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Below I have added several plants found in bloom: Sept. 5, 2006 - I joined a walk again in evening of the Irving Botanical Gardens of the Irving Centre, and then the Acadia Univ. Woodland Trail. Present were Tony Coakley, Harold Forsyth, Joanne Bishop?, Eli ?, and myself. Plants noted in bloom were GROUND NUT, TURTLEHEAD (these two species were in the botanic gardens adjacent to bog area), SPOTTED JEWELWEED (lots), HORSEWEED, WILD CUCUMBER, TALL WHITE LETTUCE, HAWKWEED (the species with purple spots on the leaves earlier in the season?)(possibly more than one species now in flower?), PEPPERMINT, a small-flowered SKULLCAP?? (Joanne collected one plant for Ruth Newell to identify), SILVERROD and other GOLDENRODS, various ASTER species, one NIPPLEWORT plant still in bloom (others all have fruited and died/dried up), QUEEN-ANNE¹S-LACE, CARDINAL FLOWER (Lobelia cardinalis). PEARLY EVERLASTING, HAREBELL (both wild and garden species), SWAMP SUNFLOWER, BLACK-EYED SUSAN, CONEFLOWER, pink-purple JOE-PYE-WEED, COMMON SPEEDWELL, EYEBRIGHT, etc. We found a few more mushrooms, among them a LACTARIUS that had a cap purplish with reddish circular lines and beige gills with yellowish latex, possibly ³Yellow-latex Milky², Lactarius vinaceorufescens ?? Also I noted on tree-trunk bark the no-longer slimy remains of several fruiting bodies of a SLIME MOLD, probably ³Scrambled-egg Slime², Fuligo septica ; these now-flattened bodies were tan to beige in colour and were the spore-producing bodies formed after the plasmodium probably climbed up the bark from the forest floor of wood/bark chips etc. Harold heard an EASTERN WOOD-PEWEE call, plus blue jays. Cheers from Jim in Wolfville, 542-9204
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