Showing posts with label #garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #garden. Show all posts
Saturday, October 2, 2021
2021 Sep 26, Day Trip to Huntsville Botanical Gardens Huntsville, Alabama
Arrived at 11 AM just as the gardens were opening.
My first stop was the Purdy Butterfly Gardens where I saw several Gulf Fritillary Butterflies, red-spotted Admiral butterflies, Zebra Long-wing butterflies, monarch butterflies, great southern white butterflies, the white peacock butterflies, and the common buckeye butterflies.
I spotted several Blue Jays and heard a woodpecker but never saw it.
I also heard several other species of birds and saw a snake as I was coming out of the wooded area.
I walked through the vegetable garden where I saw just a few including one big orange pumpkin and a few vines with fruit dangling on them.
I saw the fruit of Japanese Persimmons hanging on the trees.
On the tree next to them was a thorny tree with Trifoliate orange fruit hanging on it.
I also saw lying on the ground an osage orange, so you can see there was plenty of fruit for the animals.
I spotted a praying mantis on a small limb. I saw several turtles swimming and lying along the bank of the pond.
I saw pink and purple blooming asters and mums of purple.
I even spotted a pink rose.
I spotted a gray heron and several turtles lying on the bank near the butterfly house.
Uncaged: Birds, Nature & You along with Night Blooms still fill the gardens.
Some of the scarecrows that I saw were:
Santa’s Helper,
Mr. Antsy Pants,
Zooey the ZooKeeper,
It's a Girl Scout Vibe,
Frida Kahlo,
The Scarecrow Dietitian,
Terry Lewis “Herb’s wife:/Herb the Birdman,
Papa’s Pumpkins,
Mr. Crow the Birdwatcher,
Dog Day Bride,
Collaborative Carl,
We can do the job,
Snow Fairy,
Betelgeuse Scary Spirit,
Sir Night fo make it right,
Faith, Service, Diversity,
Page Turner,
Autumn,
Larry
If I only had a spaceship,
Rooted,
Mr. Morgan,
Bill the birdwatcher,
Johnny Apple Seed and Demeter,
Find Your Space,
South Huntsville Sam,
Auntie Smile,
Miss Mary,
La Ofrenda,
Rosie the Refunder,
Discovery Daisy,
Lady Golfer,
Noah,
Cedrick Crow pin,
Meets the Adams Family,
Tiger, and Crow, &
Voting Violet.
I saw several people in line to go into the park as I was leaving.
I spotted a lady with a Nikon camera so, I walked up to her and told her where I had seen the heron and all the butterflies that were not inside the Purdy Butterfly House. She asked me about my camera and I said I had been taking pictures for many years. She said she had just started with her new camera.
It started out a cool morning by afternoon it was hot.
I walked back to the car ate the bowl of nuts and the diet Sprite that I had brought and rested a few minutes before starting the hour-and-a-half drive home.
That morning I had stopped at Wheeler Dam to see the waterfowl.
There were several people fishing and more coming to fish.
I asked a young man about the waterfowl and he said there were a few but a couple of days back they were more than he had ever seen there.
I guess I miss them.
I did get a couple of shots of a heron catching a fish.
Sunday, June 5, 2016
History of the Mound House in Lee County Fort Myers Fl
Mound House |
People and Plants |
People and Plants
The story of people and plants provides a continuous thread from the Calusa to early Estero Island settlers, and to the present and future generations. With all the great advances in science and technology, people still rely on natural resources to provide food, medicine, rules, building materials, textiles, and dyes.
Plants Fuel a Society
Fire is important to the development of cultures. The Calusa used fire to cook, and to help carve out logs to create canoes. Archaeologists who studied this shell mound gathered a sample of the soil to be tested for botanicals. The test yielded 19,340 botanical items - 90% of which were charred wood. The most common was mangroves (77%), followed by pine or oak (21%). In addition to wood, researchers identified nutshells and nutmeat, seeds, and grass stems.
Edible Plants
The Calusa diet was centered on aquatic foods, yet research shows they also gathered seasonal nuts, seeds, and fruit. Nuts found during the excavation were primarily high-protein acorns and 91% of the seeds collected were saw palmetto seeds. Many of these seeds were found together indicating the Calusa gathered the seeds when seasonally available.
Frond Shelters
Whether it was the Calusa, the Cuban fisherman who set up ranchos or coastal fishing camps, or the late 19th-century settlers-everyone needed shelter. They survived by using natural materials to create protective structures. Palm fronds and tree trunks could be assembled together with twine made from Spanish moss. Perhaps their “houses” were similar to this circa 1910 palm shack. Records indicate that the first homesteader, Robert Gilbert, built a thatched structure on the mound site.
Plants and Progress |
Plants and Progress
It is hard to imagine now, but when the earliest settlers arrived on the Mound the surrounding habitat was very different. Native plants dominated the landscape. Years would pass before the Estero Island settlers could profit from agricultural pursuits.
A Case of Fruit From the Case Grove
By the early 1900s, settlers were raising tropical fruit crops with some success. The coastal hammock or hardwood tree grove, west of the mound was converted into orchards and fields. This is where William and Milia Case raised figs, bananas, grapefruits, mangos, papayas, tomatoes, and limes. They likely sold their fruits to local markets.
Fort Myers Cash Crop
Farming was a predominant industry on the island as well as on the mainland. Many farmers experimented by growing a wide variety of products including grapes, oranges, avocados, grapefruits, pineapples, sapodillas, coconuts, and peaches. Eventually, grapefruit emerged as the leading cash crop in the Fort Myers area. By 1915, statewide citrus production reached 10 million boxes a year.
Walk Through the Garden of History
You walk along the paths of the Mound House site and look for a variety of tropical fruit trees. While the Case family planted similar botanicals, these are newly planted to show the diversity of the crops grown on the setter’s properties over the past 100 years.
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