Spring Things
Spring is marching on here. A couple of days ago my feet were slipping on the front steps, and for a brief flash I thought there was frost. Further examination revealed that there was a thin, slippery layer of what appeared to be yellow flour. As I walked to my car I could see a fine fall in the air of tiny particles in the slanting rays of the morning sun. It was the pollen of the Douglas Fir tree , and it had coated my car with its profligate scattering of germ plasm. It was deja vu all over again. I had written almost the same exact words two years ago on this blog on April 7. Check that post for a photo of the pollen on my car windshield. These dates lend credence to my impression that this entire season is almost two weeks late because of the unusually cold winter that we have had. It has not been really cold, just 6 or 7 degrees cooler than usual. This apparently has delayed the flower blossoming, etc.

Douglas Fir pollen on my mailbox
I was thinking this two nights ago as I went out into the night and smelled the wonderful perfume of the budding cottonwoods. When the trees begin to put forth their leaves, a delicious, sticky resin that coats the tender buds puts forth this incredible aroma. This is the Balm of Gilead, believed to be that mentioned in Genesis that was gathered from the tree Commiphora gileadensis, native to southern Arabia. I love to rub these buds between my fingers, smearing the sticky stubstance all over and then deeply inhaling the smell. Normally I smell this perfume at the first of April, but it is just now coming forth almost three weeks late.
The horse tails are also putting forth. Their hard bodies with silica on their cells used to be employed as scouring rushes. They are putting forth their reproductive bodies now (strobilus, see photo) and also their vegetative structures which when fully formed, open up to provide a beautiful display of wispy plants which has given rise to their name of horse tails. The one photo shows the plant coming up through the hard asphalt pavement of the road. These are all photos that I took this morning on my walk.

Equisetum strobili which produce the spores of Horsetails.
I just had to include another photo of a beautiful clump of Trillium that I found this morning and a shot of the early Azalea/Rhododendron(?) that is blooming in my back yard just now.
The Trilliums are at their height, and provide a visual delight on walks through the woods just now.

Trilliums are blooming all through the woods.

