Fireweed – week 4

This is when the magic happens!

Apparently, each capsule contains about 300 to 400 tiny brown seeds; 80,000 per plant!  The seeds have long, silky hairs to catch the wind.  I was so fortunate to find these plants at this stage on a calm, warm day. The heat of the earth combined with the disturbance Lindor caused moving through the brush ahead of me, created an updraft of air that propelled thousands of the seeds up from the plants.  It was like watching snow fall in reverse!  It was an incredible sight.

Fireweed – week 3

Even when every last blossom is gone, these plants tint the fields with pink.

The light pink in the foreground (above) is thistle.

Fireweed – week 2

As the fireweed blossoms continue to open from the bottom up, the lower flowers die off leaving pink spikes.



I wasn’t the only one intrigued with the curly stigmas…

It was fascinating to watch the bees gathering pollen.  Most bees seemed to bounce from blossom to blossom, making it very hard to photograph them.  This big guy (below) contentedly hung out on one plant the whole time I was there.

Fireweed – week 1

Over the last couple of weeks, I’ve been observing and photgraphing the stages of fireweed development. Also known as Great Willow-herb, it is one of the first plants to regenerate a burned area of forest.  It gently colours pink the shoulders of our highways through late summer into fall.   In the next few posts. I’ll be sharing the many changes this plant undergoes.

These images were captured in the last week of July. Pinkish-white spikes begin to appear from the greenery. Soft pink blossoms open from the bottom up.



Shy-drangea

Gardening is not my thing. In spite of me, some stuff grows in the beds around my house. I was excited this spring to see my hydrangea green up. There was hope it would actually blom this year. Well, it did – sort of…timidly.


Awe, isn’t it pretty?!

It’s not me

It was brought to my attention, this week end, occasionally advertising appears on my blog.  This was news to me and not welcome news.  Turns out,

“To support the service (and keep free features free), we do sometimes run advertisements. We try hard to make the ads discreet and effective and only run them in limited places. If you would like to completely eliminate ads from appearing on your blog, we offer the No-Ads Upgrade…[$30 per year]” WordPress.com

So, do I pay to keep my blog free of ads, or simply put up with it.  What do you think?