BLOOMING BLOODROOT AND SPICEBUSH, MORRIS PARK, PHILADELPHIA, APRIL 8TH, 2014

Bloodroot is blooming in Morris Park. Over the next few weeks look for the fresh white flowers on warm, sunny afternoons on some of the well-drained south and west facing hillsides, especially near the park entrance at Morris Park Road, a bit up the trails. If you show up at our door and we are home we will gladly show you the blooming patches!

Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com

If you see us walking slowly along the paths, staring at the ground, we have not lost our marbles, we are actually looking to see the Bloodroot flowers, which can sometimes escape the eyes of the unaware.

Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com

This is a patch that used to be covered in Japanese honeysuckle and would only bloom a few flowers. Now that the invasive vine has been removed, this population has increased ten-fold in size.

Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia, April, 8th, 2014.www.thesanguineroot.com

It is very satisfying to see the direct results of the success of this beautiful native spring wildflower from the action we took to remove the invasive exotic vines, in just a few years time! Now there is much more pollen for the species-specific dependent pollinating insects on this early Spring day.

 Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com

The picture above is special and momentous. This specific flower is also attributed to our efforts. It is growing in a spot that was once nothing but invasive vegetation: The Pennsylvania state listed noxious weed Multiflora-Rose, covered in a thick matte of Japanese Honeysuckle, with a thick shrub layer of the invasive Burning Bush and a tree canopy of Tree-of Heaven, another invasive introduced from China as well as the Norway Maple.  All of these species were removed from the site. A few seeds from a nearby population (300 feet away) of Bloodroot were collected and tossed on the site 5 years ago during the invasive to native transition. It has established itself and now this flowering plant is an herbaceous layer testament to the success of this re-forestation project!

Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com
Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

This is the site where there is Bloodroot blooming today, which was once dominated by exotic vegetation introduced mostly in the past 150 years.  Now there is an early successional growth of Tulip Poplar and Sassafras, as well as saplings of Oak and Dogwood growing on this site. Mayapple is also beginning to establish itself. Invasives such as Tree-of Heaven , Garlic Mustard, Japanese Angelica Tree, and Japanese Honeysuckle are increasingly less frequent where they were previously quite prevalent. We remove the invasives on a regular basis and allow the native plants to grow.

This site has become less and less maintenance as the years go by.

We have a wait -and -see approach as to how this re-forestation effort will turn out.

Seeing the Bloodroot bloom this year for the first time since tossing those seeds in is a landmark moment for the restoration of this site.

On a philosophical note, our own intervention upon this ecosystem is not lost on us; on one side we just want to see and appreciate this natural beauty as it is in the world, as if we were initially unattached and we were uniting with this beauty and finding within it something that can inform and guide us-(perhaps a myth in our search for finding  philosophical and spiritual direction in nature)-but there is something to this, being that we encounter areas of the world we have never encountered and may never again, ones that may inform us in our worldviews; but here in Morris Park specifically, is a situation where we have willfully intervened in the natural world before us, one just outside the house in the City Park, in what we initially perceived as an overgrown area, one that seemed out of place and disturbed.

From our outreach and researches and discussions and conversations as well as our observations, we made the decision to remove the species of plants aforementioned, with the anticipation that there was a whole new set of species ready to grow there if the conditions were right, and we decided to make that decision and take that risk and we started with a very small area as a test and today, this balmy, sunny Spring day, the Bloodroot blooming on the site, we are seeing more of the results of these decisions.

At once we are disconnected from the feeling of interacting with a ‘raw’ nature that can inform us impartially on a philosophical level and we are now wholly responsible and ‘involved’ with nature on this specific site, so it is no longer wild to us in that regard. Wild without quotes because wild has become something of a societal obsession as we try to find our place in the world among species. We have made the plunge to become completely un-wild by altering a place in the world we have no history with and yet somewhat ‘wild’ by interacting with this place so thoughtfully, with such a sense of speciation and human and plant history in mind.

