Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Pale arrivals



One of my favorite moments of the year — the emergence of Monotropa uniflora, familiarly known as Indian pipes. They've waited out the spring, and with the first days of summer they pop up in little clusters here and there among last year's fallen leaves, in decent abundance if it's a good year and you know where to look. True flowering plants, they don't photosynthesize but take their energy from an association with fungi concealed in the ground, often in the vicinity of beech trees. They rise and unfurl, and as summer wears on fade into inconspicuous brown stalks. But for now, standing there ghostly white or faintly pink, silent, inoffensive, they seem welcome and restorative.

2 comments:

Madeline said...

I drew that first picture. https://www.instagram.com/p/BWnINftFa9YxYNpyAFNbLvgA5CGJulBrrvG1O80/?taken-by=madelinebourque

Chris said...

It looks much better as a drawing!