Lucky me because I have a friend who volunteers at Selby Gardens, and she gave me her guest pass today. What a treat! It was far more enjoyable than my last free visit to Selby when the rest of Sarasota was also invited for free. I’ll shell out the $17 admission before dragging my family to that mob scene a second time. But lucky me again since John and Cooper are always such good sports.
The white flowers in the first photo are commonly known as Musical Notes. Their less fitting scientific name is Rotheca incisa. I’ve never seen them before, one reason to never tire of visiting Selby Gardens or any other garden for that matter. You never know what will be blooming.
Forget the best table in town. This week, we traded a picnic table for a private island. The three of us plus Luke piled into the Koopa II and cruised to a county park in the middle of Sarasota Bay. It’s the same island that the Sarasota Bay Explorers stops at on their Sea Life Encounter Cruise and is located South of the North Bridge. It’s a pack-in, pack-out park; there are no garbage cans.
Although there’s another island up toward Longboat Key with the same name, and probably countless others wherever water and teenagers exist, John calls this spot Beer Can Island. When he was in high school, it cost five bucks to catch a ride from shore and party all night. The island has been cleaned up since and doesn’t actually allow booze or dogs any more, but we didn’t know that when we packed the boat.
There were no other human visitors on the island but plenty of flyers and four-leggeds. The bunny had us pondering how it got there, and the Anhingas had us wishing they’d be quiet.
My camera batteries had died by then, but we caught sunset on the way home…best picnic yet!
I should have one. We have a monstrous plant growing in one of our squares that I thought was a zucchini growing up from the compost. Now I think it’s a squash that I may have planted. Hmmm. It could be self-sowed. We had a squash plant there two summers ago that flowered but never fruited. Still, I’m leaning toward seeds now because I found this ripped open seed packet.
The seed packet leaves the candidates at Butternut, Spaghetti, Acorn, or Lakota squash. Only time will tell now…
I took a bit of an e-break over the past few days – not entirely, I still Googled random things that absolutely had to be seen or known right on the spot. But if it wasn’t work or curiosity related, it was off the to-do list. It was nice, and my recipes finally got organized as a bonus. But one thing that got neglected off the grid was my weekly picnic post.
John and I met last Friday at what could be the best table in town and is positively the table that inspired this series – Drive into Bird Key Park and take a right; the table is straight ahead. It was a table for two this week since Luke is still in quarantine following the flea incident. I had to leave from the office, and he’s not allowed near any carpet other than our house, which is unfortunately unavoidable.
So for this post, Lukey will be played by a wet poodle that I found fascinating. He greeted us with his big, sopping wet self the minute we got to our table, and I immediately found the pun of a wet poodle dampening our lunch over a wet noodle hilarious. After that I was pretty much just envying his life…life is good for wet poodles…
Wading…
Kayaking…
Fetch.
We missed the paddleboarders but spotted plenty of other water-lovers.
Another picnic in paradise…life is good for me too.
Yesterday’s discovery was fleas; today it was bees. I woke up this Wednesday morning with a craving for a hot, homemade donut…too bad it’s May. The Phillippi Farmhouse Market only runs November through April, but I forgot that, so a trip to the market turned into a nature walk. Running into this sign made up for the donut disappointment.
Another bonus was a healthier breakfast - an egg bought from King Family Farm and Market. Colorful eggs are the best kind; this one had a blue shell and an orange yolk.
To visit the bees, walk the Hammock Trail at Phillippi Estate Park in Sarasota, Florida. Find the flagged tree and look up.
Karma truly is a bitch. Back when I was a carefree twenty-something, I spent a summer road tripping with my dog, Bobo. He was a great traveling partner. We spent a couple weeks in Myrtle Beach and the rest of the summer in New York with my mother. This is the same mother once described on this very blog as“the most unlikely and absolute animal-hater I know,”and Bobo was no exception.
But again, I was young, about 22 at the time; it really didn’t occur to me that my mother might be bothered by the presence of a slobbering 100-plus pound black Labrador in her house. A couple times I stayed out too late, and she had to walk him. Then the bright green from his bag of dog food somehow bled onto her wall in the kitchen. But neither of these offenses were as bad as our parting gift of fleas.
I headed back to Florida with my young, fun, oblivious self and left my mother itching, scratching and wanting to kill me and my big dog too. This is where Bobo’s traveling companionship really shined - since he was the ultimate host, the fleas never bothered me. I had no idea he had fleas until my mother told me. I never saw a flea in either my car or apartment and certainly never had one on my body…until this morning.
The last house I lived in is now a rental. I was over there this morning to take care of the yard. The grass has transitioned from its winter to summer growing schedule, but my mowing schedule hasn’t caught up yet. The lawn was starting to overtake the garden bed that lines the front walkway. As I pulled back some of the grass, my legs were suddenly covered with black bugs. I quickly brushed them off, completely disgusted by the swarm action but still unaware of what they were.
