Azaleas Are Blooming

The azaleas are blooming a bit early in Maryland this year but they aren’t past their peak…so you still have time to enjoy this aspect of spring if you live in the area. Brookside Gardens and the WSSC Brighton Dam Azalea Garden are my favorite places for azaleas. if you can't get there to see them for yourself --- enjoy the pictures below.

brookside 2012 azalea.jpg

This first series of pictures is from Brookside Gardens on 4/7. There were still lots of bushes with buds still to open. I expect that there will be lots to see for at least another week. 

The pictures below are from 4/14 at the Brighton Dam Azalea Garden. They have even more bushes that are yet to reach peak bloom. The ones closest to the road are the ones most fully opened at present.

Also at Brighton Dam - there is a lovely dogwood on the path going left from the entrance. I’ll share dogwood pictures later this week.

Orchids

Orchids come is so many shapes and sizes. Aside from being interesting as flowers - they tend to remind me of other things.

My favorites are the slippers. See the pink one in the upper right - with the rounded toe and plush padding with long ties for around the ankle. And what about the green on the upper left with a more pointed toe. The lower left has the most pointed toe. And finally the white ones on the lower right - bridal slippers.

Next come the ruffles and frills…wrapped into shapes that can be trumpets or cornucopias. The edges of these petals remind us of party dresses and café curtains. It’s the edges that make the flower.

The last grouping reminds me of aliens…with full skirts and wild headdresses and appendages. Many of them grow in groups so the figures appear as if lined up for a parade (see the white ones in the middle left below).

The pictures were taken over the past six months at Brookside Gardens in Maryland and Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania. Enjoy!

Gleanings of the Week Ending April 14, 2012

The items below were ‘the cream’ of the articles I read this past week:

The Amazing Trajectories of Life-Bearing Meteorites from Earth - What happens to the ejection of rocks/water from big impacts?

Ocean surface currents animation from NASA - using data from June 2005 to December 2007

A Apple Pie by Kate Greenaway - online version from the popular Victorian illustrator

What is a Vegan Diet? - Pointers to good references. “Even if you have no intention of going vegan yourself, anyone can benefit from enjoying a completely plant-based meal from time to time.”

Baking with Whole Grain Flours - A goof reference for if you’re in the mood to experiment with some of those exotic flours that are finding their way into your grocery store - amaranth…buckwheat…quinoa

Smart grids (info graphic) - lots of technology being integrated…coming soon (click on the graphic to enlarge it)

Top 25 US Cities for Energy Star Buildings - Los Angeles and Washington DC are the top 2; Dallas-Fort Worth is 8th

Obesity Accounts for 21% of US Health Care Costs - One more reason to achieve/sustain a normal weight

Birding in the National Parks - Spring time and bird migration

Paleo-Birding: What Birds Looked Like 125 Million Years Ago - Photos of bird fossils with commentary

Know where your food comes from - An interactive map…type the name of a food and see where it comes from in the US

Prompts for Developing a Life History - Part I

Today I am starting a series of 7 posts that will include questions that can be used as prompts to develop a life history. They could be used as:

 

  • A personal assessment of your own life (i.e. your own life history)
  • A structure for initial conversations with someone else to get to know them (i.e. you each answer the question…and discuss further if needed)
  • Interview questions for someone you know fairly well but have gaps in what your know about them (i.e. like a grandparent or parent or a grandchild that has always lived far away

 

