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General Subjects => Travel / Places to Visit => Topic started by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:38:24 AM

Title: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:38:24 AM
Greetings from the Kentuckians,

Spring has arrived in Berea forest. Thought you might like to see the variety of hepaticas that are blooming in the woods as of today.
More to follow.

Alan & Sherba
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:44:06 AM
OK....I've done something wrong. Thought I'd uploaded 4 photos but only one showed up. Guess I've been away from the forum for too long.
Let's try again
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:45:37 AM
Nope....that didn't work either. So come on guys....how do I do multiple postings of photos?
They're all under 70kb and I only tried to post 4.
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:48:34 AM
Guess I could be here all night but here's another one till I get some advice. Where's Booker when you need him???
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:59:02 AM
Ah!!!! Works better with specs on. Just saw the 'more attachments' bit on the right. Come on Maggie & Ian....spare a thought for the optically challenged ex pats amongst us !!!!!
We'll be back next week when hopefully the trilliums, sanguinarias, and suchlike decide to awaken.
Sherba sends a big hug

Cheers
Alan
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Lesley Cox on March 30, 2008, 05:18:18 AM
These are really lovely. The newer doubles and "odd" forms are exciting I suppose but I still think nothing can beat the wild, growing-in-nature forms, so thanks for posting these pics. I'm looking forward to the others you mention too.

Best from NZ
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: fermi de Sousa on March 30, 2008, 05:48:55 AM
Hi Alan and Sherba,
glad to see the lovely spring flowers around you; looking forward to more as the weather warms up. We are entering Autumn here and it's the real start of the growing season.
cheers
fermi
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Diane Clement on March 30, 2008, 09:40:03 AM
Hi Alan and Sherba,
good to see you back on line here

Brilliant hepaticas, wonderful to see them in the wild.  Are they all H acutiloba?  I didn't realise there was so much natural colour variation.  Thanks for showing them
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 10:25:36 AM
Hi Diane, Lesley & Fermi,
Thanks for your replies.
I should, of course, have mentioned that these are all forms of H.acutiloba. H.americana is nowhere to be seen at the moment. Their growing habitat is quite varied. They can be found in sun, shade, wet river banks, moist open soil and growing on mossy rock.
Incredibly, for me that is, I was amazed to see erythroniums growing in abundance in exactly the same conditions and places as the hepaticas. Even found one yesterday growing under a tree. Should be in flower next week....we'll see.
All these shots were taken in the John B. Stephenson Memorial Forest at Anglin Falls in Berea, about 10 minutes from us. I've included a shot of the habitat, and Ms Sherba checking out the rock for early saxifrages. Lots of leaves, no flowers.

A few more in bloom this week
Claytonia virginica (Spring Beauty)
Enemium biternatum (False rue anemone)
Dentaria laciniata (Cut-leaved toothworth)
Cardamine ?douglasii (Bittercress)

Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Maggi Young on March 30, 2008, 10:26:11 AM
Hi, Kentuckians! Great to have you back around the place.
Glad you got the specs on and paid attention eventually, Alan..... isn't that what Sherba would have advised you to do in the first instance?   ::)

If this is a taste of what's to come from you folks, I am agog :o
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 10:38:18 AM
Hi Maggi,

You know, the strange thing is that whenever folks "do" the USA, they inevitably go west....and yet most everything that we see growing wild here, ends up on the showbenches back home. I am amazed that so few people 'do' east. I know we don't have mountain ranges like Colorado etc, but for anyone who hasn't been on the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia, I can only say you don't know what you're missing. Kentucky is probably not quite as floriferous as Virginia but we certainly have as much variety of super woodland plants. And everywhere is in such easy reach. The invitation to you and the 'old guy' is still open.
Great to be back. Life has been so hectic, Sherba and I did virtually no photography last year...but at least we have some paint on the walls now. :D
Have a great day
Aan & Sherba
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: mark smyth on March 30, 2008, 01:10:41 PM
looking forward to some unusual Sanguinaria forms.
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on March 30, 2008, 02:09:04 PM
So am I, Mark. So am I !!!!!
I've been visiting Kentucky for 8 years....an lived here 2 but have never seen one in flower would you believe. Seen literally hundreds of plants but no blooms. It always seems we have been walking too early or too late in the season but where we are now enables us to reccy every weekend so I am hopeful that 2008 will be the year.
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Tony Willis on March 30, 2008, 11:09:47 PM
Lovely pictures great to see them in the wild.The fact that my sister lived in the area for a while and I would have had to see her has put me of visiting and has kept us in the West. Now she is in Florida we may get to Kentucky.It seems full of wonderful flowers.
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Ed Alverson on April 03, 2008, 11:10:30 PM
Alan, I live in the west but I would jump at the chance to walk in the spring woods in Kentucky with you!  There is something about the diversity and abundance of the understory flora in the eastern forests that is not duplicated in the west.  I'd especially like to see photos of your local Erythronium, if you have a chance to post some.

Actually, I have wanted to visit your area for some time because my ancestors were early settlers not too far from where you live, having settled in the Sugar Creek area of northern Garrard County in the 1790's.  But then they moved on, first to the virgin prairies of SE Iowa in 1848, presumably after the forests were all cut down and the farmland lost its fertility.  A typical American story....

Ed
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: alpines on April 04, 2008, 02:03:35 AM
Ed,
You would be more than welcome. Sherba and I are going to Floracliff for an organized wildflower walk on Saturday,so I am hoping to see some Erythronium in flower. Floracliff is a State Nature Preserve, not too far from Garrard Co. I'll post shots of what I find but apparently I missed Trillium nivale by two weeks. Ah well!!! There's always next year.
Good to hear from you. Keep in touch
Alan & Sherba
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Katherine J on April 04, 2008, 07:51:47 AM
but we certainly have as much variety of super woodland plants.

Indeed. Beautiful Hepaticas! And super scenes too! That "anglin falls" is simply wonderful!
Go on with pics, please! :)
Title: Re: Hepaticas In Kentucky
Post by: Kristl Walek on April 04, 2008, 09:27:15 PM
You know, the strange thing is that whenever folks "do" the USA, they inevitably go west....and yet most everything that we see growing wild here, ends up on the showbenches back home. I am amazed that so few people 'do' east.

There is utter magic in the eastern North American woodlands that I have not seen matched elsewhere. After all, this is the botanic strength of this area of the world-one which was once solid forest!!!!

For the past many weeks, as I have been obsessing over real estate listings in the mountains of western Canada, a picture of spring in my eastern Canadian woods keeps sneaking into all the spaces between asking price and size of acreage. I see the drifts of Trillium, Erythronium, Sanguinaria, Asarum, Ferns and I become homesick before I have even left......

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