After the lawn was mowed, I realized whatever they were had feasted on my legs. There were so many red splotches that they looked more like a rash than bug bites. But it wasn’t until I got Luke from the backyard that I knew they were fleas. Bobo was all black; Luke has enough white fur to spot fleas from a distance. Still, there’s always a hint of denial in situations such as these, so I gave his back a good back and forth rub with both hands to see if the black specks were just dirt. He does love rolling around in stuff.
But dirt doesn’t bite, and I could feel the fleas on my hands and wrists. He couldn’t get in the car; he was completely covered. So thinking I was flea-free, I left Luke in the backyard and drove to the house to get his shampoo. This is the text I sent John while stopped at the very first light just around the corner, “I’m freaking out…I have fleas. They’re on me!” There was one on my sock and another on my shoulder laddering up to my hair.
I stripped at the door and immediately showered. I gathered Luke’s bath supplies and sprinkled Borax in my car to dry out any potential eggs. I thought I was safe. Once again, I’m stopped at a light and there it is - one lone flea lurking above the visor and my head. But Luke had it far worse than a few lingering fleas. It took three vigorous scrub downs at the rental house to get them all off and when we got home I saw two more. It was straight to the tub for Lukey.
Luke was traumatized by the bathing; I’m traumatized by the phantom itching. It doesn’t matter that we’re showered and flea-free; my skin is still crawling. So this is for my mother: I’m sorry. Although it was said 10+ years ago, I’ve never meant it more than today.
Last night I couldn’t keep my eyes open, and tonight they won’t shut. It’s now past midnight, a seemingly appropriate time to blog about my new friend, the juvenile Yellow Crowned Night Heron.
John and I spotted him within our first three steps on the Sarasota Bay Walk last week. It took a bit longer to identify him. Neither one of us could ever remember seeing a bird like this before. At first, my books and image searches led me to an immature Reddish Egret. But after looking closely, the beaks didn’t match up. The Reddish Egret’s beak is much thinner than the Yellow Crowned Night Heron’s.
Then I saw a picture of a Louisiana Heron. The markings on its neck looked similar; and despite its name, the Louisiana Heron is also a common bird in Florida, North Carolina and Texas. But again the beak wasn’t quite right. When I finally came across a picture of a juvenile Yellow Crowned Night Heron, its beak and feathers gave it away immediately. The beak is shorter and thicker than most other water birds around here, and the feathers look like they’ve been given a French manicure. The blue feathers are outlined in white.
It’s not surprising our first spotting was on the bay walk. The area was restored to a tidal habitat. Tidal habitats are hunting grounds for Yellow Crowned Night Herons, and like the Louisiana Heron, their name is misleading. It’s not uncommon to spot them during the day.
Fitting a picnic into the middle of the workweek can be tough, so yesterday we snuck a quick-nic into our routine. Cooper gets out of school early on Wednesdays; instead of just one of us heading up to Lakewood Ranch, we both went. We grabbed a giant sub from Sweetbay, a hungry Cooper from school, and popped over to Adventure Park. We walked the main trail but never found a picnic table…a seat and a view is all you need.
Adventure Park is in the Greenbrook section of Lakewood Ranch. It has nature trails, ball fields, a paw park, and a outdoor roller rink…but quick-nics don’t allow for much exploring or photography. Although these birds were really making themselves known. They squawked non-stop; I had to get at least one shot.
But it was quickly on to grocery shopping, so we were off to King Family Farm and Market. In addition to blueberries, zucchini and the rest of our produce for the week, we picked up local cherry clams for dinner and eggs for the morning.
Beyond our picnic at Ken Thompson Park on Saturday, our weekend was mainly filled with movies and naps. It was wonderful…until Monday. Because then, all the things that should have been done over the weekend were glaring at me – the knee-high grass especially. So I complained to John last night, dusting off a vague recollection of him saying he would mow the grass last week, and woke up to this.
I recently spotted an American Painted Lady butterfly for the first time. It was flitting around the yellow tickseed at King Farm. Scientifically known as Coreopsis, tickseed was named Florida’s state wildflower in 1991; there are 13 native species of Coreopsis throughout the state.
The American Painted Lady is different from the Painted Lady butterfly. As with the American version, I’ve only ever seen one Painted Lady; it was at a butterfly farm in New York. There were hundreds of Monarchs under the tent and only one Painted Lady:
The two butterflies look very similar but have two distinguishing traits – their orange color and hindwing eye spots. The orange wings of the Painted Lady are paler than those of the American Painted Lady, and the Painted Lady has four small eye spots on its hindwings. The American Painted Lady has two large eye spots on its hindwings.
In Gardening for Florida’s Butterflies, Pamela F. Traas says, “The best way to attract American lady butterflies to your garden is to plant large masses of the same nectar plant” (36). That could be why I spotted this one at King Farm. There was a huge patch of Coreopsis in one spot. Tickseed is in the Aster family. In addition to providing nectar, plants in the Aster family, along with a few cudweed species, are host plants for American Painted Ladies.
Traas, Pamela F. Gardening for Florida’s Butterflies. St. Petersburg, FL: Great Outdoors Publishing Company, 1999.