You don’t have to use every question and you may think of others you would like to ask as you go through these. Writing or recording the answers will result in a rudimentary life history. Consider embedding pictures of items the supplement the narrative. Eventually you'll want to get it into a form you can easily edit - like a word processor - but you can start out with a tablet/blank book and pen. Sometimes ordinary things can have a lot of meaning (for example - a raggedy baby's blanket that is part of a 'first memory').

~~~~~

The first series of questions is about your childhood through the completion of your education.

  1. Where and when were you born?
  2. What was your favorite activity as a child?
  3. What is your earliest memory?
  4. Who taught you your numbers and letters?
  5. How much did you know before you went to school? Could you write your name, etc.?
  6. What was your favorite subject in elementary school?
  7. Who helped you with your homework in elementary school?
  8. What was your elementary school classroom/school building like?
  9. What was the most memorable event of elementary school?
  10. Did you play a musical instrument? Do you still play?
  11. What kind of ‘trouble’ did you have as a teenager?
  12. What do you remember the most about high school?
  13. What was your hardest class in high school?
  14. Did you participate in sports in high school? Do you still play?
  15. What extracurricular activities did you participate in during high school and college?
  16. Did you have a job while you were in high school? If so - what did you do?
  17. Do you have friends from high school you still keep in touch with?
  18. Did you go to college?
    • Where?
    • What do you remember the most about college?
    • What was the hardest class for you  in college?
    • How was your college paid for?
    • What did you major in?
    • Did you have a job while you were in college? If so - what did you do?
    • In retrospect, to what extent did you use your college education in your work?
    • Do you have friends from college you still keep in touch with?
  19. What was your first car?
  20. Did you ever travel by yourself prior to college? If so - where, how, when?
  21. Did your family take vacations? If so - where did you go/what did you do?

Later parts to this series will focus on favorites, habits, family and friends, the present and the future. The segments will come out about once a week.


Favorite Smells of Spring

What are you favorite smells of spring?

The smells I most strongly associate with spring are those that are outdoors.

Hyacinths. The scent of hyacinths is synonymous with early spring for me. The bulbs come up early and sometimes weather a last snow - as they did this year. A few times I’ve bought a pot of them to have indoors but most of the time I am content with smelling them on the March breeze.

 

 

 

Violets. We have wild violets that grow in the shade under our high deck. They bloom in April. You have to be in the right place to spell their scent on the air. They’re small and close to the ground but prolific bloomers so often I smell them before seeing them.

Lemon Balm. I planted a small pot of lemon balm years ago and now it takes over whole beds and grows out into the yard. It comes out very early and imparts its lemony smell whenever it is disturbed.

What are your favorite smells of spring?

Brookside Gardens Turtles

Back in mid-March we had some very warm days here in Maryland and the turtles were very active in the pond at Brookside Gardens. Some of them still had a layer of mud on their shell from being buried in the silt. One hauled herself out onto the rocky shore and surveyed the scene. Have you ever noticed that turtles have no chin and that their eyes protrude? It gives them an ancient look.

This turtle was one of the larger turtles in the pond and had an entourage following her as she swam near the surface. Was she climbing onto the shore for a few moments of solitude?

It was not to be. Soon there was another turtle headed for the same rock.

With great effort, he pulled himself out of the water.

Are they posing for a picture or sending us a message that they want us gone?

Do they look more annoyed here in profile - as they turned to get back in the water?

They slipped back into the water and, presumably, continued their spring-time games.

Recipe of the Week: Sweet Potato Cake Muffins

This recipe is derived originally from a carrot cake recipe. I used grated sweet potato in place of the carrots. I also substituted honey and apple juice concentrate for the sugar. This recipe does well with whole wheat flour because is it very moist and the other ingredients are hearty flavors that are not overwhelmed by the whole wheat.

1 1/3 cups olive oil

1 cup honey

1 cup apple juice concentrate

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

