Signs of Fall: Wooly Bear Caterpillar

This insect  is a common sight in Raymore Park at this time of year inching its way along pathways and clearings. The freshly hatched wooly bear caterpillar is often seen moving along the ground looking for a hibernation spot. This one will pupate; in spring and its offspring will pupate in summer. Eggs from the summer generation hatch to become the overwintering caterpillar.

Pyrrharctia isabella; the banded wooly bear caterpillar

Pyrrharctia isabella; the banded wooly bear caterpillar trundling to a winter refuge.

These benign caterpillars have 13 segments and feed on plants such as clover and milkweed. Despite a spiky rather than wooly appearance, they contain no poison although handling them may trigger allergies in sensitive folk. If disturbed, they curl into a ball and stay still. Folk legends say that if the brown stripe on the caterpillar is narrow, winter will be cold and long. According to this little guy photographed today, we appear to be in for a mild time of things. The forecast is no doubt as accurate as those provided by Wiarton Willie. Regardless, this creature is able to manufacture its own anti-freeze and stop its heart before freezing solid during the winter. When spring arrives it thaws out and through metamorphosis, becomes a pupa and then a moth. Incredibly the Arctic version of the Wooly Bear Caterpillar needs several seasons to gather the food to become mature enough to pupate.

Signs of Fall: Black walnuts

Last night the first ground frost hit Raymore Park. This occurs when the temperature doesn’t go below zero but there is a touch of white on the grass. Hopefully the first air frost is some time away but there are unmistakeable signs of fall, even though most leaves are still green. One sign that is hard to miss is the fruit that seems to be everywhere. From crab apples to acorns, seeds for the next generation are ready to be distributed.

These exotic looking fruit are black walnuts.

These exotic looking fruit are black walnuts.

Black walnut trees are very common in Toronto and provide food for squirrels and the occasional curious human. They are native to Toronto but thrive in cold spots such as Quebec City because they avoid frost damage by leafing late in spring.  The walnuts themselves are surrounded by a fleshy outer skin and then an incredibly hard shell.

This walnut was run over by a car revealing the unbroken inner shell.

The walnut on the left was run over by a car revealing the unbroken inner shell.

Unlike Persian (aka English) walnuts that have been cultivated for millennia, black walnuts are pretty much as nature designed them and as a result are smaller and incrementally more difficult to harvest. Anyone who has attempted to extract a black walnut can only appreciate the skill and determination of squirrels. The trees dispense a natural herbicide called juglone which kills competing plants unlucky enough to be nearby. The toxicity is not isolated to plants; horses should be kept well away from black walnuts. Attempting to extract the nut from the flesh will leave hands turned dark orange by the chemical. The wood is much prized as a veneer.

Thanks to absent-minded squirrels, Raymore Park is a black walnut nursery with more and more planted every year. They grow quickly and can live on average 200 years. As time goes on, walnut trees will increasingly influence the variety of flora and fauna in the park.

Beautiful September day

It’s Sunday and after yesterday’s decent rainfall, the park is washed clean and cooler dryer air has pushed its way through. Today, a group of painters scattered themselves throughout the park to various locations and were tackling some landscapes.

This gentleman was just south of the Humber Creek. Hope he takes that can with him!

This gentleman was capturing the view just south of the Humber Creek. Hope he takes that can (near his tripod) with him!

Elsewhere, these tall yellow flowers are hitting their peak.

Ragwort, not to be mistaken for ragweed.

Balsam Ragwort.

Balsam Ragwort is a member of the aster family and may actually be native to the area.

Chicory and its distinctive blue flowers.

Chicory and its distinctive blue flowers by the Humber.

Chicory is an interesting plant. As with many wildflowers in Raymore Park, it is not native. Probably brought over by settlers from Europe, it has a taproot that after baking, can be finely chopped and used as a caffeine-free coffee substitute. Chicory has been substituted for the real  thing whenever coffee supplies have been interrupted such as in wartime. My mother lived through World War II and tolerated the occasional chicory coffee. Many people acquired a taste for chicory and retained the habit but she refused to drink it after the war, regarding it as a bit too much like ‘dishwater’.

Other varieties of chicory have leaves that can be used in salads, some variants being radicchio and Belgian endive.

Finally, some goldenrod – a sure sign of the approaching fall season. It looks like an allergy sufferer’s nightmare but in fact releases no pollen.

Goldenrod mixed in with some wild asters.

Goldenrod mixed in with some wild asters.

Tim Hortons and Corporate Responsibility

I don’t know what’s in Tim Hortons’ coffee but there must be an additive that makes some of their customers into irresponsible idiots. There’s a percentage of Timmies drinkers who seem to believe that nature will be enhanced by their discarded cup.

A sociopath was here.

A sociopathic calling card.

Now naturally you would think that Tim Hortons being a responsible Canadian corporation would be horrified that some customers are cavalier with their Timmie Trash™. After all, their mission  statement claims that ‘Our vision is to be the quality leader in everything we do.’ Given that, you might also think that the lid is made of biodegradable plastic. Wrong. Well at least the cups are paper and therefore biodegradable. Wrong again; they’re lined with plastic.

Tim Hortons must know that a significant percentage of its customers are tossers and that these cups degrade the visual and natural environment. They then become the responsibility of the taxpayer through street and park cleaning. They must also know that their refusal to use recyclable materials increases the burden on landfills. Tims apparently doesn’t care. If they did care, they would provide a meaningful percentage of profits towards solving the problem.

