Friday, March 2, 2012

Tree of the Week



Siberian Elm, Ulmus pumila L.

DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS: Leaves simple, alternate, elliptic to elliptic-lanceolate, 1 to 3 inches long with petioles 1/16 to 1/8 inch long, toothed; base slightly unequal; upper surface glabrous; lower surface glabrous or nearly so; veins running directly into the teeth. Winter twigs very slender, light gray or gray-green, glabrous or nearly so; leaf scars very small, otherwise similar to slippery elm. Buds ovoid or globose, 1/16 to 3/16 inch long, the terminal absent; scales 6 to 10, dark purple-brown, shiny, glabrous except for white hairs along their margins. Flowers green, very small, perfect, without petals, on stalks about 1/16 inch long, appearing in crowded, umbellike clusters before the leaves unfold in spring. Fruit a 1-seeded, nearly round samara about 1/2 inch in diameter; wing glabrous, shallowly notched, seed cavity distinct. Bark gray-brown, shallowly furrowed with long scaly ridges, uniformly red-brown in cross section.

SIMILAR TREES: Other elms have much larger, doubly toothed leaves and larger buds.

IOWA DISTRIBUTION: Cultivated throughout the state, often escaping to waste places. Hybrids between this species and the slippery elm are sometimes encountered.


Forest and Shade Trees of Iowa: Third Edition, by Peter J. van der Linden and Donald R. Farrar

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Winter Bird



Killdeer
Charadrius vociferus

An early migrant, the first killdeer of spring arrives in late February, singing its name as it flies over the upland areas around my woods. The killdeer is a member of the plover family, one of several shorebird families, which usually live near water. This species is also found in fields far from water. I have never seen this bird in the woods, but once I hear it, I know I will be able to find it a short distance away in a farmer's field.

Fifty Common Birds of the Upper Midwest, watercolors by Dana Gardner, text by Nancy Overcott

Monday, February 27, 2012

Bachelor Bess Winter Story



March 6, 1915 / Van Metre, South Dakota
To Mrs. M. M. Corey

You never in your life saw such a bunch of weather as we're having. It has been snowing for about a week almost constantly. There hasn't been much wind but I never saw so much snow in my life. Last Wednesday morning it was so deep that Mr. Newlin went ahead of me to the railroad gate to break the way a little for me and it was so hard to get through then that I knew by night I couldn't make it so I just camped at the school house. Mrs. Seieroe heard about it Thursday so Thursday evening Andrew [Seieroe] came for me. He took me to school yesterday morning but I had no pupils except Peter [Seieroe] and the Mathews. The whole bunch looked like boys for the only way the girls could make it was to put on overalls. Andrew came for Peter and I last evening. We like to never have got here. If this keeps up I don't know what will happen. Stock is suffering now in places. Mr. Putnam and Andrew started to walk to Wendte on the track but got in up to their waists and gave it up and came back. Am afraid it will be to omuch for the snow plows if it keeps on. Won't the river howl when this goes off.

BB