3 eggs

2 cups whole wheat flour

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon (rounded)

2 teaspoons baking soda

1 1/2 teaspoons salt

3 cups grated sweet potatoes (less than 1 pound)

1 cup raisins

1 small can crushed pineapple, drained

 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Spray muffin tins (makes 24+ muffins).

In large bowl, combine together the flour, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt. Add the grated sweet potato and raisins; stir to coat them with the flour mixture.

 

 


Whisk olive oil, honey, apple juice concentrate, vanilla, and eggs together in a small bowl or large measuring cup. Add to the flour mixture and stir until combined.

Scoop the batter into muffin cups until each is 3/4 full. Bake until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool on a rack. I made regular muffins, muffin tops, and a couple of mini-Bundt muffins.

Brookside in Early April

cam group.jpg

There was a Camellia Show at Brookside Gardens this past Saturday. I enjoyed walking through it and taking pictures. There are a number of aspects to the flowers that I was trying to capture: many yellow stamens, vein patterns in their petals, varying colors of the petals, and the slight variations of the petals themselves.

Many of the ferns had already unfurled with the earlier warmth this spring but there were still a few fiddleheads.

The tulips are also most their prime so I found myself looking at the color variations in their petals - like the purple and white below. And then there are other springtime flowers - Jack-in-the-Pulpits, wisteria, dogwood, azaleas and other bulbs. Spring has sprung!

History of Botanical Print Making - Online Examples

Botanical prints have been popular since the beginning of books. They were intended to be educational and often show dissections of flowers or seed pods. They are often beautiful works of art as well.

Many of these old books have been scanned and are accessible via the Internet. I’ve created a time ordered sequence below and pointed to where you can find the whole book of similar prints.

 

Published in 1484, Peter Schoeffer’s Herbarius latinus contains simple drawings like on the right. The drawings clearly could not be used by themselves to identify a plant. This book was created not that long after the printing press became more widely used (i.e. the Gutenberg Bible was made in the 1450s).

 

 

 

 

 

In 1487, Hamsen Schonsperger published Gart der Gesundheit. An example showing an Iris is on the left; the color is rather primitive.  The images are embedded with the text rather than being on separate pages.

 

 

 

Hieronymus Brunschwig’s Das Distilierbuoch came in 1521. It has some plain drawings and some colored. The plain drawings show more detail than earlier drawings although some parts seem stylized rather than reflecting of reality as shown in the grape vine representation on the right. This book also include manufacturing type diagrams...it is a 'how to' book.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1546, Kreüter Buch, darin Underscheid, Würckung und Namen der Kreüter so in Deutschen Landen wachsen by Hieronymus Bock was published. The strawberries are easily recognizable. The color is a little better than in the 1400s example.

 

 

 

 

 

Skipping ahead to 1788 when Joseph Gaertner published De frvctibvs et seminibvs plantarvm the attention to detail had increased even more. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1805, William Hooker published 2 volumes of The paradisus londinensis:or coloured figures of plants cultivated in the vicinity of the metropolis with color representations. While these volumes were focused on plants near London - the 1800s were a time of plant exploration around the globe and the botanical prints of the era made those discoveries more widely known with their realistic portrayals.

 

 

 

 

In 1818, William Jackson Hooker published 2 volumes of Musci exotici - with renditions of mosses. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The 2 volume Florae Columbiae by Hermann Karsten was published in 1869. 

 

 

 

 

Medizinal Pflanzen was published in 4 volumes in 1887. I picked the dandelion print for the example from this book (on the right). Note the way the illustrator sought to fit as much as possible about the plant onto a single page.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1904, Kunstformen der Natur was published by Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel. This book has a wide range of prints, not just botanical. The one of pitcher plant is shown at the left. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1907, Alfred  Cogniaux published the many volumes of Dictionnaire iconographique des orchidees. The prints are lovely and grouped by the classification of orchids at the time. My favorite orchids are the slipper-like ones.

 

