Up Close and Native, Round 2

It’s that time again — let’s play another Guess That Native! game (for Round 1, click here). How closely do you know your southern native plants? Remember, all of these plants are native to Texas, at the very least, simply because that’s where I garden. Even if you aren’t from Texas or the South, I hope you’ll play the game — I bet you’ll know some of these plants or perhaps plants from the same family! Here we go!

A.
buffalograss05-01-13 B. crossvine03-23-13 C.spanishred06-26-13D.evergreensumac03-23-13 E.mexolive06-26-13 F.redyucca03-23-13 G.skelleafgoldeneye06-26-13 H.blackfoot06-26-13

Ready to check the answers? Let me know how you did!

Walker the Teaching Snake

When my boys asked to have snakes as pets, I was hesitant only because we already have quite the zoo here at home. But I wanted to say yes, because I’ve loved snakes since my own youth. My condition for agreeing was that I wanted snakes that I could use as teaching aides, because I want to encourage people to appreciate snakes for their beauty, uniqueness, and importance to the ecosystem. Most snakes are non-venomous, but a lot of people just fear them all, leading to the harm of many innocent snakes (and remember, even venomous ones are beneficial). We need nature’s predators, else the balance of critters in the world take a turn for the worse — such as an overpopulation of rats.

walkerA06-17-13We have two snakes, but I only brought Walker for this teaching outing at El Ranchito, a nature-immersion summer camp for youth of low-income families (Walker joined Paco, whom you’ll meet below). Walker is a rat snake/corn snake hybrid, complete with a checkered underbelly. He’s about 1 1/2 years old now, and almost a yard long. walkerC06-17-13He’s quite comfortable with being touched, having been handled by our family and guests for so long, but he still a little guy and rightfully cautious when on a big white table under trees filled with birds.

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I told the story of Walker’s spinal issues (he has a section of his body that doesn’t constrict very well), and the kids were very good about being extra gentle with him.

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I was very proud of Walker, and he earned himself a nice big mouse dinner. Morse, our other family snake, didn’t go to the camp, but she appeared in some of our teaching pictures — she got a nice big mouse dinner, too.

The real star of the day was Paco, a 10-year-old Baird’s Rat Snake who lives with fellow Master Naturalist Sue A. He’s been teaching with kids a long time and really puts on a show.

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Plus, at about 6 feet long and absolutely gorgeous, he knows how to impress. Baird’s Rat Snakes have a beautiful silver and salmon coloration.

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The kids lined up paper towel tubes for Paco to travel through — the effect was something akin to a pasta necklace. When not in the paper rolls, Paco traveled around people’s shoulders, and even made a couple of attempts to get to the top of the canopy above us — because above that were trees and lots of birds. Rat snakes are excellent climbers.

Let me tell you a story about our other snake, Morse, who is an anerythristic motley corn snake, also about 1 1/2 years old and well over a yard long. Looking back at older posts, I realized that we once thought she was female but somewhere along the way started calling her a he. Well, we should have paid better attention, because she is, in fact, a she, and we discovered this when — surprise — we found eggs in the habitat she and Walker shared. Alas, the eggs weren’t viable, but she and Walker have their own separate rooms now (Walker’s all the time looking for her, though). Snakes will be snakes, I suppose.

Wildlife Projects for Kids: Seed Paper

It’s been a busy couple of weeks for me. This week alone, I’ve been teaching about the wonders of snakes to kids at a summer camp (with friend and fellow master naturalist Sue), talking about backyard bird identification to a local gardening group, and then leading walks about Texas plant adaptations at the Wildflower Center’s first Nature Night of the year. Next week is more snake talk, and then Amphibians! The other exciting news is that this week on Central Texas Gardener, you can see me visiting with Tom Spencer about kid-friendly, nature-approved wildlife projects. If you have a chance, check it out!

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One of my very favorite projects is seed paper, an easy way for kids of all ages to give the gift of nature to others. It also teaches kids about recycling, taking used paper and turning it into something else, such as birthday cards or holiday gifts — even ornaments. As the native seeds start to grow, then the gift extends to pollinators, birds, and other wildlife, and it spreads beauty, too!

