#snake hill wildlife management area

LIVE
I’m keeping a low profile until deer hunting season runs its course.  Until then, a few mementos froI’m keeping a low profile until deer hunting season runs its course.  Until then, a few mementos froI’m keeping a low profile until deer hunting season runs its course.  Until then, a few mementos fro

I’m keeping a low profile until deer hunting season runs its course.  Until then, a few mementos from late October on Snake Hill.


Post link
The foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the predThe foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.Field notes: 1.  Yellow is the pred

The foliage is now reaching peak color in the Cheat River Canyon.

Field notes: 

1.  Yellow is the predominant color in many sections of the canyon, especially where American beech, tulip poplar, sugar maple, witch hazel, and yellow and black birch are the dominant species. Sugar maple has a highly variable leaf color in the canyon, ranging from vibrant yellow to brilliant orange. In the rockier sections of the canyon, where it occurs with beech and birch, it seems to dress like its neighbors.

2. The oaks were just starting to go on Sunday, and will add some additional color this upcoming weekend - when everything should be at peak.  Over the past decade or so, peak color in the local NC WV area has moved steadily from mid to late October to early November. Good article here on how climate change is dulling and delaying peak in some areas of the country. Higher elevations of the Alleghenies seem to be more resilient and have continued to change over in early October.

3. Mapleleaf viburnum (Viburnum acerifolium) is now firmly at the top of my list of favorite native shrubs. Everything about this plant fills me with joy, from its graceful, maple-like foliage to its somewhat balletic, clumping habit. In the spring, it produces the most enchanting bouquet of delicate white flowers with pink highlights. The flowers give way in the fall to iridescent blue-black berries, which contrast beautifully with the pastel-like red of its foliage. Fortunately for me, mapleleaf viburnum loves this canyon and is common throughout.

4. Eastern teaberry (Gaultheria procumbens), also sometimes called American wintergreen (not to be confused with striped wintergreen), carpets the acidic forest floor of the drier, oak-hickory woods in the canyon and adds a nice pop of green color (freckled with bright red berries) to the fallen leaves. The same is true of the various species of clubmosses that seem delighted to grow in the canyon, including fan clubmoss (Lycopodium digitatum), the most common variety.

5. Gray, drizzly overcast has been the rule for the past two weeks in NC WV. Normally, I would not be overly happy about that. But for some reason in the fall, it fits the mood and can actually bring out the leaf color even more. So I’m not going to bitch and instead be contented with what I have to work with.  :-)


Post link
A greater angle-winged katydid (Microcentrum rhombifolium) seeks shelter in the hollow of a leaf on

A greater angle-winged katydid (Microcentrum rhombifolium) seeks shelter in the hollow of a leaf on Snake Hill yesterday. Although NC West Virginia has yet to experience its first frost, the area’s autumn songsters have nonetheless dwindled to a few hardy baritones. The final act is drawing near.


Post link
“In the deep falldon’t you imagine the leaves think howcomfortable it will be to touchthe earth inst

“In the deep fall
don’t you imagine the leaves think how
comfortable it will be to touch
the earth instead of the
nothingness of air and the endless
freshets of wind? And don’t you think
the trees themselves, especially those with mossy,
warm caves, begin to think
of the birds that will come — six, a dozen — to sleep
inside their bodies? And don’t you hear
the goldenrod whispering goodbye,
the everlasting being crowned with the first
tuffets of snow? The pond
vanishes, and the white field over which
the fox runs so quickly brings out
its blue shadows. And the wind pumps its
bellows. And at evening especially,
the piled firewood shifts a little,
longing to be on its way.”

- Mary Oliver


Post link
loading