It has drizzled all day, and started raining with a vengeance just after we got home! However, that didn't stop us from our walk. The dogs wouldn't give us a moment's peace if we didn't, anyway!
The Waterblommetjies Aponogeton distachyos are out on the Experimental Farm dam.
A more general view:
We wanted to check up on the development of the buds on the plant we have been watching for weeks, but on the way found these. We're not sure what they'll turn out to be.
Close up of the bud:
Here's some healthy looking re-sprouting from what might be a Cape Myrtle Myrsine africana.
Here's that grass again, the flowers ever more prolific!
Still it's only the Wachendorfias with the curly leaves growing flat on the ground which are out, and there are plenty of them. Those growing upright show no signs yet of any buds forming.
Here's our mystery plant, looking as if it's going to be a Satyr Orchid, one of the Satyriums.
Close up of the bud:
Open flowers on the Othonna heterophylla are still eluding us! We need some sunny days!
Up at the top, visibility was limited!
Back in the unburned section, there was a Brunia which was worth going off the path for! It was completely covered in these white balls.
At the ruined railway cottages, this Prickly Pear Opuntia always has one or two flowers out, best photographed in overcast conditions.
One wonders how the spiders manage on an electric fence, no problem, it seems!
We're clearly entering an exciting time!
A :-)
Sunday, 30 August 2015
Sunday, 23 August 2015
Wachendorfia Sunday Flower Walk
The Wachendorfias are beginning to come out, but strangely it seems at this stage that it's only the ones with the first leaves growing close to the ground after the fire. Those growing 'normally' seem to be far behind.
We hurried up to the plant we've been watching develop, but it seems we must wait a bit longer!
The buds are getting longer and peeling away from the stem from the bottom up... what will it turn out to be?
More of these short grasses........
A berry (and thorns!) on Asparagus lignosus:
After getting excited last week about all the buds on the Othonna heterophylla, guess what? It's been eaten again!
There was even a partly open bud lying next to it on the ground. There are still tightly closed buds.
Here's another we remember; a white five-petalled flower from the top, but the closed bud and the back of the petal is mauve. The stem twines. Common names Baroe (khoi) and Klimop (Afrikaans) Cyphia volubilis.
This is the growing tip of a Liparia splendens we know, now re-growing nicely. I suspect there's a lot of growing to do before we get any flowers.
At the base of a Mimetes cucullatus which was badly burned is this, looking ever more like a 'baby' with red tips to the hairy leaves.
More exciting is what looks like a whole lot more, less than a metre away! This is not all.
This looks like re-growing Pseudoselago serrata which was quite prolific all over the area we are montitoring.
There is a lot of this, growing where we remember China Flower Adenandra uniflora. What could it be?
Now the dam is full again on the experimental far, the Waterblommetjies Aponogeton distachyos have come back and there are already buds on it.
:-)
Monday, 17 August 2015
Starting to Move! Sunday Flower Walk
All over there are signs of activity! Not showy at this
stage, you have to look carefully. Oh! That is in the veld. At the ruins of the
Railway cottages it's another story, with the Narcissus at their very best!
The grasses are flowering, is this Ficinia
bulbosa? :
This one's slightly yellow hue caught my eye:
A very short one:
Is this the same, with its reddish colour?
Here again is one of the Wachendorfias which had
leaves growing close to the ground, pushing a bud up. The normally growing
W. paniculata elsewhere show no signs of flowers yet. So it's still a
mystery!
We went looking for the single broad-leafed plant we found
sevral weeks ago. We were delighted to find many buds on it. We can't wait to
see what it turns out to be!
Also in that area, we found the fleshy-leafed Othonna
heterophylla which had been so completely eaten. It has re-grown well and
again has buds on it:
So there are two reasons at least to check again next
week!
There are many of these broad-leafed Daisies, looking for
a name!
After the first flush of growth after the fire, these Fire
Asparagus A. lignosus have set green berries and are now pushing out
fresh green growth again!
This looks like an Orchid! Dominic has warned us
that we'll find them in profusion from now on!
I realise I've been looking in the wrong place for the
single Heeria argentea we have found in 'our patch'. What I've been
looking at is the remains of a Pelargonium, which is re-growing
nicely:
The Heeria is a few metres away, and yes! It's
re-sprouting!
The leaves are very pale still:
The Pelargoniums seem to be thriving after the
fire!
In the unburned section we found a Searsia in
flower, reminding us what the others should look like!
:-) A
Sunday, 9 August 2015
First Wachendorfia Sunday Flower Walk
We spotted the first Wachendorfia paniculata today, and at the same time solved the conundrum of what the low-growing curled pleated leaves are; just that, presumably affected by the fire!
This is also the first non-green colour we have seen in the burned veld for a long time. I suspect it won't be long before there will be a riot of colour, judging from how they are growing in places!
We're still unsure what had caused damage to many of the new growth, sometimes older leaves which have come up since the fire. These are Agapanthus walshii. Was it frost? The leaves all look as if they have been blown from the north-west. Is it because there's little other vegetation to protect these first re-sprouters?
We keep thinking the Buchu Agathosma crenulata can't possibly have more flowers, yet every time it looks more covered in these delicate blooms:
Some of the Brunias are covered in the white baubles which are made up of many florets.
Since the fire, many of the sandstone rocks are flaking off like this:
The Fire Asparagus A.lignosus are less obvious, but they're still to be found, with new light-coloured growth:
The Searsias are making a strong come-back. There seem to be several different types, but all with leaves in threes.
Three leaves:
We went to the place we remember many China Flower Adenandra uniflora growing, and we're confused by what are growing prolifically there.
Here's one up close. The leaves are evenly distributed around the stem at every node in threes or fours. What can they be?
We went up to where the Pagoda flower Mimetes cucullatus was burned, to inspect the tiny plant growing near its base. The leaves are hairy and each has a single red tip.
Could it be a baby, and could these, about a metre away be more? We'll be back to observe soon!
We know what to expect when we hear a hoarse squeak, over and over from the shky! Spur Winged geese!
Last week's efforts at the culvert seem to be paying off, it's flowing clear! We haven't had heavy rain since. I suspect it will have a tendency to silt up.
:-) A
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)