Notes and Changes since last report
- It was 60°F and cloudy with light breezes at 11:00 AM on June 8, 2016. It sprinkled for a good part of the walk.
- This week's trail report covers the Wappinger Creek Trail side of the trail system.
- Great spangled fritillary and European skipper were seen earlier during the week, but not today...
The Trails
- The front Old Hayfield at Gifford House was frothy white with bedstraw.
- That's a lot of tiny white flowers.
- White campion was off to the side here and there.
- Half way along the field, yarrow was blooming.
- Right at the edge, birdfoot trefoil was just starting up.
- Every once in a while, yellow goatsbeard would stand out like a giant dandelion.
- The giant seed head continued the trend.
- A frightful sight was black swallowwort in bloom.
- This viney relative of milkweed is recognized as such by monarchs and they will lay eggs on it, but it is fatal to the caterpillars.
- The spot, near the junction of the Sedge Meadow and Wappinger Creek Trails, was marked with some green flagging for your perusal... and its eventual removal.
- Oxeye daisy was out in clumps.
- Masses of multiflora rose blooms were along the shrubby side of the trail.
- Privet was thick along there too.
- Butterflies aren't very active on cool, gray days, but that can work both ways for the butterfly watcher: a little wood-satyr was trying catch some sun sideways and from above.
- A robber fly was just hanging out on a milkweed leaf.
- My favorite butterfly magnet, milkweed, was just starting to bud up.
- In the back of the field, a young bluebird was watching me watching it.
- At my feet was a tiny vetch that I hadn't noticed before.
- It's narrow leaves and little blue blossoms suggest slender vetch.
- Another study in tiny was a chickweed or a stitchwort.
- A bumblebee was pretty lethargic today too.
- Tower mustard was standing above everything, but with only tiny flowers at the top.
- A little spring moth went from spot to spot before settling down long enough for one shot. In the sun, metalic sparkles glitter in the dark margins.
- The familiar cow vetch bore unfamilar bugs.
- The view back down the Sedge Meadow Trail was of blooming gray dogwood.
- Its small blossoms fill the air with a funkiness.
- In the Sedge Meadow were several heads of Angelica.
- Indigo buntings seem to sing from high in trees, but often feed low in fields where they "chip" sort of like a cardinal.
- An Appalachian brown in the back Old Hayfield was a surprise until considering that water runs on 3 of the 4 sides.
- All the way in the back, ironwood fruit were developing. Did I miss the flower?
- I think it was a hickory sporting little round galls on some leaves.
- Keeping distance and moving slowly paid off while following a white-spotted sable moth.
- A pair of crane flies was well hidden in last year's dogbane pods.
- I knew the "other rose" would be in the Old Pasture. I forget what, but it's not multiflora.
- By the watershed kiosk on the Wappinger Creek Trail, shinleaf was getting ready to bloom.
- Down in the floodplane, nearing the Appendix, invasive narrow-leaved bitter cress pods were swelling with seed. Can't just pull and leave them now; they should be removed.
- Next time: the Cary Pines Trail side of the trail system.
Mammals | Birds | Butterflies | Moth | Insects | Caterpillars | Arthropods | Fungus | Herp | Plants | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo | 2 Appalachian Brown | 1 Little Spring Moth | 1 Bedstraw | |||||||
2 Chimney Swift | 7 Little Wood-Satyr | 1 White-spotted sable moth | 1 Birdfoot trefoil | |||||||
1 Great Crested Flycatcher | 2 Common Ringlet | 1 Black swallowwort | ||||||||
1 Yellow-throated Vireo | 1 Chickweed | |||||||||
6 Red-eyed Vireo | 1 Cow vetch | |||||||||
1 Tree Swallow | 1 Gray dogwood | |||||||||
3 White-breasted Nuthatch | 1 Multiflora rose | |||||||||
2 Eastern Bluebird | 1 Multiflora rose not | |||||||||
5 Veery | 1 Ox-eye daisy | |||||||||
3 American Robin | 1 Privet | |||||||||
6 Gray Catbird | 1 Slender vetch | |||||||||
1 Brown Thrasher | 1 Tower mustard | |||||||||
2 European Starling | 1 White campion | |||||||||
2 Cedar Waxwing | 1 Yarrow | |||||||||
1 Blue-winged Warbler | 1 Yellow goat's-beard | |||||||||
1 Prairie Warbler | ||||||||||
1 Black-and-white Warbler | ||||||||||
1 Ovenbird | ||||||||||
1 Louisiana Waterthrush | ||||||||||
1 Common Yellowthroat | ||||||||||
1 Eastern Towhee | ||||||||||
1 Chipping Sparrow | ||||||||||
1 Song Sparrow | ||||||||||
3 Indigo Bunting | ||||||||||
1 Red-winged Blackbird | ||||||||||
1 Brown-headed Cowbird | ||||||||||
2 Baltimore Oriole | ||||||||||
1 American Goldfinch |