This is just a small sample of what is available. The two main repositories that I’ve used are Botanicus and the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Both have many more volumes of botanical prints than I've shown here and I encourage you to browse through them. Both repositories have a similar online viewing design. The frame along the left side of the book browsing window generally shows which pages have an illustration (marked 'illustration' or 'plate' or 'tab', for example) so it is possible to skip to the pages that include prints.

Enjoy!

Gleanings of the Week Ending April 7, 2012

The items below were ‘the cream’ of the articles I read this past week:

Funny Food (365 fun, healthy, silly, creative breakfasts) - Take a look at this site if you need to spice up  a child’s (or your own) breakfast

Bioluminescence in the ocean - pictures and explanation from National Geographic

The Secret Life of Fish (TED video)

UK Emissions Dropped 7% in 2011 - due to reduced energy demand (warmer weather) and increased low-carbon electricity generation

5 states (US) getting over 10% of electricity from wind power - South Dakota, Iowa, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wyoming.  Wind generation has been growing by 36% each year since 2007. States that are getting between 5 and 10% from wind are Colorado, Kansas, Idaho, Oregon and Oklahoma. If Texas were a country, it would rank 6th in the world for total wind capacity.

Research on how Giant Gypsum Crystals form - some recent discoveries about the initial stages and how increasing our understanding could benefit industrial production of plaster and help keep pipes clear in desalination plants

Photo of the Day: Rufous Hummingbird

Lean Back - slide show from The Economist re media consumption

12-Mile-High Martian Dust Devil - dust devils form on Mars too (there are two animations accessible via the bottom of this page - http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ESP_026394_2160)

The role of mobile devices and social media in news consumption

Jefferson Memorial

When we went down to the see the cherry blossoms in Washington DC back on March 23rd, we walked through the Jefferson Memorial as well. I like the classical shape of the portico and columns…the round dome…the marble.

In the center - there is the larger-than-life statue of Jefferson. His words are etched into the walls. I found myself marveling at how relevant they still are.  This memorial is not only about remembering the man; it is about renewing our understanding of the foundation for our country that is still vibrant and strong.

Around to the side of the memorial, there is an entrance to go under the memorial where there is a museum and gift shops. Jefferson’s words are etched in the walls here too.

The memorial is visible from most of the walk around the tidal basin. The last picture is from the other side of the tidal basin - just past the Martin Luther King Memorial - framed by cherry blossoms.

There always seem to be a lot of people around the Jefferson Memorial. It is a calm spot amid the bustle of city traffic. Somehow it seems to be above the fray and it helps everyone who comes here to be that way too for a few moments.

Recipe of the Week: Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich

Had a peanut butter and jelly sandwich lately? I’m featuring it as the ‘recipe of the week’ because these sandwiches from childhood can still be a great main course for a quick lunch. Here are some ideas to create your ‘grown up’ version of this favorite sandwich:  

  1. First - Choose interesting bread. I like a whole wheat or multi-grain bread but a raisin or cinnamon bread would be a good choice as well.
  2. Second – Pick a peanut butter you like. There are the tried and true ones like Jif or Peter Pan but you may opt for something with fewer additives or a mix of peanut butter with something else. My favorite is still Jif.
  3. Third – The jelly can be the old standby purple grape or something else entirely: red raspberry jelly, orange marmalade, peach jam or even lemon curd. 

Cut in half (or quarters) for easier eating. Do you choose squares or triangles? Which way did you mother generally cut your sandwich…are you nostalgic or wanting to be ‘different’ at this point in your life?

A piece of fruit or finger salad (carrots, celery, little tomatoes) goes well with this sandwich. A gala apple is my favorite.

Quote of the Day - 04/04/2012

We are not unlike a particularly hardy crustacean....With each passage from one stage of human growth to the next we, too, must shed a protective structure. We are left exposed and vulnerable, but also yeasty and embryonic again, capable of stretching in ways we hadn't known before. - Gail Sheehy in Passages: Predictable Crises of Adult Life

