Saturday, April 18, 2009

My "head-clearing" hike

After receiving the devastating news this week that I may lose my beautiful, big science room at the school where I have taught for the past 13 years (due to funding changes), I had to get out in nature and clear my head on Friday. There is nothing like a good hike in the woods to help take your mind off negative thoughts! Kenny and I took off for Haw Ridge (a local greenway) at 1:00 p.m. and got off the trail at 6:00 p.m., with 20 miles of hiking trails there, it isn't hard to spend a lot of time there.

The first distracting thing I found was in the parking lot before we even started our hike! It was a fly on a Redbud flower that didn't move even as I got closer. I zoomed in on it with my macro lens and noticed white fuzz coming from its abdomen. (The photo is a bit out of focus, the wind was blowing!) I knew immediately that it had been infected with a fungus. The fungus is like something out of a science fiction / horror movie. It grows throughout the fly's body, consuming it as it grows. Before it sprouts the reproductive spores, it affects the brain, causing the fly to crawl to the end of a branch or a blade of grass. After the fly dies, the white sporangia burst from its body to release spores that may eventually infect another fly, completing the cycle! Later on up the trail, I saw an ant dragging something across the ground. It was a dead wood roach (right)! It was amazing to watch the ant pulling another insect that was larger than itself! How is that for pest control!?

The wildflowers are quite pretty at Haw Ridge. I enjoyed seeing the violets, phlox, trillium, Spring Beauty, Rue Anemone and others. The Puccoon (left) was in full bloom on the trail in the cedar barrens. Once I saw a Zebra Swallowtail butterfly on one of the flowers, but it didn't stay still long enough to get it in focus. Later I did manage to snap one photo when one landed on a maple leaf. The last time I took a photo of one of these butterflies was when it was on a kid's shoe at science camp last year! They are not the most cooperative butterflies to photograph!

We stopped at a picnic table along one of the trails to eat lunch. After our break we resumed our hike. I noticed a single leaf growing out of the ground with a knobbed spike next to it. I immediately recognized it as an Adder's Tongue Fern (left). I had only seen them before at Frozen Head State Park. It doesn't look anything like a typical fern leaf. I was surprised I had never seen it at Haw Ridge before since we had hiked there so many times. When we hiked up Saddle (a moderately rated trail in a valley between two steep trails), we enjoyed seeing an amazing number of wildflowers. The Foamflower was especially pretty growing in masses along the little stream (right). I was also happy to see the beautiful pink Pinxterflower (a wild azalea) in bloom on top of the ridge. They are not a very common flower, so it is always a treat to find them in bloom. They have a lovely aroma too.

I felt a bit better after the hike, but I'm still heartbroken about the possiblity of losing my room. It may have to be used to become another 4th grade classroom and I would be moved into what was the old boys' locker room on the far end of the school by the gym. The room is much smaller than what I have now, there's no storage room and the windows are so high I wouldn't see anything but the top of a tree. It would be like making someone living in a beautiful, spacious mansion in a great neighborhood pack up everything they own and move into a shack high in the mountains next to an ugly coal mine with no neighbors nearby!

Monday, April 13, 2009

Easter Virgin Falls hike

After a very stormy Friday and a cool, drizzly Saturday, Kenny and I were ready to do some hiking. I'd been wanting to go to Virgin Falls State Natural Area (80 miles west of here in White County) for a long time, it had been 8-1/2 years since we last hiked there. Even that much time could not erase the memories of how difficult the trail was, but due to the recent rains, I knew the falls would be very nice. It took it nearly 2 hours to drive down there, so we got on the trail at 11:00 a.m. I was glad I had printed directions to the trailhead from the state website because it was a bit tricky to find. This trail is an 8-mile loop that starts high and ends down in the bottom of the gorge next to the Caney Fork River. This is opposite of most of the trails in the Smokies, you start low and end up high (meaning you get to go back down when you are tired and your feet are beginning to hurt); at Virgin Falls you have to hike up steep, often muddy trails at the end of the trip.

The amazing thing about the 3 major waterfalls along that trail is that they all drop into a cave and disappear! Virgin Falls (above) comes out of Virgin Falls Cave (right) in the middle of a cliff and plunges 110 feet into another cave below to finally emerge into the nearby Caney Fork River. The light contrast made the shot of the water emerging from the cave very tricky.

The other two waterfalls are Big Laurel Falls (left) and Sheep Falls (right) that are seen from the trail on the way to Virgin Falls. It is possible to walk behind Big Laurel Falls due to the large cave it flows into. Sheep Falls can be seen from a distance as it tumbles from a cave in the cliffside and down into another cave below.

The beginning of the trail was devoid of wildflowers, I was starting to think it was going to be pretty dull. But as we descended into the gulf (as the "gorges" around here are called) we began to see a wonderful variety, including: many of the flowers I saw at Frozen Head on Sat., Fire Pink, Golden Round-leaf Ragwort, Dwarf Crested Iris, Bishop's Cap and even some Green Violets (in bud).


Fire Pink (left)
Bishop's Cap (right)









I will be adding a Virgin Falls gallery to my website soon, so check it for more photos!