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April 24, 2007 - I should have checked the DAPHNE plants at the bottom of Oak Ave. in Wolfville before predicting that they were not yet in bloom. This afternoon they were glorious with their abundant pink blossoms, actually more attractive than the planted ones at the Wolfville Waterfront Park -- the latter are much more leafy than ³Jean Timpa¹s² more natural plants. To find them, walk about 100 metres beyond the end of the pavement and look on the southern bank where a bunch of small white birch trees are. ---------- From: Jim Wolford <jimwolford@eastlink.ca> Reply-To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca Date: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 10:33:00 -0300 To: NatureNS <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca> Cc: John Gilhen <GILHENJA@gov.ns.ca> Subject: [NatureNS] daphne, scilla, headless voles, tree swallows, ring-necked ducks, harlequins, pheasant courtship, calling wood frogs and peepers April 23, 2007 - The planted DAPHNE bushes in the Wolfville Waterfront Park are in bloom. The Daphne bushes along lower Oak Avenue probably are not in bloom yet, since they are protected from the sun and afternoon warmth by a hillside. --------------------- Jim (James W.) Wolford 91 Wickwire Avenue Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada B4P 1W3 phone (902)542-9204 (home) fax (902)585-1059 (Acadia Univ. Biology Dept.) e-mail <jimwolford@eastlink.ca> ---------------------- ³...... the Earth .....belongs as much to those who come after us as to us; and we have no right, by anything that we do, or neglect to do, to involve them in unnecessary penalties, or to deprive them of benefits which are theirs by right.² - John Ruskin ----------------------
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