Thursday, September 24, 2015

Lobelia

I found out what these are. They are both from the same family. 


This is  Cardinal Flower, Scarlet Lobelia/ Lobelia Cardinalis. You can see why; it's very red. 





This is Great Blue Lobelia, or Blue Cardinal Flower
Lobelia Siphilitica 



Here is where I found the info about them, a useful site for identifying flowers in Wisconsin: 

They are both such striking and beautiful flowers; I don't recall seeing them before. Both were near water, although the Scarlet was found right at the edge of a lake. 

Monday, September 21, 2015

Indian Pipe

I discovered what those "flowers" with white stems and leaves are. Indian Pipes, or monotropa uniflora.

http://www.ct-botanical-society.org/Plants/view/398
http://www.missouriplants.com/Whitealt/Monotropa_uniflora_page.html



September 17, 2015



Walk on the Black Walnut nature trail 

Some white mushrooms?

Goldenrod-like flower







what are these??? They remind me of smokestacks.







By the river


What kinds of flowers and plants are these?




September 13, 2015


Brown-eyed Susans in a prairie zone




Snake in the wall of the shelter on top of the bluff




baby bats in the shelter as well. One bat started licking the other bat with its tiny pink tongue--so cute!



Turkey vulture flying above the bluff





Lavender asters (?)


I caught a leopard frog and let it go later

September 12, 2015




I found these red flowers by the lake. I'm not sure what they are called. 
Trempealeau, WI





September 11 2015



September 11, 2015
Perrot Park









Monday, July 9, 2012


Today I went down to the marsh with the dog. As I rounded the corner to walk on the gravel path, the smell of dead fish hit me. In the shallow water, a pile of dead fish floated. I tried to keep going, but the stench was too strong, and I gagged. I couldn't help but turn back, and wondered how the man who had walked in ahead of me could stand it. I was told that the reason the fish are dying is because of a combination of the heat and lack of rain. My dad, who has lived here half his life, said that he'd never seen anything like it. This area has had heat and no rain before, so there must be another factor. I walked out the door just now, and dust blew in my face from a passing car, since a construction crew has been tearing up our street. Hell, I thought. Dust and smell of rotting fish, and heat--this must be what hell is like. It hasn't been so hot the past few days, though we had 100 + degrees last week. The heat index was over 112. Up north, some people got rain, and there have been power outages because of storms out east, but here, there is no rain in the forecast. The leaves are falling off the trees, and the crunch of dry leaves reminds you of fall, not summer. I hope we don't have an actual drought. With the fish already dying, what other effects will turn up? I heard of lakes drying out west, and I don't want that to happen to our marsh, though that is a long time in coming, thankfully. We just need rain, soon.