What you need:

  • Used or scrap paper of assorted colors (don’t use glossy paper)
  • Water
  • Blender
  • Native seeds, such as wildflowers or perennials (think about what would naturally germinate in the upcoming growing season)
  • Cookie cooling rack or a sturdy grid
  • Window screen or other flat mesh, cut to about the size of a sheet of paper
  • Baking pan or basin to catch the water
  • Cookie cutters of assorted shapes
  • Light-colored felt pieces, cut larger than the largest cookie cutter
  • Absorbent sponge

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1. Start by tearing the paper into small bits, keeping each color separate. If you don’t have a lot of a particular color, you can add a few white scraps, but don’t go overboard with the white, as the resulting colors will, of course, be paler or even gray. For each color, add the paper bits to a blender and add a small amount of water. This amount will vary, but add just enough to moisten the mixture for blending without turning it to soup. Blend to a pulp.

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Yogurt cups or small bowls are great for keeping the pulp colors separate. Don’t add the seeds yet, however — we’ll add those as we make individual shapes.

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2. Set up the window screen pieces on top of the cookie cooling rack, and place the baking pan underneath (this will allow you to squeeze out excess water from your seed paper). After choosing your cookie cutter, take a small amount of paper pulp and sprinkle in some seeds, then mix it together briefly with your hands (sprinkling seeds on later is less effective — you need some paper fibers to surround the seeds and hold them in the paper). Press the moist pulp-seed mixture into the chosen cookie cutter, about 1/4″ thick.

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Then gently press your fingers along the paper pulp edges as you remove the cookie cutter so that the pulp mixture doesn’t lift away from the screen or pull away with the cookie cutter.seedpaperstepsC05-12-13

3. Lay a piece of felt on top of the pulp. On top of that place a sponge.

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4. Next, carefully press your hand onto the sponge to squeeze out excess water. Re-position the sponge as necessary.seedpaperstepsE05-12-13

You might need to periodically squeeze out water from the sponge itself as it absorbs some of the water.

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Be creative and combine colors however you like. Here you can see some flowers, one just before pressing out the water. You can even add bits of “intact” paper for decoration — scroll down to see the tree ornament for an example.

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seedpaperstepsF12-10-10We’ve made bunnies, stars, airplanes, holiday shapes, and even a rainbow trout for a fisherman. Technically, you don’t even need the cookie cutter — if you want to make a lizard or a dragon or a bumblebee but don’t have a cutter for it, just create one by hand!

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5. Be sure to let your creations dry well indoors– set out on paper plates or cardboard or on the window screen pieces and let them air dry for 2 or 3 days. Don’t dry them in the sun — this might encourage early germination of the seeds. Occasionally check for curling as the seed paper dries — if there is any curling, just flip the seed paper over while it is still slightly damp and gently press it down flat again. I like to flip the seed paper while it dries, anyway, whether it is curling or not.

6. To create seed cards, simply use a dot or two of white school glue to attach the fully-dried seed paper to the card of your choosing (perhaps use construction paper or card stock). To create ornaments, use a hole punch or the tip of scissors to carefully puncture a hole in the seed paper for an ornament hanger.seedpaperstepsM05-12-13

7. Finally, include planting instructions with your seed gift. Of course, you will want to adapt your note to match the type of seeds you used with your seed paper. Don’t forget to mention the type of seeds in the paper if you can, as well as the recommended season for planting!

By the way, this project is easy to do with small or large groups of kids. It’s fun for an outdoor event, too. Enjoy!

To learn more about other wildlife/nature projects for kids, as well as ways to connect kids with nature, just click here!

Wildlife Project: Building an Insect Hotel

One of our spring projects was to give a gift to pollinators and a boost to the ecosystem by building an insect hotel. This type of project is becoming increasingly popular, and it was our turn to make one, by gosh.MEOinsecthotel06-04-13

An insect hotel is a structure that offers native bees a place to build nests, a place for fireflies to lay their eggs, a place for lady beetles and butterflies and lacewings to seek shelter, and so on.

