On St. Patrick’s Day, we had a freeze, and the handyman called and said it was too cold to work. Three days later, the equinox, we were doing the delayed chore and sweating.
We’re in that part of spring that makes us think that it arrives all at once. The Wise Woman and I went for a hike in the woods at Tucker for a closer look.
The beeches are shedding last year’s leaves, while just about everything else is putting on new growth. Caterpillars and other insects are everywhere, feasting on the tender plants and providing feasts for birds.
The pollen is so heavy in the pines that the male cones look like yellow Christmas tree ornaments.
The buckeyes, in genus Aesculus, have complicated flowers the color of peaches. Violets are everywhere. But most of the blooms were from species that had escaped from the garden. I saw azalea blossoms and hoped they were wild. But they were in the Tsutsusi section of genus Rhododendron, evergreen azaleas from China and Japan.
Then there are the puzzles, the things I don’t know what to call. Leatherleaf mahonia, Berberis bealei, is putting out green fruit, while thorny olive, Elaeagnus pungens, putting out red. Leatherleaf mahonia has been here so long it’s considered naturalized, while thorny olive is still considered invasive. Both came from China.
A pileated woodpecker worked over a dead tree for insects. They’re enormous compared to the other woodpeckers. This one was oblivious to us, and we spent 10 minutes just watching.
Crows are usually wary, but we ran into one who perched on a limb 25 feet away and just watched. The Wise Woman feeds crows around our homestead. They like peanuts, and I wondered whether a walker in Tucker keeps peanuts in a pocket.