Back to our little nature lover who communed with nature this morning while enjoying a coffee. They had to pass a garbage can on the way out of the wild area. Even so, the thought of carrying the cup all the way back was too much and the cup had to be left for someone else (me).

Tosser!

Who’s poisoning the Humber?

After a prolonged dry spell, it’s rare that water in the Humber is cloudy. Today, water in the river had an unpleasant opacity to it. I’ve seen this happen before under similar conditions and attempted to trace the source on my bike but it seems to be well north of Weston. You can see the comparison between today (August 25th) and last Monday (19th).

Notice that the spill is recent as water close to the shore is still clear.

Notice that the spill is recent as water close to the shore is still clear.

For comparison, Monday's view of the same spot.

For comparison, Monday’s view of the same spot.

Raymore Park has a beach

There are over 1400 Toronto parks, some tiny postage stamps just a few square metres while others cover vast ranges. The best known, High Park covers 161 hectares (400 acres) while Mimico Waterfront Park has over a kilometre of shoreline. Raymore Park, while not well known is larger than most, but to me its appeal lies in the sheer variety of features and habitats tucked away in various corners. One such feature is formed just past the inside of a very sharp curve in the Humber. After a rainfall, heavier sediment in the form of sand is carried along until the water slows and the sand is deposited. The beach actually gets built up after each storm and has been there for many years.

Looking north; the curve of the river allows sandy sediments to be deposited here.

Looking north; the curve of the river allows sandy sediments to be deposited here.

So it’s not Bondi or Waikiki. It is however a quiet and scenic place to sit and reflect in the middle of a big city. If you stay quiet for a few minutes, you’ll be amazed at the wildlife that will appear – take your pick from toads, egrets, hawks, blue herons, mallards, mink, beaver, fox, coyote, deer etc.

Before Hurricane Hazel in 1954, the small community living here would use the beach in summer for picnics and as a way for children to cool off.

Looking south along the shoreline.

Looking south along the shoreline.

Cicadas are hatching

Unless you know what to look for (thanks, Codemonkey), the mysterious life cycle of the cicada happens without most people noticing. We can hear the electrical sounding buzzer noise that cicadas produce in late summer but where they come from is rarely given a second thought. Unlike their better known American cousins with 17-year life cycles, the ones seen in Toronto have 2-5 year cycles of birth and death. Ours are known as Dog-Day Cicadas, Harvestflies or formally, Tibicen Canicularis. The common names refer to the later days of summer in which they appear. Because their life cycles overlap, our cicadas appear every year.

From a human perspective, their life begins when they come up from burrows in the ground and climb a tree. They pump fluid into their abdomens which bursts open the exoskeleton from which they emerge.  At this final life stage, tiny wings are revealed. After a few minutes these wings inflate with blood and unfurl to grow larger than the insect itself. The adult cicada is now ready to fly.

This tree is a cicada adult hatching point.

This tree is a cicada adult hatching point with many exoskeletons visible.

This

A cicada emerging from its exoskeleton. The two sets of wings are unfurling.

This

Green blood can be seen circulating through the wings.

This

The cicada beside its old exoskeleton.

Adults can live for 5-6 weeks if they’re not picked off by birds and other predators. Most of the time, we can’t see them but we can certainly hear them. Males are the noisemakers and they produce that familiar deafening sound to attract a mate. Female cicadas carve slits in tree branches and lay their eggs. After hatching, nymphs drop to the ground. This first larval stage digs until reaching tree roots from which they feed, moulting several times before that last stage above ground some years later.

There is a folk legend that the first buzz of cicadas in late summer indicates there are only six weeks until frost.

What a depressing thought.

Fossils

When I was growing up in England I spent many a happy hour looking for fossils in Weardale, the upper reaches of the river Wear (pronounced as in weir). Raymore Park has lots of river bed in which to go fossil hunting, especially in summer when water levels drop. Many of these fossils date from the time 450 million years ago when Toronto was below the equator, covered by a shallow sea and the days were only 22.5 hours long (ah nostalgia).

Once you go fossil hunting, your eye develops a sense for it and you really don’t have to look very hard. The constant churning of the river brings new rocks to the surface so there are new discoveries to be made with every visit. Here are a few that I photographed along the Humber the other day without too much effort.

Trilobite

A cephalopod, ancestor of squid and octopus.

Trilobite

Another cephalopod

Calcium

This limestone rock possibly washed downstream from the upper reaches of the Humber contains the fossils of hundreds of creatures.

Worm tracks on a rippled surface.

Worm tracks on a rippled surface.

It’s a great adventure for kids to be able to find fossils and look at these exotic sea creatures who made their mark (literally) hundreds of millions of years ago.

Anomalies

A couple of shots illustrate one of the habitats in Raymore Park.

A bull thistle stands guard over a field of queen anne's lace.

A bull thistle stands guard over a field of Queen Anne’s lace.

The field in question will be a small wood in a few years thanks to native saplings in place for several years. For now, weeds and wildflowers are enjoying the space. Bull thistles are not native but seem to be the most common thistle in Raymore Park. Members of the aster family they propagate by seeds alone. The roots and leaves are edible with some preparation.

Queen Anne's lace

This Queen Anne’s lace has a tiny red flower.

Another foreign invader (from Europe), Queen Anne’s lace is a member of the carrot family and the root is edible. Being a biennial plant, it flowers and dies in its second year. Insects love QAL and so it can’t be all bad.