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Part of the fun is building it with natural and re-used (untreated) materials, so making one can be super cheap. Ours cost us the price of one 2′ x 4′ piece of plywood, just a few bucks (we could have brought that price down to zero if we had called friends for a spare scrap, but rain was coming and we had to speed up a couple of steps).

Insect hotels can be done very simply, just by stacking materials such as old boards, pallets, or bricks. This makes it possible for even young kids to help create a hotel (check out this link for a huge variety of other people’s insect hotels). An adult should make sure the structure is safe and secure, but kids can help fill the open spaces.

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But older kids and adults can really go to town to build the insect hotel of their dreams, so to speak. It can become a real-life math problem, a science project, and an engineering or art or architecture project all in one. Ours is somewhere in between simple and fancy. It LOOKS fancy, but it was remarkably simple — best of both worlds! So while there are lots of ways to build insect hotels, I’m just going to show you how we did ours.

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You start with what you have at home or can get for free — this makes every insect hotel unique (what a wonderful concept!). We had five things at home that made this project straightforward and easy to do. The first is that we had 12 vintage screen blocks our neighbor passed along to us a few years ago — we kept them until we could figure out a perfect project for them. We also had an assortment of bricks, decaying wood from one of our raised vegetable beds that was in need of repair, scrap pieces of 2×4 in the garage (for the roof), and lots of natural materials from our garden and yard (sticks, leaves, etc.).

The vintage blocks set the stage for the design, as they also set the height of the shelves. We spaced them just far enough to allow for potential partitions (we would use more decaying wood and some bricks to create these). To add just a bit of additional height, we used two layers of bricks as the base, then cut the veggie-bed wood to size to create the shelves. The reason for the height from the bricks was to be able to add leaf litter underneath the insect hotel to give toads a place to find shelter, caterpillars a place to overwinter, and lizards a place to lay eggs. I should probably mention that we also removed grass and laid down cardboard as a barrier to weeds (the cardboard will break down quickly but will block out light nicely for a while to keep weeds at bay).

insecthotelB05-14-13The roof was the only part where we used new wood, that 2×4 plywood I mentioned, plus some scrap wood lengths we had in the garage.

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You can see the basic roof design my kids and husband created to fit the hotel. This is the only piece that involved nails of any sort — everything else is stacked only.insecthotelE05-14-13

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The plywood was used to make shingles of a sort. A bit of caulk at the top filled the seam.

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Already at this point, a harvestman and a tiny orbweaver spider had moved in. Clearly they were eager for bug feasts to come.

insecthotelJ05-14-13I painted the top section using leftover paint from our house’s exterior — this makes the insect hotel fit the setting nicely, as it matches our house and the color scheme of our garden’s decorations. Of course, it rained that very night, so in the picture it looks dirty. Rain came again for a few days after that — I was so glad the roof was done.

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For filling the spaces, our priority was to create places for native bees to build their nests. We collected logs from the yard for this, using a chainsaw to cut them to an appropriate length. Following mason bee nest box instructions, we drilled holes 6″ deep into the wood (the deeper holes allow for female bee eggs — shallower ones produce male bees). So that we could add homemade paper liners to better protect the bees (again, following the advice of experienced mason bee keepers), we used a 3/8″ drill bit rather than the traditional 5/16.”insecthotelN06-04-13

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To make liners for the tubes, we cut parchment paper to about 3″ x 6″. These we rolled tightly with a pencil, then inserted them into the holes (they unrolled nicely inside to make a good liner). The liners bring the hole diameter to about the 5/16″ preferred by mason bees.

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The screen block was a perfect place to add additional places for nesting bees and other critters. A neighbor on our street is always happy for us to cut down the running bamboo that is invading her yard from her nearby neighbor’s property, so we gathered bamboo, trimmed off the branches, and sliced the bamboo into 6″ lengths of all diameters to fill the holes.
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Here we were casual about it — there are lots of different sizes for many species of insects interested in using the bamboo. Some were cut with the bamboo joint at one end, so they are open only from the opposite end (nice for shelter or nesting), while others are open at both ends, allowing an insect to pass into the main hotel structure if it desires.insecthotelH05-14-13

On the middle shelf of the insect hotel, we created partitions with bricks, then inserted rolled corrugated cardboard as lacewing shelters. insecthotelO06-04-13
Additional bricks, with the holes open from the front, protect the cardboard and insects while allowing easy passage for the critters to enter and exit. We also made “A”-shaped partitions simply by cutting more veggie-bed wood to size and sliding it in — no nails required.

