Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Climbing a Holly Tree - from Deb Lux


Debbie Lux sent two photos of the Historic Holly. Of the one looking up, she wrote, "Thought it would be fun to imagine climbing a holly tree."



Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Friday, March 25, 2011

Tagged Trees in the Barton Arboretum

Dave sent me a spreadsheet of the tagged trees in the arboretum. This database not only has the location, the common and latin names, but also a column for a photo url -- which lo and behold is a live link!! Cool. For the first item I typed in the url http://mlra.org and automatically it became a live link.


Thursday, March 24, 2011

Native Plants in Burlington County

This is the homepage of the NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY OF NJ They have photo galleries of flowering plants by season, and "To submit your best photos to the Photo Gallery, send JPEG files via e-mail along with the scientific and common names and the location of the photo to webmaster@npsnj.org."

They also have spreadsheets of native plants, by county, as xls files. However, through the magic of google docs, I have made the Burlington County spreadsheet available to anyone who has THIS LINK. Scroll down and you'll see that I've red-bolded some of the names on the list. (just a few - will finish the job later) Red-bolded plants are those that are on Rudy Salati's DATABASE OF WILDFLOWERS at Medford Leas. As we take photos of wildflowers, I'll be replacing outsourced photos on the wildflowers website with out own - and in addition, if we have great photos that are on the Burlington County spreadsheet we could send them to NPSNJ.

Herb and Deb, I'd like to also mark in bold-red fonts the trees and shrubs that we have on campus. I can give you editing permission on the spreadsheet (my preference) or you can provide me with a list and I'll do the editing to highlight names of the native plants we have here.

The galleries at the NPSNJ site are flowers in bloom by season, fall foliage, pinelands, and Isle Royale. Most of the photos are from from H. Ling or M.Ling. Pinelands by M. Hogan.

Maggie (who accidentally signed in as Arboretum Blog Team)

Monday, March 21, 2011

Beavers at work in Sharps Run

This morning's email from Herb Minkus:
"The beavers have been busy(once again),constructing dams on Sharp's Run. They are working on one under the bridge by route 70 and also behind the arts and social wing parking lot. I hope we can tolerate the damage and appreciate this industrious animal."
evidence of beavers
closeup of another tree
click the images to make them big - I think those are dams in the background of both pictures, but I'm not sure (sez Maggie). 

Sharp's run is the creek that one crosses entering Medford Leas from Route 70.  Go to the map in the previous post,  click on it to make it big, then click again to make it bigger.  Sharp's Run is labeled.  You can locate it between the RR embankment and the guest cottage.   Herb, can the dams be seen from yellow trail #13? 

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Wildflower Walk March 19

Click the pics to see them big

Jane Bourquin and I went on a wildflower walk today. Jane will be leading walks the 2nd and 4th Saturdays of the month, and they'll be announced in the monthly calendar (this one wasn't).
First we went over Bridge#5 on Yellow Trail #12 to The Island (4 o'clock on the red trail)

Then we went north along the red trail and walked a short distance on Yellow Trail #11.


Along Pebble Run we saw a few Lesser Celendine in bloom. And many more (sort of a ground cover) that will soon be in bloom. Lesser Celendine was a favorite of Rudy Salati and of William Wordsworth -- HERE'S THE POEM BY WORDSWORTH.

However Jane dislikes it because it takes over and crowds out other plants.

This is a photo from Delaware Wildflowers site where the Lesser Celandine are crowding out Virginia Bluebells.  The captions says "this plant covers acres of the Brandywine River floodplain."

We took another photo looking up Pebble Run toward Bridge #3 - I liked the Beech with the white leaves leftover from last year. Then we walked along the run up to the red trail and back to the car where we started -- near Bridge #5.
Click the map to see it big - then click again to expand it so you can read it. 

Court 12 - Now It's Spring.

Side by side - Court 12 in February and again in March.
Click pics to see them large
Photos by Jim Muir

Friday, March 18, 2011

Arboretum committee & signs of spring

Click on the images to see them full size.  Kitty Katzell sent these five images with this message:
"This morning, I went to the quarterly meeting of the Estaugh Arboretum Committee. Pictures 1 and 2 show people at the meeting in the Nature Center. I walked home from the Nature Center via Medford Leas Way and Medford Leas Way Extention, past Parking Lot B, and into Court 4 from Parking Lot A. Picture 3 shows the only daffodils I saw in flower along that entire route. After I turned onto Medford Leas Way Extension, I walked around the circle in the Memorial Garden, where I took Picture 5.  The leaves around it resemble the leaves on a rhododendron, but the flowers were unfamiliar, and very low to the ground.  [Deb Lux's comment says they are HELLEBORUS; she planted them about 6 years ago.]  At Parking Lot B, a Magnolia tree's buds were bursting, and that's Picture 4."
#1
#2
#4
#3
#5 - Please leave a comment if you can ID this plant.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

