Garrison Springs Community Forest

There were still some leaves on the trees when we visited Garrison Springs Community Forest in Ozark, Missouri last month. It is a newly opened natural area snuggled into the developed area of Ozark. The vegetation makes it feel much further out; the ‘noise’ of the place is only the gurgle of water from 3 springs and the sounds of birds singing and leaves moving in the breeze.

Our area had gotten very little rain the past few months, but the springs still were flowing, and robins were bathing along with the newly fallen leaves.

A daddy long legs (harvestman) crossed our path as we headed back to the car. We stopped to get a picture.

This place is small but not that far from where we live…a place to visit again for a quick nature fix…and to see the improvements as they happen in the next few years.

Fall Foliage in our Yard

The fall is in full swing around our yard. The oak and sycamore and tulip poplars are more than halfway through their fall. The red maple is about halfway through. I’m sharing our yard’s fall foliage in photos today….before we do another round of leaf mowing. This is the view from my office window…a pine on the left then a tulip poplar and then the red maple.

a 2020 10 IMG_2503.jpg
f 2020 10 IMG_2511.jpg

At ground level in the back yard you can see the understory of spice bush (yellow) and the dark tree trunks (the red maple in the foreground); it’s been foggy on most recent mornings. The brush pile catches a few leaves.

m 2020 10 IMG_2526.jpg

The maple does not seem to have as many pure red leaves this year. There is another maple behind the tulip polar that always turns yellow and I think one of the maple leaves below is from that tree.

t 2020 10 IMG_2524 (1).jpg

The tulip poplar leaves turn brown very quickly once they are on the ground so it is a challenge to get some with lots of yellow.

t 2020 10 IMG_2524 (2).jpg

I have taken a lot more sycamore leaf pictures this year. I’m not sure it is it the size variety of the durability of the leaves once they are on the ground. The leaves are large and leathery which make them easier to rake…and really need mowing keep them from killing the grass and clover in our yard.

The tree got a late start and didn’t manage to make very many seed balls because of the cold weather back in May…but there are certainly a lot of leaves to mow from that tree!

The Virginia creeper on some of our trees (oak and sycamore) and the exterior basement wall are changing color too.

The oak leaves that are falling now are brown…with an occasional flash of yellow.

o 2020 10 IMG_2507.jpg

And then there are invasive ground plants that are changing from green to yellow and red. I would rather not have them….but they are hard to eliminate.

i 20201020_141401.jpg

There are things other than falling leaves that I found when walked around the yard.

A harvestmen spider

2020 10 IMG_2518.jpg
20201020_140905.jpg

Lady’s thumb (another non-native plant)

Deer trimmed day lily leaves at the base of the oak tree

20201020_141337.jpg

The micro clover is doing very well…still very green and spreading

A garden spider with 2 stink bugs in its web

s 20201020_140446 (1).jpg

Spider webs in the azalea bush…maybe funnel spiders?

Overall – a lot of evidence of the season in our yard.