Monday, July 25, 2016

Nature Study Outing :: Thinking Back to Late Spring

Okay, so I'm way behind in sharing about our nature study outings.  Sadly, all the wildflowers here are pretty much gone, the stunning variety of shapes and colors replaced by thistle, more thistle, and the dried up remains of what once was. I'm only sad because I love wildflowers, not because there isn't plenty still to observe and discover -- there certainly is! More about that another day.  Today, I'm going back in time a couple months to the near-peak of our wildflower season.  A day with lots of color... and some unexpected adventure!

Our day started here, at the water's edge:


The kids spent the first hour collecting frogs.  They headed out by themselves along the trail holding the terrarium, and we moms got distracted by the wildflowers.

larkspur -- new for us this year!

young curly dock, I think

having trouble identifying this one amidst the million yellow flowers that bloom in our area -- help?
it looks like a yellow chickory!

mariposa lily
yellow mariposa lily

salsify
sticky monkeyflower
Meanwhile, the kids were busy by the water.






When they came back to us, they had a whole terrarium full of jumpers!



We made them release them right away at the pond's edge, but most of them ended up in the water.  My friend remarked that it looked like the start of a triathalon.  Ha!



They all seemed to be okay in the end and we had a little chat about not over-collecting.  Ahem.

Most of the group had to head home at that point, but one friend and I had a little extra time before we had to leave, so we decided to explore a little trail we hadn't been down before.  I was pretty sure it looped around toward the lake and then would deposit us back onto our trail down to the parking lot.  So off we went, with all the littles in tow.  (Yep, wait for it.)


And then we started climbing!  The trail was a bit steeper and rockier than we were expecting, but we kept thinking it was almost finished.  Did I mention it was in the 90s?  For my California kids (and who am I kidding -- for me!), that is hot.  But we kept trekking and finally wound up with these views:



We also ended up seeing a lot of new flowers, including two kinds of owl's clover and four kinds of clarkia!


narrow-leaf flax flower

clarkia

another variety of clarkia


An hour later than expected, our dirty, sweaty troupe arrived back at the cars -- thankfully with a nice variety of specimens to draw (the silver lining!).


I didn't have my littlest two boys along (they stayed home with Daddy), but I carried my three-year-old for the last half mile.  And my friend was wearing her infant and pushing her toddler in the double stroller -- with her older kids' help, thankfully.  Did I mention the trail was rocky?  Yeah.  But we have plans to revisit it on a moms' hike soon.

So does this ever happen to you -- you get a little overeager and pretty soon you're in out of your depth, with your kids along for the ride?  And when that happens, do you find your silver lining in new varieties of wildflowers? :)

14 comments:

  1. Hi Celeste,
    Great photos! Do you allow your kids to pick the flowers? I am always reluctant.

    Thank you!

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    1. Sometimes. :) I mostly tell the kids "no picking" because then I can control how many and which varieties we pick. (My littles could get overzealous -- the toads would be a prime example of that! LOL) Our family rule of thumb is that we pick one "specimen" of each variety IF it is plentiful in that area. If there are only a few, we take photos or draw them only. But when we can take one home, it really does give us a chance to observe closely, draw accurately, and identify.

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  2. Remind me again where you get your observing trays from?

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    1. Here they are!
      http://www.lakeshorelearning.com/product/productDet.jsp?productItemID=1%2C689%2C949%2C371%2C898%2C055&ASSORTMENT%3C%3East_id=1408474395181113&bmUID=1469541980836

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  3. I am always biting off more trail than I can chew just because of curiosity...what's around the next bend or off on the other fork in the trail. But, like you discovered, there are always rewards to the extra effort. I loved this entry!

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    1. Thanks, Barb! And I'm glad to know I'm in good company. :)

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  4. Is the yellow flower possibly tarweed?

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    1. I don't *think* so, since the tarweed we have here has a different kind of center...but it does have the same notched petals! I'm thinking maybe cat's-ear? I was just doing a bit more searching and that looks like the closest match. I wish I had an expert to ask, though! :)

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  5. We almost always go a little farther than we ought to, but I'm not sure anybody remembers the hard part after a while because there's usually something to make up for it. 😊

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  6. Your wildflowers are lovely - quite intense in colour. Ours tend to be more muted.

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    1. Really? How interesting! Our spring wildflowers are the brightest. The summer blooms are in duller colors for the most part. :)

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  7. I love the story of this day! I can so see it all playing out... :-) I've definitely done that sort of thing before too. What wonderful wildflowers that day.

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    1. Lovely, right? I'm already looking forward to seeing those colors next spring! :)

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