20 April
At last, after numerous official guided visits, speeches, and a ribbon cutting attended by innumerable dignitaries, a return visit to the Hamilton Forest and Wetlands. It has become officially Hamilton Marsh Regional Park and Conservation Area. In addition to its newly conferred status among human governments, spring has come to the area, and the Forest gleams with new growth. Every spring, the salmon berry bushes are among the first to blossom. Ferns are beginning to sprout--the single shoot of bracken fern: and the clusters of lady fern. Vanilla leaf is appearing, providing us with a effective mosquito repellent when we forget to bring our own, and the dismissively named "false lilly of the valley," not yet in bloom, but abundant. I doubt very much that the plants intend deception--they will produce nice white clusters of blossom as the season advances. Kindbergia emerges from stumps, sprouting its beaked capsules. Along a branch path, ...