

As of Friday morning — rhododendrons, azaleas, violets. Things are blooming so fast I don’t even have time to look up the Latin names. So interesting that the rhododendron bloom is pink before it opens up to be white and yelow. What’s the adaptationist story there? Unfortunately, our rhodos have all fallen to some sort of fungus. These are a wan attempt to regrow but half the bush is already brown and withered.
And (boo hiss) the garlic mustard is attempting to take over. Time to break out the salad recipes.
On the ECOLOG-L list the other day, Andrew Richardson posted a call for people/organizations with webcams to consider joining their monitoring network:
We are conducting a “near” remote sensing project to monitor vegetation
phenology using webcam images. We have established a network of about a
dozen sites in the northeastern US and adjacent Canada, and we are
archiving daily images from these cameras (for a map of sites, and some
sample images, see http://www.forest.sr.unh.edu/richardson/#Towercam).
By separating camera images into red, green and blue color channels, we
are able to extract seasonal signals of spring green-up as well as autumn
coloration and senescence (see my 2007 paper in Oecologia for details).
How cool to be able to automate this data gathering process.
In an email exchange he also encourages individual contributions:
If phenology is of interest to you, I’d urge you to consider contributing
to the Northeast Regional Phenology Network (NE-RPN) which is part of the National Phenology Network.
Jargon aside, phenology has to do with the timing of life events, such as flowering, setting seed, nesting, etc.
I’m going to take a look, though my own gathering of data is likely too slipshod for their needs. When I get a chance I’ll try to evaluate what they have and post results here. In the meantime, check it out yourself.
Our bleeding hearts began blooming recently. I noticed them on Tuesday, but my husband reports that he saw a neighbor’s in bloom on Saturday.
In sad news, I must report that Antoinette the Ant Lion is definitely no longer among the living. Upon the recommendation of Akito Kawahara, I went to separate the two lions. Apparently they don’t actually specialize in ants, but will attempt to kill anything that falls into their pit. There were two nice pits in the bowl, but I guess that both were made by our as yet unnamed acquisition from Texas. Antoinette was motionless when I dug her out of the sand, but that’s not unusual. However, she is still motionless atop the sand in the new jar two days later. So, we cannot say exactly when she expired, or why. She will be missed.

After a couple of days of heavy rains, most of the crabapple petals have been brought to the ground in a vivid pink carpet.
Meanwhile, our dogwoods started to bloom yesterday. They aren’t too photogenic yet, and because of the rain won’t mesh as nicely with the crabapple.
How do people find the time to write voluminous blog posts? It is all I can do to jot down sketchy notes.
1) The bunnies in our parsley planter have disappeared, we presume they hopped away and were not just eaten by the crows (one of which was lurking yesterday while mama rabbit visited and a suspected daddy rabbit was trying to entice her away to start the next clutch — or whatever those furry things create when they reproduce (says the ornithologist))
2) Today the following started blooming near our house: a big cherry, the grape hyacinths, and the crabapple in the circle.
As usual, blooms elsewhere are way ahead of our yard, which appears to be shady and have poor soil.
The pears along I-95 have been blooming for at least two weeks.
Forsythia in our area has been blooming for at least a week, probably more.
Tulips were in full bloom outside the Department of Justice in DC when I took this photo March 27th.
And our daffodils just started to bloom yesterday.