As humanity grapples with wilderness, at once romanticizing it and destroying it, we choose the fun and enlightening path, which is to romanticize, of course, and that is where the answers can begin to be addressed, and we turn to science for that, again, of course, because all practical and philosophical matters look to science to keep on track. And Science, with its tested and tested again and again and scrutinized again and again is what ultimately informs our philosophy, the testing is like a conscious form of evolution, it guides and informs us, it is wild in that way.

It has been a wild, natural ride, taking the plunge and removing plants from the park, our yards and watching new ones grow, collecting and tossing seeds from time to time, proceeding slowly and cautiously all the while.

The trade off to this work, this decision, is that what we see in this specific area of Morris Park is not a truly ‘wild’ place, one which we have had no prior connection with and one we can appreciate as an outsider viewing the area as a natural place regardless of its history, influenced by humans to varying degrees. Instead what we see is a place that we have intervened with, one of which is no longer wild in this sense. It is an adventure, having made the plunge, these waters we have jumped into where we are so involved with the natural world, we as a species have altered it so much and now we as individuals and communities are compelled to interact with it on much more intensive levels than we feel comfortable with, we debate about wild vs not wild, who are we and what do we do?

 

For now, lets just enjoy the beautiful flowers and enjoy the warm sun on this balmy early Spring afternoon.

 

Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com

We love to stroll up the path and enjoy the flowers!

Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in area once dominated by Multiflora rose and Japanese Honeysuckle. www.thesanguineroot.com

While the Bloodroot is a very glamorous early Spring native bloomer, we must also notice the blooming Spicebush!

Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com
Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

Not to be missed!

Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com
Spicebush Blooms in Morris park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. April 8th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

 

 

 

 

BlOODROOT BLOOMS IN PENNYPACK PARK, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA, APRIL 5TH, 2014

This is Spring!

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

The delicate white flowers of Bloodroot have arrived. This has been a long, cold winter, different than the ones in the past few years.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

We weren’t sure if they would be blooming but we took the chance and went here to see. It was a warming afternoon, with some sun and clouds.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

We were actually a bit surprised they were up and blooming.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

But here they were, the Sanguinaria canadensis, Bloodroot, the namesake for this blog and our inspirational plant blooming away in the middle afternoon sun of this early April weekend day.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

This is a well-drained and sunny Springtime hillside, a perfect place for Bloodroot to thrive.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

After such a long winter, these beautiful white flowers are the perfect greeting of Springtime.

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

Springtime is here!

Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com
Bloodroot blooms in PennyPack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 5th, 2014, www.thesanguineroot.com

To know more about this flower and its habits please read our article that describes in greater detail its magnificence.

Bloodroot blooming in Pennypack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April, 5th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

Bloodroot blooming in Pennypack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April, 5th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

Below is the hillside with all of the blooming Bloodroot. At the first glance, it would appear as if there is no blooming flowers here.

 

 

Bloodroot blooming in Pennypack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April, 5th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

Bloodroot blooming in Pennypack Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April, 5th, 2014. www.thesanguineroot.com

WOLF CREEK TROUT LILY PRESERVE

THE SANGUINE ROOT VISITS THE WOLF CREEK TROUT LILY PRESERVE IN GRADY COUNTY GEORGIA DURING PEAK BLOOM. MILLIONS OF BLOOMING DIMPLED TROUT LILIES CARPET 15 ACRES OF A NORTH FACING HARDWOOD HILLSIDE IN THE AFTERNOON SUN, MONDAY FEBRUARY 24TH, 2014.

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve

We had been wanting to visit this place for a long time, and the opportunity arose as it just happened to coincide with our winter vacation to neighboring Thomasville, Georgia. Seeing this  preserve at peak bloom was also a very lucky moment in our travels. The stars were indeed aligned just right for us on this balmy, sunny afternoon in this southern Georgia hardwood forest.

