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Panorama of Little Salt Marsh, Quivera National Wildlife Refuge |
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Showing posts with label Tradescantia occidentalist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tradescantia occidentalist. Show all posts
Sunday, June 8, 2025
Quivera Roadtrip
ProfessorRoush took a vacation from work and gardening Friday and, with his beloved Mrs. ProfessorRoush, made a 2.5 hour daytrip west and south to explore the Quivera National Wildlife Refuge near Stafford, Kansas (population 925). Quivera NWR is a 22135 acre sand prairie and inland salt marsh smack dab on the central migratory flyway, and it supports the vast migration of hundreds of thousands of Sandhill Cranes and the much more rare Whooping Crane, as well as 340 other species of migratory birds and the Monarch Butterfly. Established in 1955, it is a virtual oasis for these migrations and sits among ancient sand dunes covered by grasslands, rare geography, geology and ecology for any area, but especially for Kansas.
ProfessorRoush was interested in exploring his newfound hobby of birding, adding a dozen species to his Life List, and the ever-tolerant Mrs. ProfessorRoush may have initially viewed it as an unavoidable hardship but also showed minor signs of excitement with binoculars in her hands. It was a gorgeous, perfect weather day, but this is really the wrong season for birding and witnessing the mass migration. However, my amateur naturalist came out and I made up for the current sparsity of wildlife by exploring the abundant native Kansas flora you see pictured here in bloom. Some, like the Prickly Poppy (Argemone polyanthemos) pictured at the right, are old familiar friends. I briefly considered that this might be the Hedge-Hog Prickly Poppy (Argemone squarrosa), but it doesn't have the more abundant stem and leaf prickles of the latter, so I believe I've got it right. Other forbs, like the Butterfly Milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) pictured at the top and above left, were recognizable, but displayed its yellow form rather than the orange flower I'm used to. Prairie Spiderwort (Tradescantia occidentalist) added abundant blue accents along the roadsides to the yellow native sunflowers that were just beginning to bloom. At least I think it was Prairie Spiderwort. It could also be Common Spiderwort or Long-Bracted Spiderwort, but unlike the former it has hair on its sepals, and it branches more than I would expect for the latter. While I have plenty of sunflowers to view on my own prairie, Spiderwort is more rare here in the dryer climate of the Flint Hills.
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