~~~~~

What do you think about the analogy made in this quote…that the passage to the next stage of human growth requires shedding of our ‘shell’ like a crustacean?

For me - the most recent passages have been more gradual and not like the abrupt shedding of an entire ‘protective structure.’ I was able to anticipate the passage and do practice stretching before it happened. Instead of a single physical milestone there were more complex and multiple psychological milestones.

Still - I like the analogy of the crustacean in the sense that being aware of the protective structures we have and noticing when they restrict our growth is probably key to our continued development whether or not it is a ‘passage from one stage of human growth to the next.’  

How aware are you now of the components of your ‘protective structure?’

Frosty Tulips at Brookside Gardens - April 2012

We had a frosty morning yesterday (April 3rd) here in Maryland and the tulips at Brookside Gardens still held the misty crystals when we got there. Enjoy my collage of pictures below…along with a rather scruffy looking robin.

frosty tulips collage.jpg

The azaleas are also beginning to bloom at Brookside although not quite at their peak just yet.

Quote of the Day - 04/03/2012

Usually we think of wisdom in terms of lofty abstractions, not survival skills, absolute truths, not tactful equivocations. - Mary Catherine Bateson in Composing a Life

~~~~~

Today’s quote prompts some thinking about wisdom. I’ve diagramed the quote in green in the mindmap below.

'Lofty abstractions' and 'absolute truths' are on the right and somehow seem more commonly associated with wisdom than 'survival skills' and 'tactful equivocations' shown on the left. We think of wisdom as the highest level of knowing (i.e. the sequence being data --> information --> knowledge --> wisdom) but do we recognize it in all the forms it takes?

10 Years Ago – In April 2002

Many years ago I started collecting headlines/news blurbs as a way of honing my reading of news. Over the years, the headline collection has been warped by the sources of news I was reading…increasingly online. Reviewing the April 2002 headline gleanings - I forced myself to pick 10.   

  1. Wildfire scorches parts of New Mexico
  2. A new census in the solar system doubles the number of large asteroids thought to lurk between Mars and Jupiter.
  3. Despite decades of legal protection, the billion or so monarch butterflies that overwinter in Mexico are losing the cloudbelt forests they depend on
  4. China tops list of world executioners
  5. Thousands of mummies, most of them from the Inca culture five centuries ago, have been unearthed from an ancient cemetery under a shantytown near Lima in Peru,
  6. Huge colonies of Earth microbes are living off of hydrogen gas released by common rocks, raising the possibility of similar life forms on Mars
  7. Adventurer Thor Heyerdahl dead at 87
  8. Cooking tomatoes -- such as in spaghetti sauce -- makes the fruit heart-healthier and boosts its cancer-fighting ability
  9. Four whooping cranes taught to migrate by human trainers have completed the return trip to Wisconsin from Florida on their own
  10. Being the firstborn child in a family may make a person more likely to develop coronary disease

As usual, my interests are reflected in these top 10: space exploration (2 and 6), earth systems and exploration (1, 3, 5, 7 and 9), food/health (8 and 10).

Quote of the Day - 04/02/2012

The value of goals is not in the future they describe, but the change in perception of reality they foster. - David Allen

~~~~~

David Allen (“Getting Things Done (GTD)” guru) is very good at cutting through hoopla to the main point and this quote is a good example of his talent. His valuation of goals is tangible because our perception of reality is the basis for our actions. Look back at your goals or resolutions for the year. How are they fostering your perception of reality and actions? If they aren’t - are they really your goals?

March 2012 Doodles

I’ve scanned my favorite doodles from last month into a slide show (below). They’re made with gel pens on black paper in a spiral notebook that I found in my spring cleaning this year.

Doodling has no constraints. It doesn't have to look like anything at all. Sometimes it reflects what I'm thinking about - sometimes it is made on autopilot and reflects nothing at all. I've named the doodles after the fact and that is displayed at the bottom of each image. 

 

Previous doodle posts: 3/6

Quote of the Day - 04/01/2012

Success is not final, failure is not fatal. It is the courage to continue that counts. —Winston Churchill

~~~~~

What jumps into your mind when you read this quote?

My first thought was that this was another way of saying that the past - containing a mixture of successes and failures - is not as important as actions now…or planned for the future. Courage seems like too strong a word for what it takes to continue in a way that counts. Courage implies facing something dangerous or painful or very difficult. Does pushing toward goals to achieve the purpose of your life always require courage? Maybe. Maybe not. It also requires a lot of other attributes too....like preseverance, integrity, discipline.

Around our (Maryland) Yard in April

It’s already April. We had some unseasonably warm days in March but now seem back into a more seasonable pattern. I took a walk around our yard this morning and created a montage of the pictures below.

So - the early April checkpoint for our yard here in Maryland is: The early bulbs (hyacinths, crocus and daffodils) are spent. The day lily leaves have recovered from the deer browsing so they may bloom normally later this spring. We have two tulips blooming in the same bed as the day lily greenery; the deer ate the rest down to the ground. The robins are very active and singing every morning. The maple samaras are about ready to fly - the lower branches have been thoroughly browsed by the deer so may 'self-prune' in upcoming months. The oak buds are popping from the top down. Our tulip poplar has a lot of spring green leaves and tight green flower buds all over. The iris green leaves are up already; they must be too tough for the deer since they don’t even have teeth marks. The tortoise that lives in that garden was out on one warm day but retreated when it got colder here during the past week; I didn't see him at all this morning. Our struggling azalea has a few blooms. 

Previous Months