Showing posts with label paw paw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paw paw. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2022

2021 Sep 16, Paw Paw Patch Hike Joe Wheeler

 Our hike began at the Champion trail which begins at the West end of the Lodge parking lot. (1 mile; Elevation: 566.76 ft./628.17 ft.)

Today at 10 AM went on a Paw Paw Patch hike led by Sam Woodruff.  A family of five, 2 girls and one boy they lived and traveled in a fifth wheel and traveled all over the USA. He was ex-military. A woman from Florence got too hot while hiking. Everyone stopped hiking while Sam went to get a golf cart and take the woman to her car.  He made sure she was okay before leaving her. We then continued our hike. 

We saw many different wild mushrooms, wildlife flowers, and a couple not ripe pawpaws. The little redheaded boy found a rubber snake in a tree. Sam said he had put several along the trail on a previous hike for school children to find.


 

Sam identified several mushrooms and plants on the hike 
Seeds from the Paw Paw Patch
One of the tastiest late-season rewards for hikers and wildlife alike is the pawpaw fruit, which begins to ripen in late summer and peaks in September and October. The flavor of pawpaw fruit is often compared to bananas but with hints of mango, vanilla, and citrus. The fruit has the ungainly appearance of a small green potato and may occur in clusters on the tree. Despite pawpaw’s prevalence in NCR forests, successfully foraging for its fruits can be a challenge. Pawpaw is self-incompatible, which means that pollen produced on a plant cannot pollinate flowers on the same plant. Instead, to produce fruit, a pawpaw flower must receive pollen from flowers on another tree, and sometimes this “other tree” is farther away than it may appear at first glance! Although pawpaws frequently grow in clusters (think pawpaw patch), the trees in a patch are often genetically identical and connected underground by roots (and thus, in biological terms, are a single plant). Nonetheless, pawpaw’s pollinators (which include flies and beetles) inevitably pollinate some flowers, and fruit hunters may eventually find a tree with fruit. Opossums, foxes, squirrels, raccoons, and birds are all known to enjoy pawpaw and are likely to be closely watched for ripe fruits. Still, pawpaw fruit can often be found by closely surveying the ground underneath a fruiting tree.

Sam holding a couple of Paw Paws and
the little Red-headed boy who was a member of our hike 

Crab Apple Tree
The animals that eat crab apples are rabbits, squirrels, mice, voles, rats, foxes, deer, and insects. They also eat the seeds, buds, and leaves of this fruit. Crab apples are also used to attract birds, and they are also used to make bird feeders.

Shelve Mushrooms 

2024 Apr 27, Car & Tractor Show, Tee-Ball Game, Art Museum and Sisters

Hubby and I  rode to Killen Park for the Killen Log 877 Classic Car Show which featured bikes, jeeps, classic cars, and new cars. Cahaba Shr...