to the field, lined with icy autumn olive bushes.
Wild rose hip
Icy autumn olive branches against the sky.
Norway spruce needles.
Water horehound
White cedar leaf encased in ice.
Wild rose hips
Water horehound
Pine needles
Ice coated grass
Maple leaf bud poking out of the ice.
Wild rose hips
A bit of mesh that was protecting a young planting.
Ice coated currant leaf.
Ice on the back of our van. Just about all the ice was covered in patterns like this, but the smooth black surface made them stand out even more.
Young maple tree

A Walk on a Winter Day

Freezing drizzle isn’t among many people’s preferred weather, nor is it particularly spectacular looking when glanced at casually. It takes a closer look than most would give it to appreciate its effects.

Ice covered teasel
Ice covered goldenrod seedheads and wild rose hips
I think this is a juniper. The leaves of young and older trees can be different, which might explain why I haven’t seen any larger trees with needles like this…
Another teasel
Moss on a fallen log
White cedar leaves
The same young tree as above, which I believe is a juniper
Grass seedhead
Grass seedhead

Patches of Color

As the leaves turn to their autumn colors, it is quite satisfying to see many of the things we planted for some particular function (such as producing edible fruit or nuts) just sitting there looking very pretty. When we first got here, the woods looked magnificent in the fall, but now there are also bright patches of color all around the yard.

Hazelnut bush with catkins and a nut in its husk.
A couple of currant bushes, and some oregano growing around the currant in the foreground.
Aronia bush. Aronias produce nutritious berries, which are sometimes called chokeberries.
Peach tree. This picture is from a couple years ago; it hasn’t reached its peak fall colors yet this year. I suspect it will be even prettier this year though, because the tree is more filled out and the leaves look less chewed on.