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Fall at Vista Farm

Home EcologyFall at Vista Farm
Chinese Tallow
Chinese Tallow, Triadica sebifera, tree with beautiful fall colors.

Fall at Vista Farm

October 24, 2019 Posted by Judy Darby Ecology, Trees, Uncategorized

Fall might be my favorite time of the year at Vista Farm. After a sweltering South Louisiana summer, the cool nights and pleasantly warm days are a blessing. The old Catahoula cur is out running after squirrels and rabbits. The meadow is gold and white with late blooming asters. The sky is deep, clear blue.

Narrowleaf Sunflower, Helianthus angustifolius
Narrowleaf Sunflower, Helianthus angustifolius, abundant in the sunny flatwood meadow.

The colors are just stunning. Deep in the swamp we don’t get much color in our leaves. They go from green to brown overnight. But a few species like the Red Maples are showy.

Red Maple, Acer rubrum, growing beside the pond with the lower limbs hanging over the water. Beautiful.

Say what you will about Chinese Tallow–most people would rid the whole country of this non-native, invasive tree. It takes seven years for it to produce seeds, giving you plenty of chances to chop it down. If you let it produce you will NEVER get rid of the seedlings. This thing is prolific beyond belief. If you chop down a mature Tallow, little volunteers will pop up around it until you dig up the stump or poison it. On the other hand, its leaves are gorgeous in the fall and from the nectar its flowers produce come a fine quality honey made by bees who love this tree. It’s a real dilemma for me, but I err on the side of chopping them down at least a lot of them.

Chinese Tallow, Triadica sebifera
Chinese Tallow, Triadica sebifera, growing all over the place. Chop! Chop!

Look around. Even if you don’t have colorful leaves the signs of fall are all around you. The squirrels are stocking up for winter in every hollow tree.

Eastern Gray Squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis
Eastern Gray Squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis

The migratory Yellow Rump Warblers are back in the Wax Myrtles. Caterpillars have started making their cocoons.

Cocoon
Cocoon made by some unknown species of butterfly on the seed head of a sunflower.

It’s a beautiful time of the year.

Tags: AutumnChinese TallowCocoonecologyecosystemfallflatwoodGray SquirrelhabitatLouisianameadownativeRed MapleseasonspeciessunflowerVista Farmwetlandwildlife
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About Judy Darby

Judy Darby is a photographer and freelance writer in Madisonville, Louisiana. Originally from Ruston, Louisiana, she lived in Weston, Connecticut for more than 20 years before moving to south Louisiana where she met her long-time significant other, Noel Brumfield, a U.S. Coast Guard licensed 100-ton captain. Judy exchanged a 15-acre tract on Interstate 20 in Ruston for Vista Farm in 2005 and is turning it into a protected habitat for small wildlife and native plants.

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