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Fred's photos from Wheaton Labs

 
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Location: Wheaton Labs, MT and Tularosa, NM
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I arrived at Wheaton Labs with some perennial plants thinned from my garden in Minnesota. These are plants that with no care would spread to take over the whole urban lot. I figured that made them good candidates for the fledgling food systems here at the lab, where there's a bit more space for them to expand.
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Black raspberries
Black raspberries
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Egyptian walking onions
Egyptian walking onions
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Daylilies
Daylilies
 
Fred Tyler
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One more photo, which I guess is garlic chives, but we always called onion grass. I also gave almost as much as is in all these photos to Evan for his ant plot. Not pictured were some comfrey, horse radish, and oregano.
image.jpg
Garlic chives
Garlic chives
 
Fred Tyler
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Lots of mulching hugle berms today, and i saw a few things:
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something in Calochortus genus
something in Calochortus genus
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beneficial predator: snakefly
beneficial predator: snakefly
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four future robbins
four future robbins
 
steward
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Location: Moved from south central WI to Portland, OR
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hugelkultur urban chicken food preservation bike bee
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That snakefly is really cool - never seen one of those before.
 
Fred Tyler
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Jocelyn was just telling me about salsify and then i found a good example of it in bloom. Found a growie with very hairy leaves, felt a little sticky, and a yellow and purple veined flower. I couldn't track down an ID on that one. The highlight of the day was when Evan and i were helping Michael work on the RMH in the teepee. We heard the buzz of tens of thousands of bees. The skiddable bee hut is near the teepee, so i figure the colony there was splitting. I followed them about 800 ft where they rested on the branch of a dead tree while their scouts went looking for a new home. At first they were very noisy, but soon quieted down. I'm trying to get the video sorted out so i can post that too.
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Salsify
Salsify
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mystery plant
mystery plant
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swarm waiting for scouts
swarm waiting for scouts
 
Fred Tyler
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In the spirit of "some video is better than no video", here is a video with some clips from the bee swarm. At first they are flying everywhere, then they are calmed down into a clump while they wait for the scouts. Sorry for the bad orientation of the video. I tried to adjust it in editing. Next time will be better.

 
Fred Tyler
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Here is some Lupine hard at work fixing nitrogen in the middle of a little used road at the lab. Then there is a crazy fungus that Evan showed me bursting out of one of the trees on his plot. I later found it is the pine-oak gall rust. It is a fungal disease caused by Cronartium quercuum, and requires both a pine and oak host to complete it's life cycle. I haven't seen any oaks around here, though. On such a young tree it will likely cause death, though older trees can survive with a little disfiguring. After visiting with Evan i found a bunch of orchids across the street from ant village. The Mountain Lady's Slipper (Cronartium quercuum).
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Lupine
Lupine
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pine-oak gall rust - Cronartium quercuum
pine-oak gall rust - Cronartium quercuum
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Mountain Lady's-slipper - Cypripedium montanum
Mountain Lady's-slipper - Cypripedium montanum
 
Fred Tyler
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We've been getting a bit of rain here at the lab, so now we have lots of mushrooms! The first one is an edible puffball, but I don't know the others. I need to get an ID book for Montana mushrooms.
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puffball
puffball
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????
????
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????
????
 
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Location: Mukilteo, Washington
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http://www.montanamushrooms.com/ is a site you might want to look at for your mushrooming.
 
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Location: missoula, montana (zone 4)
hugelkultur trees chicken wofati bee woodworking
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Fred,

It is quite possible that if you put a plant/mushroom ID book requests on the gapper love thread, they will show up.
 
Spare the rod, spoil the child. Here, use this tiny ad named Rod:
Back the BEL - Invest in the Permaculture Bootcamp
https://permies.com/w/bel-fundraiser
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