Welcome back to the silliest feature of my blog, the Naturalism on Speed Challenge. Last year I challenged myself to identify 50 species before the CASA River Century and another fifty by the end of the year. This time I'm going for fifty more, for a grand total of 153. I expect this one to be much harder because so many of the most familiar species are eliminated. Further, since there are only so many terrestrial animals likely to show themselves I will be primarily identifying plants (outside my wheelhouse) and squinting at birds (which move as quickly as I do). I suppose insects might be a promising well to draw from, but those are, well, very small.
The List
I thought about reproducing the original list in this space, but it is something of a wall of text. I'll see if I can figure out a non-obnoxious way to present it later.
- Ranunculus ficaria (lesser celandine)
- Sanguinaria canadensis (bloodroot)
- Kalmia latifolia (mountain laurel)
- Hieracium pratense (yellow hawkweed)
- Claytonia virginica (Virginia spring beauty)
- Lamium amplexicaule (greater henbit)
- Dryocopus pileatus (pileated woodpecker) added 3/22/12
- Mertensia virginica (Virginia bluebells) added 4/6/12
- Dicentra canadensis (squirrel corn) added 4/6/12
- Haliaeetus leucocephalus (bald eagle) added 4/6/12
- Phlox divaricata (wild blue phlox) added 4/6/12
- Brassica juncea (Indian mustard) added 4/15/12
- Geranium maculatum (wild geranium) added 4/15/12
- Trillium grandiflorum (large-flowered trillium) added 4/15/12
- Meleagris gallopavo (wild turkey) added 4/15/12
- Corvus corax (common raven) added 4/15/12
- Cardamine concatenata (cutleaf toothwort) added 4/15/12
- Heracleum maximum (cow parsnip) added 4/15/12
Grainy photo of pileated woodpecker snapped in June of 2010. |
My most recent training ride took place outside the usual habitat zone I ride in (on Shenandoah National Park's Skyline Drive, to be precise). As such, I entered with high hopes of really putting a dent in this year's challenge. I did, but not quite to the level I had hoped. Seven new species went on the books, but a few were plants I could have easily picked up in the 'burbs. Unfortunately the black bear I saw was from the car, I only heard the coyotes (at night anyway), and I couldn't pin down the exact identity of the owl or some of the hawks I rode past. Good get on the wild turkey, though.
Running Total: 121
Animals: 44 (11 mammals, 27 birds, 4 insects, 2 reptiles)
Plants: 72
Fungi: 5
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