One more…

One more…

I got home from California late last night. And I think I must have left a few molecules behind. I have been good for nothing all day today. My suitcase it still taking up space by the front door, unpacked. It doesn’t help that I was welcomed home with three inches of fresh snow. Which hurt all the more because northern California has had a wet spring, and everything was so green it looked like Ireland.  So, I am phoning it in today…one more classic STILL image from a couple years ago.  On the other hand, I did bring home a bag of left over NorCal foraged bits from my workshop I taught while I was out there. I’ll dump it out tomorrow, and hopefully find some fun new-to-me specimens to photograph.

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signs of spring (6 of 6)

signs of spring (6 of 6)

Some years, depending on the rains, all the leaves seem to burst their buds in the same week. Other times, it seems spread over several weeks. Waxy and transparent, baby leaves are so different from their mature form, that it is worth taking a moment to drink them it.

early spring linden leaves

 

  • Susan L. says:

    So lovely, it almost makes me feel like crying. In a good way!

    reply

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signs of spring (5 of 6)

signs of spring (5 of 6)

Delicate bloodroot is the very first of the woodland spring ephemerals to bloom every year. Sometime hepatica gets there first. Together they announce the season of spring ephemerals: The short window of spring wildflowers that take advantage of the leafless trees for the sunshine they need to bloom. It’s a fleeting season, and all the more precious for it.

bloodroot: spring woodland flower (Sanguinaria canadensis)

  • Old Lady Gardener says:

    So lovely! One of my faves. Your photo perfectly illustrates why this spring charmer is called “bloodroot”

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signs of spring (4 of 6)

signs of spring (4 of 6)

New-growth green is best expressed in comparison to the deeper greens of summer. Can you tell I am Rothko fan?

new and old balsam needles

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signs of spring (3 of 6)

signs of spring (3 of 6)

Happy vernal equinox everyone!  The equinox is early this year–more often it falls on the 20th or 21st. On this day we get 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness. I love the symmetry.

violets, elm samaras, spruce tips

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