The morning after the mowing


The morning after the mowing two geese visited. It was only a light rain during the night, but because of the grass in the gully the drainage had been slowed.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Court 5 on Ash Wednesday

Kitty Katzell took start-of-spring photos on March 9, Ash Wednesday. On the left are some catkins on her black pussy willow bush; on the right is a closeup of buds on the lilac bush at the intersection of Courts 5 and 6.

A month ago - Snow in Court 12


Click on the image to see it full size

Jim Muir took this photo in Court 12 after one of the February, 2011 snowstorms.    There are more  snow photos at both the MEDFORD BLIZZARD SLIDESHOW - (2010 photos by Jim and Jeanette Muir and Margery Rubin)  and the LUMBERTON BLIZZARD PAGE (2010 photos by Ulf Gummeson)

Saturday, March 5, 2011

The Wall of Ivy

These photos don't look like much and that's the point.  Debbie Lux doesn't think much of that bed of ivy along the wall.  So watch for the coming transformation.   
Click on any pic to see it big
When enlarged the photo above shows a little bit of the sloping triangular bed at the top of the wall.   As of today,  that bed is bare.   Deb cleared it last fall and planted hundreds of bulbs.  This new  bed of bulbs can best be viewed from the hallway outside the Activities room or from the corner window of the coffee shop.

After seeing her photos here, Deb emailed,
"Hi Maggie, It's really going to be a popular site.  I'm very interested in helping with pictures.  I would like for you to add, Dwayne Mathews was a very big help in clearing up this area.  He also power washed the walls and side walk after we added compost.  Ivy could return, so I'll plant annuals until I'm sure it's gone for good.  Thanks so much for a wonderful blog.  I'll check it often.  Debbie"  

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Friday, March 4, 2011

Hawk in the Lumberton Meadow

Dave sent this photo explaining, "Here's an interesting photo from Lumberton. It's some sort of Hawk I saw in the meadow in late January, 2011."

[March 10 note: see Miriam's comment explaining why she thinks it's a Northern Harrier. ]

Sitting like Snoopy 
This photo gives an opportunity to explain a couple of things about the blog.  One - there's a place for comments below each post  -  to let us know what kind of a hawk this is,  click below on the word "comments" and a dialogue box will open where you can write.  Two - if you click on any photo in the blog  it goes to a large version.  So click the pic and the hawk will fill your screen.  Use the back arrow to return to this page.

Dave Bartram LOVES this idea

Dave replied enthusiastically to email asking him to be a team photographer.  He wrote, "I just LOVE this idea. I've been working on the GPS tree mapping project with Russell and Herb Minkus. I've also been working with Gordon Clift to map the trails at Medford Leas. One of the things we envisioned was being able to highlight particular things and places, such as the Fringe tree and then share it with residents via the Internet. One of the things that I can add to this blog, as well as what you asked for is geographic information - either a map or a Google Earth overlay. So when you run an entry on the Fringe Tree, I could have a map or Google Earth view of exactly where it is. This would work better for things on the trail where it's not so obvious where it is. For example some special flower or tree or something. Anyway, I am very anxious to participate. ... This is a great, great idea. Dave. 

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Two favorites from mlra.org

One day, in the summer of 2009, Medford Leas and area was blessed with a 4+ inch rainfall.  Steve Denham writes, "Once I saw Kriebel Way, the beckoning of adventure did me in and I got my camera and away I waded. Bye the bye, the chirping, croaking, yelling, whatever, of the frogs was deafening."    Steve has produced an OUTSTANDING PHOTO ESSAY  with vivid descriptions and lovely photographs. 



On a rainy day in 2005,  Maggie Heineman took photos of the meadow.  This photograph with a robin at the edge of the water and the reflection of a Lumberton Campus home was just  pure luck.   To see large versions of all the photos in the album "Lumberton Meadow in the Rain,"  just FOLLOW THIS LINK.


If you click the pics you'll see them full size.  Use the back button to return to this page.

Lumberton Meadow in the rain

Happy Birthday Medford Leas

Its an auspicious day to start this blog.  It's the 40th Anniversary of Medford Leas.     


Maggie Heineman and Kitty Katzell are the first two members of the Arboretum Blog Team and the editors of the blog. We have no experience with blogs.  But we'll figure it out and start from here.