I had gone down to the river trail to look for pink fawn lilies and trilliums. It had rained every day throughout April, a little or a lot, and sometimes with snow, until the last couple of days; now with the sun shining down, the trail would be dry and the flowers should be in full bloom.
Erythronium revolutum |
The fawn lilies were growing thickly all along the sides of the trail. But most of them were small, with the petals curled tightly upwards, slightly shrivelled; only a few had the usual spread petals.
50-odd lilies in a small patch. |
These two looked fine. |
Trilliums, (trillia?) there were plenty, white and pink and almost purple.
Trilliums start out white and turn pink, then purplish with age. Here, the stamens are loaded with pollen. |
A younger trillium; no pollen yet. |
And this one's a palest pink, just starting to release the pollen. |
I was wondering why the fawn lilies were so curled up. Could it be that the sudden change in the weather, from cold (snow only 2 weeks ago) to hot (for here) had stressed them? Or was I just too late; should have come a week ago, rain or no rain.
I drove back to town and stopped beside a shady wetland; here it would be cooler, and damper. Maybe the lilies would be happier here. But no; they were plentiful, as always, but even more tightly curved upward.
I did find two very late skunk cabbages in the mud. The flower calendar is out of whack.
Brand new baby skunk cabbage, still closed. |
~~~~~~~~~~~
Fui a caminar al lado del rio, esperando encontrar los Erythronium revolutum, los fawn lily (lirio de los venaditos) y los trilios. Había llovido todos los dias, poco o mucho, y a veces con nieve, durante todo el mes de abril menos los últimos dos, pero ahora el sol habría secado el sendero. Y las flores estarían en toda su gloria.
Fotos:
- Un lirio.
- Había muchos, pero casi todos eran chicos, y tenían los pétalos enrollados, encogidos. Solamente unos pocos traían los pétalos extendidos como los solía encontrar,
- Estos dos están bien.
- Un trilio de color violeta. Nuevecitos, son blancos, pero mientras envejecen, se ponen color de rosa, y hasta morados. Este lleva mucho polen.
- Un trilio casi blanco. Las anteras todavía no llegan a producir polen.
- Y otro blanco (con un dejo de color de rosa). Empieza a tener polen.
Me preguntaba porque sería que los lirios de venadito estaban tan enroscados. ¿Sería el estrés causado por el cambio abrupto del clima, de nieve hace quince dias a calor ahora? O puede ser que llegué tarde; debería haber venido en abril, llueva o no.
Se me ocurrió ir a buscar otros en un pantano bajo sombra; el clima sería menos cambiadizo alli; tal vez los lirios estarían más contentos. Pero no; estaban creciendo por dondequiera, pero todos encogidos.
Pero encontré dos coles de pantano, un poco retrasados; el calendario floral está loco.
Foto # 7: una col juvenil; todavía no se ha abierto la espata para mostrar el espádice adentro.
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