Other materials used were decaying wood slices for firefly larvae, loosely placed coir fiber as a general shelter place for small insects, and twigs and pine cones and other wood bits for additional shelter. We filled the roof section with pine straw needles. Though we intended it for insects, it wouldn’t surprise me if Carolina Wrens or other birds will nest in the roof’s pine straw one day. They might think an insect hotel is a perfect place to build their home — convenient food on the spot!

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Of course, there was one more finishing touch needed. A grand-opening sign! We made use of some more rotting wood from the old veggie bed and some more outdoor paint, including outdoor acrylic, that we had on hand. We attached a supporting piece of wood to the back, then stuck the sign into a plant pot with some rocks (see top photos above).

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View from the back

The back of the insect hotel duplicates the front half, mainly because we liked the front so much.

We’re already seeing evidence of bees building nests, and other critters (including more little spiders) have moved in. What a simple but rewarding project! Though we could have finished this in just a day or two, we spread it out over time due to occasional rainstorms. The most time-consuming part, honestly, was drilling the holes in the logs. You have to take a lot of breaks to let the drill and drill bit cool down — they get hot!

To see a couple of other nifty Austin insect hotels, visit Sheryl’s tall, well-planned structure at Yard Fanatic and Vicki’s clever use of an antique bottle rack to make her uniquely awesome Bee B&B at Playin’ Outside. Another gorgeous insect hotel is Gail’s pollinator condo at Clay and Limestone in Tennessee. Remember to also check out the link at the top to get even more ideas!

Standing Cypress Love

I finally updated our list of plants growing in our garden. We’re up to 157 native species and counting! While I’m at it, let me mention that I’ve got a brand new page dedicated to wildlife projects for kids of all ages. These can be accessed any time from the sidebar. I’m feeling so productive!

standingcypressA05-2013I have to show off the current eye-catcher in the garden, Standing Cypress, Ipomopsis rubra. Tall spikes of brilliantly-colored flowers draw your attention quickly — show stoppers, they are!
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I grew these from seed, simply tossing them all over the front and back yards (which means I have them here, and there, and everywhere!). They are fun little biennial plants. Don’t expect blooms the first year — Year One will simply bring you small rosettes. Year Two is the exciting year — the little rosettes suddenly form growing stalks that keep growing… and growing and growing… and then they stop.

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Most of my Standing Cypress bloom stalks are taller than me, and there are quite a few that have reach 6-foot in height, making it fun to measure them against the men in our family. To give you a bit of a size perspective, I present to you in the photo above our Loki, who is much taller than your typical Husky (think wolf-size).standingcypressI05-2013

The red tubular blooms make this flower a favorite of… you guessed it… hummingbirds.standingcypressE05-2013

While I was outside taking photos, I could hear the familiar “buzzing” of lighting-fast hummingbird wings — I could tell our garden visitors were annoyed that I was standing near their beloved red blooms. Lucky for them, there are plenty of other flowers in bloom around the garden (and feeders, too). So they might have been annoyed with me but certainly not lacking in alternatives. While we have Standing Cypress all over the place, too, those in shade have not yet opened their buds (they are just really, really tall at the moment).

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Standing Cypress is generally considered a plant with red blooms, so we were pleasantly surprised to see that we got a few yellow specimens. What a treat!

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With luck, these lovely plants will naturally reseed, yellow ones included. standingcypressJ05-2013

Such a nice pop of color! That’s Damianita out in front. In this spot, later in the year, the White Mistflower and Lindheimer’s Senna will also add their own color. Hopefully some of the Standing Cypress will still be producing blooms at that time for a beautiful color medley.