25 Picture of the day - POD (cont. 16) (Read 38654 times)
kypaddler
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Re: Picture of the day - POD (cont. 16)
Reply #90 - Nov 10th, 2010 at 2:59pm
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I myself am beginning to regret sending it on, too.

Cry

-- kypaddler

And note that Dave (whose hand is holding the smallie sandwich) didn't cover the whole bread. He was being considerate, because that was his second or third, and the rest of us weren't finished with our first, yet.

  
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PhantomJug
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Re: Picture of the day - POD (cont. 16)
Reply #91 - Nov 10th, 2010 at 7:47pm
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What?  No lettuce?  You weren't the party we encountered at the BH/Quetico portage about 4 years ago with the huge plastic container of white bread were you?  Pascanell and I paddled away thinking that those guys must really like sandwiches.   Grin
  
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marlin55388
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Re: Picture of the day - POD (cont. 16)
Reply #92 - Nov 11th, 2010 at 4:09pm
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Bearberry is a groundcover shrub (woody), a sprawler like a creeping juniper(J. hortizonalis). I usually observe it in and adjacent to rock outcroppings.

Wintergreen like bearberry is a deciduous evergreen woody perennial(shrub), with a similar shaped leaves but the wintergreen's is larger and in fewer numbers. Wintergreen is also stoloniferous, think underground strawberry runners, bearberry on the other hand is not- it is a creeper rerooting as it goes about its business. They both have light pinkish bell shaped flowers, from my recollection. Wintergreen's berries are larger than bearberry but both are red. They are woody shrubs (woody perennials) even though they are ground hugging in stature.

The fragrance of the foliage is probably one of the easiest ways to discern the difference...

The wintergreen that I have observed has been mostly growing in acid duff that is well drained, moist, and with good snowcover in the dead of winter and some filtered shade in summer...actually most of what I have observed for colonies have been found on a south easterly slope in combination with pine (jack and red) and then in WI (on sand with oak and white pine).

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Hope this helps...and kale is a well traveling substitute for the L; where's the T anyway?

  
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db
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Re: Picture of the day - POD (cont. 16)
Reply #93 - Nov 13th, 2010 at 6:30am
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Seems a good time for a (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)

Thanks to all the photographers for sharing and thanks Marlin for the recent IDs. Pearly everlasting eh? It sounds so ubiquitous and if I ever see one in real life anytime soon, I may even remember what it is. Wink I've never noticed it before.
  
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