Friday, February 28, 2014

Nettles 2014

Last day of February, new moon, mostly sunny and rather warm. Snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus) letting out tiny leaves, Indian plum (Oemleria cerasiformis) raising amazing candelabras of flame-green leaves. 

And nettles -- still slightly small, but their unique flavor strong and welcome: stings into spring!

(Things are a little slower than 2010 so it seems)

spring indian plum oemlaria candelabra
Spring Indian plum candelabra

nettle grounds
Nettling grounds

spring stinging nettles washed
Stinging nettles (Urtica dioica)

Saturday, February 22, 2014

February Fungus in the Urban Forest

Various fungus found in the urban forest this month. Some are perennial but others have just come up. Does the urban heat island expand the mushroom season of the urban forest, by bringing warmer temperatures deeper into the rainy season?
shelf fungus
frilly orange mushroom
Frilly orange polypores, exploding out of an (alder?) log
beautiful black mushroom
Fresh, beautiful, black mushroom
brown cup fungus mushroom
 
layered shelf mushroom fungus conk
Massively varnished, impressively layered conk
small bright orange fungus
Itsy bitsy bright orange fungus
old puffball with moss
An old puffball, with moss growing out of it! Still expired spores when I poked it.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Marquam in the Snow

 bright bike forest
The eve of Snowpocalypse 2014 was cold and clear. Before scurrying on to some place warm, I stopped by Eagle Point, a mysterious spot and unsigned park.

cold rhododendron leaves
Notice the rhododendron leaves above my bike - they're tucked down and curled under - yes, it was very cold.


marquam snow sam jackson park road
Next afternoon the snow started to fall. And actually stick. And build. Here we see cars flooding down the hill from OHSU, getting out before steep hill roads grow more difficult.

marquam nature park snow
 Immediately adjacent to machine madness, Marquam was calmly taking on the light dusting.


licorice fern cold snow sori
Usually bright, smiling, and green in cool, wet winter weather, licorice fern curled up in the cold. Was it simply drying out, or utilizing dry weather for spore dispersal, or both? Anyway, check out those sori!

licorice fern cold snow sori

 

snowy marquam shelter
 The next day, we had accumulation.


snowy holly leaves
 Mini-mountains of snow mounded on spiky holly leaves.


snowy ivy snag
This is a snow-topped, ivy-covered snag of some sort. Strange beast.

slipping ice marquam shelter
On Monday, things began to melt. Sheets of ice were slipping from the Marquam shelter roof.


muddy urban stream snow
And by Tuesday, the snow had its sentencing - warmer temperatures were in. Many urban streams were running chocolate-mud brown.


marquam trail snow traffic
A record of strong foot traffic was kept by the snow... despite, or because of, the snow.

sam jackson park rd sneckdown
This 'sneckdown' shows there could be room for a bike lane or sidewalk (or raised bike path-sidewalk combination) along the short section of SW Sam Jackson Park Rd leading to the park's main entrance. More space allocated for bikes and pedestrians here would make accessing the park by non-car a lot less sketch.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Edible Invasives

Riding out highway 224 along the Clackamas River is one of the best ways to experience NW Oregon in late summer. I travelled this corridor in 2012 en route to forest camping.

blackberry bike clackamas river

Free refreshments were all along the road. I stopped often to pick sweet, sun-ripened blackberries.


A year later I travelled the route again, but vines that had supported fruit the year before were now just dead white bare branches, incapable of producing special regenerative berries.

bike clackamas river basalt

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Beans of the Summer

Scarlet runner beans are a peak summer vegetable with flashy red flowers and large, prolific pods. Immature pods are like a meaty green bean and the mature seeds can be used as a dry bean.

When immature, the beans are hot pink. Later on they develop dark speckles...

hot pink speckled bean


dry speckled bean
As they mature the pink darkens to purple, and even continues to deepen as the seeds age off the plant.

Last summer a trellis full of runner beans -- including scarlet and less colorful types -- fell over in my garden. I'd meant to save them for seed, but they weren't very dry when they fell. I shelled them and put them on a dehydrator.

 The treatment was too harsh, judging by the cracked seed coats.

Figuring the beans wouldn't store well and might not sprout at all, I rehydrated them in preparation for cooking.




But lots of them did sprout - go beans!


 Then I cooked and ate them.