We met at Beacon Hill the sky's predicted doom but there is no cloud that is dark enough to ward us off from botanizing and no soul too old to not embrace the day and charge forward and so cheer we heaved ourselves up in a high bukkie knowing fully well that we could be drenched and the vessel we found ourselves sitting in which offered no shelter nor comfort could become a pool in which we would find ourselves like floating fish. We set off being bumped about over dirt wet roads and observed that degraded sugar-cane fields that once were prime where slowly rehabilitating themselves even though they were being grazed by cattle. We'd never seen Dissotis canescens flower in such vast fields. They have appreciated the high-water table.
As we drove into the reserve one's eye's which would normally want to look at animals searched for flowers and what a sight we saw. Pachycarpus grandiflorus subsp. grandiflorus which is our endemic flowered in colonies and we could easily count to ten. Tephrosia polystachya stood out in mass. They looked like the Southern Cross scattered in the veld.
On
the forest's edge we found the Homalium
rufescens, a South African endemic and a tree we seldom come
across. Once in the forest we came encountered Premna mooiensis which is also known as the Skunk bush, and Skunk
bush it was. It's
certainly not going to make it into the perfumery industry other than to ward
off another.
We came across Cryptocarya myrtifolia which is Vulnerable
A2cd and one's eye caught the blue tinge on the under-side of the leaves. Eugenia
erythrophylla is Near Threatened B1ab(iii,v) and a lot of laughs came as the Eugenia species
are causing a lot of head scratching and headaches. Dorothy pointed out
the hairy pockets in the vein axils of Chionanthus foveolatus
subsp. tomentellus and the
forest floor was scattered with the rare Faurea
macnaughtonii. Rinorea domatiosa is also
one of our rare and endemic species in South Africa.
In the forest we came across two species of Streptocarpus and the Rhipidoglossum xanthopollinium where in flower. Attached to the rock surface flowered the gentle Stenoglottis fimbriata subsp. fimbriata.
This
truly is a special reserve and what a privilege it is to be able to explore it
with women and men of wisdom who are willing to share their knowledge. We
are all students no matter the age if one's willing to learn and grow.
Stenoglottis fimbriata subsp. fimbriata ORCHIDACEAE |
Open air taxi. Dorothy, Gail and Hillary with Simon checking in on his passengers. |
Let's rattle and roll. Action, camera, ready. |
Ready, steady, GO! |
Alepidea peduncularis APIACEAE |
Aloe linearifolia ASPHODELACEAE |
Bulbophyllum scaberulum var. scaberulum ORCHIDACEAE Photo credit: Simon |
Hairy pockets |
Chionanthus foveolatus subsp. tomentellus OLEACEAE Photo credit: Dorothy |
Clausena anisata var. anisata RUTACEAE |
Blue tinge on under-side of leaves. |
Cryptocarya myrtifolia LAURACEAE Vulnerable A2cd |
Cryptocarya woodii LAURACEAE |
Dermatobotrys saundersii SCROPHULARIACEAE |
Drypetes arguta PUTRANJIVACEAE |
Encephalartos villosus ZAMIACEAE Photo credit: Simon |
Eugenia erythrophylla MYRTACEAE Near Threatened B1ab(iii,v) |
Eugenia sp. C MYRTACEAE |
Faurea macnaughtonii PROTEACEAE Rare |
Homalium rufescens SALICACEAE South African endemic |
Margaritaria discoidea PHYLLANTHACEAE |
Red glandular tips on serrated leaf margin. |
Maytenus cordata CELASTRACEAE |
Pachycarpus grandiflorus subsp. grandiflorus APOCYNACEAE South African endemic |
Peperomia retusa PIPERACEAE |
Plectranthus sp LAMIACEAE |
Premna mooiensis LAMIACEAE |
Rhipidoglossum xanthopollinium ORCHIDACEAE |
Rinorea domatiosa VIOLACEAE Rare South African endemic |
Smilax anceps SMILACACEAE |
Streptocarpus sp. GESNERIACEAE |
Tephrosia polystachya FABACEAE |
Tricalysia capensis var. capensis RUBIACEAE |
Triumfetta pilosa MALVACEAE |
Wahlenbergia huttonii CAMPANULACEAE |
Tracy appreciating the Pachycarpus grandiflorus subsp. grandiflorus |
Heading home and pausing in the drizzle to capture the flowers. |
Zanthoxylum davyi RUTACEAE |
Pondoland CREW! Hillary, Tracy, Maggie, Simon, Dorothy and Gai “Adopt the pace of nature: her secret is patience.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson |