Nature Strollers

The mission of the Nature Strollers is to support parents and grandparents in their role as primary interpreters of nature for their families; to provide opportunities for families to enjoy unstructured time outdoors; to familiarize families with local trails, refuges, sanctuaries and preserves; and to develop networks among families with a common interest in nature.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Goose Pond Mountain Created Wetlands, 23 May 2008

The Nature Strollers hit the boardwalk at Goose Pond Mountain State Park on a sunny, spring day. With at least one at this location every week, we enjoy the seasonal changes and look forward to seeing the familiar wildlife of the season: blue herons overhead, toad tadpoles in the small pond, bullfrog tadpoles in the large ponds, preying mantis egg cases, and the songs of the gray tree frogs overhead.
Even small toddlers like Olivia are excited about the prospect of seeing
a northern water snake basking in the sun.


Meanwhile, the boys grab sticks and pretend they are lightsabers, acting out Jedi epics.
Sybil and Olivia look closely at a predaceous diving beetle larva we scooped up in our net. The whitish stripe down its back was conspicuous in the aquatic vegetation.

The edges of the two large ponds are bright with blue flag iris, as beautiful in bud as in flower. I mention to the moms that this one is native. Several families have asked for advice about planting native wildflowers in their yards, I'm thrilled to see they are appreciating the beauty of our local flora.
We spotted a ladybug eating some wooly alder aphids. The kids helped bend back the branches of the alders. Soon we discovered thirty "patches" of the tiny sap suckers. I mentioned that when they fly, they are said to look like white pom-poms on the wing. This garnered a chuckle.
One of the parents noticed that two species of pine were flowering next to each other, a nice contrast between the yellow-green “candles” and the pink “pine cones.”
Acadia (3) was all over the pink ones.
Acadia and I found an unidentified caterpillar or larva on a rush. We called the gang over to see.
We took all the kids up to the pines to see the robins in their nest, everyone was startled when one flies off. That’s one big baby!



The hickory hairstreak caterpillars are active, using their silk to “tie” up the leaves
and make a shelter.
Pinkish-orange galls on a hickory leaf, one of Sebastian’s discoveries, are a bit of a mystery. My guess is a gall-making wasp, but there are other possibilities.
Sybil is very proud of her net wielding that results in a close-up view of a bullfrog tadpole.
Acadia stomps it up in the mud, a popular activity with the toddler-in-rainboots set.
Finally, along the path we see that the earthstar mushrooms have curled up in the dry air, disappointing Sebastian and Nathan who were at school when we first discovered them. The earthstars depend on pelting raindrops to help distribute their spores. I include a picture of them open, which is much cooler.



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