Saturday, November 11, 2017

Black & White

Stormy Sunday
While strawberry picking at Adam's Farm, a storm rolled in, giving us a good soaking and a photo opportunity.
 Cathedral Bells 4
Aka Purple Cup and Saucer Vine, monastery bells, Mexican ivy. (Cobaea Scandens)
This photo is of flowers on their way out and still very beautiful.

 Me & My Shadow
 Friends On A Beautiful Autumn Afternoon
 Winter Fencline
 Icy Light
Weather Vane On The Barn
Snow Caps On Sedum
Crow 
 Princess Of The Leaves
Squirrel On A Fence
Dahlias Beautiful, even in black & white.
Water Lilys As Art In Black & White with Special Effects.

My photographs are available for purchase through EliseCreations.net
Thanks for your visits, favs and comments. As always, appreciated very much!
© all rights reserved by Elise T. Marks. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Monarch Butterfly On A White Zinnia

Monarch Butterfly On A White Zinnia

They say that the name Butterfly is of unknown origin, but I believe that they were originally called Flutterbys, as I like to call them, and that someone (perhaps a child), probably mispronounced it, and it stuck. They are fascinating creatures who take to the air on gossamer wings. They've come to symbolize metamorphosis. These remarkable pollinators display a diversity of colors and patterns.

My photographs are available for purchase through EliseCreations.net
Thanks for your visits, favs and comments. As always, appreciated very much!
© all rights reserved by Elise T. Marks. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

ARROWHEAD

 ARROWHEAD/DUCK-POTATO Sagittaria spp. 
Common arrowhead or Duck-potato is a colony-forming, aquatic  perennial, rising above water level to a height of 3 ft. Members of the Water-Plantain Family grow in water, in swamps, on muddy banks, or occasionally in wet sand. 
 The rhizomes, young leaves, young shoots and young inflorescences are all edible, but it is the corms that are most widely valued for food. Arrowheads are also important sources of food for ducks and geese.
Arrowhead tubers were high valued food sources for Native North Americans who consumed them raw, boiled, dried, baked, roasted, mashed, ground into flour, or candied with maple sugar. Be sure to only eat from arrowhead plants growing in unpolluted waters. To gather the tubers, use your hands or feet to follow the rhizomes that extend out from the center of the plant’s roots in the mud and water. Remove the tuber growing at the end of each rhizome. Scrub the tubers clean and them boil them in salted water for 15 minutes. Though the skin is edible arrowhead tubers are more palatable when peeled. The best times for collecting tubers is in fall or early spring.
A number of tribes are known to have used the arrowhead plant for medicinal purposes. The Navajo used the arrowhead plant to treat headaches, the Ojibwa ate the corms (tubers) for indigestion, and the Algonquin of Quebec used the root to treat tuberculosis.

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© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED BY ELISE T. MARKS. PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS IMAGE ON WEBSITES, BLOGS OR ANY OTHER MEDIA WITHOUT MY EXPLICIT WRITTEN PERMISSION.

Monday, October 23, 2017

Purple Cup and Saucer Vine

Purple Cup and Saucer Vine 
Aka Cathedral Bells, monastery bells, Mexican ivy.
(Cobaea Scandens) 
A fairy tale vine with flowers that will scale a trellis quickly in warm weather and will be covered by midsummer all the way until frost with lovely 3" violet purple flaring bell flowers that glow in the late afternoon sun and evening light.
From Central and South America
 
Cathedral Bells

Cathedral Bells Going To Seed

MY PHOTOGRAPHS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE THROUGH ELISECREATIONS.ARTFIRE.COM
THANKS FOR YOUR VISITS, FAVS AND COMMENTS. AS ALWAYS, APPRECIATED VERY MUCH!
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Monday, October 16, 2017

Virginia Virgin's-bower

Virginia Virgin's-bower, 
Clematis virginiana L.
(also known as devil's darning needlesdevil's hairlove vinetraveller's joyvirgin's bowerwild hops, and woodbine), and is the most common clematis in New England.
Attracts: Hummingbirds & Bees. 
Medicinal: An extract of the stems was used as a wash to induce strange dreams by the Iroquois. It is a hallucinogen. Aboriginals used this plant as medicine for many purposes. The Cherokee used an infusion of this with milkweed (Asclepias) to treat backache, as well as using it in ceremonial medicine to induce dreaming. They also used it as an ingredient in ceremonial green corn medicine. An infusion of the root is taken for stomach trouble and nerves. An infusion taken from the root was used to kidney trouble by the Cherokee and the Iroquois. The Iroquois also used and infusion of the roots to treat veneral disease sores.
Warning: All parts are POISONOUS. The toxic foliage is avoided by mammalian herbivores. However, the foliage of Virgin's Bower can provide significant cover and nesting habitat for many songbirds.

MY PHOTOGRAPHS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE THROUGH ELISECREATIONS.ARTFIRE.COM
THANKS FOR YOUR VISITS, FAVS AND COMMENTS. AS ALWAYS, APPRECIATED VERY MUCH!
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED BY ELISE T. MARKS. PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS IMAGE ON WEBSITES, BLOGS OR ANY OTHER MEDIA WITHOUT MY EXPLICIT WRITTEN PERMISSION.