Categories
BAHINS DishmanTours

Walking in the Hills

A visual tour of the Dishman Hills

Categories
BAHINS Books&Stories

The Story of Jumping Mouse

A telling of the Jumping Mouse story

Categories
BAHINS Books&Stories

I’m in Charge of Celebrations

A reading of Byrd Baylor & Peter Parnell’s classic picture book

Categories
BAHINS Discovery

Nature’s Time Machines

Categories
BAHINS ScienceConcepts

Exploring the Fire Resistance of the Ponderosa Pine

Categories
BAHINS DishmanTours

Enchanted Ravine

Categories
BAHINS NatureChallenge

Nature Challenge: What Happened to This Tree?

What do you think happened to this tree?

Categories
BAHINS Discovery

Color Search

Grab your crayons or colored pencils and explore the many shades of color in nature.

Categories
wildlife

Pinedrops (Petrospora andromedea)

Do you know about Pinedrops (Petrospora andromedea)? Pinedrops are a flower that breaks all the rules. You will see no green on this plant. This saprophyte has no chlorophyll to turn sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water into the food it needs to grow. It opens a window into what is happening in the WWW (aka Woods Wide Web) that flourished out of sight in the forest sub-floor. Instead it takes – or as some might say, steals or hijacks – what it needs from a vast underground Mycorrhizae web consisting of a fungus that connects to the root systems of its host plant to form a symbiotic relationship. The fungus provides its host with additional water and nutrients while the host provides the fungus with carbohydrates from photosynthesis. In the case of Pinedrops, the host is predominantly Ponderosa pine. So look to the thick decomposing needle beds around Ponderosa pines to find this plant. It can grow four feet high, so it’s hard to miss. The previous year’s growth dries to a deep rich brown color. This plant is bi-annual and blooms every other year. Pinedrops is also known as Coyote’s Arrow

 

Pine drops often grow in the thick beds of decomposing needles found at the base of a Ponderosa pine
Categories
wildlife

Lanceleaf Springbeauty (Claytonia lanceolata)

Do you know about the Lanceleaf Springbeauty (Claytonia lanceolata)? The petals of the Lanceleaf Springbeauty may be white or pink, but both colors have dark pink veins in each petal. This flower grows up from a spherical corm, a fleshy taproot, similar to the crocus or iris. When eaten raw, the corm has a pleasant, radish-like taste. When boiled, it takes on the texture and taste of a baked potato.  It prefers a position of full sun, and has trouble growing in the shade.