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Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com

Erythronium umbilicatum, the Dimpled Trout Lily

image

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com

Trillium maculatum, the spotted Trillium

Trillium maculatum, Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Trillium maculatum, Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Trillium maculatum, the spotted trillium, Wolf crek Trout Lily Preserve, Grady County , Georgia. www.thesanguineroot.com
Trillium maculatum, the spotted trillium, Wolf creek Trout Lily Preserve, Grady County , Georgia. www.thesanguineroot.com

 

For us northerners, seeing this vast hillside of green flowering things at the end of February was a sight to behold! blooming amidst Saw Palmetto and the Trout lilies, the Trilliums were truly pleasing to the eye and welcoming to the camera’s lens. The Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve encourages photography.

This is a place of spectacular beauty, a place that entirely transcends the monotonous landscapes of the developments and highways, the attempts at landscaping and the increasing lack of a sense of place that is dominating the developed vistas of America at this time. A place like this gives us a sense of where we are and when; it is a place where we retain a perspective on the location and the season, on the speciation found in the natural world around us. When we find ourselves marveling in the beauty of other species and in the places we find, discover and seek them out, we are further enlightened and enabled into the landscape.

This is one of those places, so unique in its location, and so rare and abundant, a place similar to this is usually found hundreds of miles north in the Appalachian Mountains. Why this is located here in Southern Georgia is possibly related to the Ice Ages. An astounding place such as this makes us think of botanical history in relation to geological history; an exercise that helps us stretch our minds into the milleniums past; here is a place where we see beauty and excite fascination in the times that have existed long before us.

Just some of the other species at Wolf Creek: Southern Twayblade Orchid (Listera australis), Greenfly Orchid (Epidendrum magnoliae), Coral Root Orchid (Corallorhiza wisteriana) , Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis), and of course many, many others such as Oaks, maples, beeches and blueberries, Saw Palmetto, just for starters to get you interested!

 

 

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com

The story behind how the Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve was created is inspirational. It was to be developed into housing. It had been known for a long time as a property with a noteworthy wildflower population, and it took the efforts of very dedicated people to save it from destruction.

From reading the history, it could be argued that this land was saved because of the housing market collapse in 2007-2008.

Now it is owned by Grady County and is preserved in perpetuity as a preserve. This did not come easy, however, and the story of its preservation is a inspiring reminder of what it takes to retain the beauty in the world around us.

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com

Here is a trillium with four leaves, folks. They are named for their three leaves, petals, sepals. Oddities, always in nature, making the world go round.

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve  www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve www.thesanguineroot.com

These Trout Lilies exhibit the recurved petals so distinguishing of this flower. note the Trillium maculatum in the backround.

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve  www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve www.thesanguineroot.com

This photo was taken in the best spot (noted in the brochure), where the vantage point of Trout Lily coverage is maximized. You can see the pitch of the slope in the horizon, which is helpful in getting a feel for the landscape.

The caretakers of this preserve have gone to great extents to make our visit truly pleasurable, from creating a great website, promoting it in the local papers, facilitating parking arrangements, creating signage, brochures, and maps. There was a box full of brochures in the parking area that approached the topics of native plants, invasive plants and ecology.  As we walked into the preserve there were signs that reminded us to stay on the trails. we found ourselves taking extra precautions on the trails to not step on any Trout Lilies or Trilliums. (It takes years for a single Trout Lily plant to make it to bloom, so to step on one and crush it in the act of trying to appreciate it is antithetical to the exercise)

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com
Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, www.thesanguineroot.com

Here we are, Sean Solomon and Isabelle Dijols, finally at the long awaited and oft talked about Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve. (Photo by Cathy Smith)

Photo by Isabelle Dijols, Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, Grady County Georgia. www.thesanguineroot.com
Photo by Isabelle Dijols, Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve, Grady County Georgia. www.thesanguineroot.com