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#shadbush
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jadafitch · 1 year
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Blue Jay on Shadbush
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0erpro · 1 year
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Time for best boi Goh
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Goh and the Shadbush are a really good mashup and I had some fun with this drawing
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Sketch below!
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fheskohdak · 1 year
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azql5mzjp · 1 year
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joeinct · 1 month
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Shadbush. Near Hillsborough, New Hampshire, Photo by Eliot Porter, 1957
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fatehbaz · 1 year
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Saskatoon, Juneberry, Shadbush, Shadblow, Sugarplum, Sarvis, Serviceberry -- these are among the many names for Amelanchier. Ethnobotanists know that the more names a plant has, the greater its cultural importance. The tree is beloved for its fruits, for medicinal use, and for the early froth of flowers that whiten woodland edges at the first hint of spring. Serviceberry is known as a calendar plant, so faithful is it to seasonal weather patterns. Its bloom is a sign that the ground has thawed and that the shad are running upstream -- or at least it was back in the day when rivers were clear and free enough to support their spawning. The derivation of the name “Service” from its relative Sorbus (also in the Rose Family) notwithstanding, the plant does provide myriad goods and services. Not only to humans but to many other citizens. It is a preferred browse of Deer and Moose, a vital source of early pollen for newly emerging insects, and host to a suite of butterfly larvae -- like Tiger Swallowtails, Viceroys, Admirals, and Hairstreaks -- and berry-feasting birds who rely on those calories in breeding season.
In Potawatomi, it is called Bozakmin, which is a superlative: the best of the berries. [...]
For me, the most important part of the word Bozakmin is “min,” the root for “berry.” It appears in our Potawatomi words for Blueberry, Strawberry, Raspberry, even Apple, Maize, and Wild Rice. The revelation in that word is a treasure for me, because it is also the root word for “gift.” [...] When we speak of these not as things or products or commodities, but as gifts, the whole relationship changes. [...] I accept the gift from the bush and then spread that gift with a dish of berries to my neighbor, who makes a pie to share with his friend, who feels so wealthy in food and friendship that he volunteers at the food pantry. You know how it goes.
To name the world as gift is to feel one’s membership in the web of reciprocity.  [...] How we think ripples out to how we behave. If we view these berries, or that coal or forest, as an object, as property, it can be exploited as a commodity in a market economy. We know the consequences of that.
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Text by: Robin Wall Kimmerer. “The Serviceberry: An Economy of Abundance.” Emergence Magazine. 26 October 2022.
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🐸 HAPPY FULL PINK MOON! Typically in my region, the full moon in May carries the last chance of frost, but when the full Moon 🌝 arrives late in April, it frequently marks the same. Because spring can be fickle, there is also a long history of looking to botanical indicators like Shadbush (Amalanchier canadensis) and Dogwood blooming, and the time when oak leaves grow to the size of a mouses ear 🐭 to insure safe planting. This full moon can offer a safe time to plant cold tolerant greens and herbs like borage, calendula, fennel, spinach, lettuce, kale, collards etc.
And don't forget to get out tonight along with the peepers and celebrate the full Moon and the arrival of spring with a howl or dance around the fire!
The Heirloom Gardener John Forti
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grubloved · 2 years
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Saskatoon, Juneberry, Shadbush, Shadblow, Sugarplum, Sarvis, Serviceberry—these are among the many names for Amelanchier. Ethnobotanists know that the more names a plant has, the greater its cultural importance. The tree is beloved for its fruits, for medicinal use, and for the early froth of flowers that whiten woodland edges at the first hint of spring. [...]
In Potawatomi, it is called Bozakmin, which is a superlative: the best of the berries. I agree with my ancestors on the rightness of that name. [...]
For me, the most important part of the word Bozakmin is “min,” the root for “berry.” It appears in our Potawatomi words for Blueberry, Strawberry, Raspberry, even Apple, Maize, and Wild Rice. The revelation in that word is a treasure for me, because it is also the root word for “gift.” In naming the plants who shower us with goodness, we recognize that these are gifts from our plant relatives, manifestations of their generosity, care, and creativity. When we speak of these not as things or products or commodities, but as gifts, the whole relationship changes. I can’t help but gaze at them, cupped like jewels in my hand, and breathe out my gratitude.
 In the presence of such gifts, gratitude is the intuitive first response. The gratitude flows toward our plant elders and radiates to the rain, to the sunshine, to the improbability of bushes spangled with morsels of sweetness in a world that can be bitter.
Robin Wall Kimmerer, The Serviceberry, for Emergence magazine, December 10, 2020
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🍂 Happy Autumn Equinox! 🍂
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jadafitch · 3 months
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New England native shrub patterns, in spring and autumn. Featuring some lepidoptera species hosted by the plants, in their larval and adult forms. For a project that's been 4 years in the works… More details soon. Mountain Holly Northern Wild Raisin American Mountain Ash Shadbush with Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly Beaked Hazelnut with Luna Moth Staghorn Sumac with Spring Azure Butterfly Red-osier Dogwood with Cecropia Moth American Witch Hazel with Eastern Tent Moth Pussy Willow with Mourning Cloak Butterfly Gray Alder with Banded Tussock Moth Big-fruit Hawthorn with Viceroy Butterfly Winterberry Holly
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lyeekha · 1 month
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shad? shadberry, shadbush? tastes like a blueberry plum
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Dryad Creation: Art Block Support
Use the Random Number Generator to help you choose a tree or plant that you can create a dryad from.
Boab/Baobab Tree
Eucalyptus Tree (Any including Rainbow Eucalyptus)
Wattle Tree
Palm Tree
Blue Jacaranda Tree
Dragon Blood Tree
Oak Tree
Mistletoe
Nightshade
Beech Tree
Pine Tree (Any)
Ajuga
Japanese Cherry or Maple Tree
Maple Tree (Any)
Rhododendron
Willow Tree
Wattle Tree
Tibetan Cherry Tree
Shadbush
Lantana
Silky Oak
Bamboo
American Chestnut
Poison Ivy
Angel's Trumpet
Ginko Beloba
Crabapple Trees
Monkey Puzzle Tree
Bunya Pine
Epimedium
Geisha Girl
Siberian Cypress
Cassia Fistula ( I cannot give you the other name or you'll get weird google results lmao)
Mangroves
Tree of Heaven
Any Fruit Tree (Your Choice)
Gulmohar Tree
Bonsai Tree
Cannonball Tree
African Tulip Tree
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deartreadmill · 2 years
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Tracking is going well. I didn’t really plan for picking up the pieces and starting again, so I’ve had to immediately play the ‘improvise with what’s in the kitchen’ game.
Fortunately, my favourite yogurt was $3 off when I was picking up veggies the other day, so I got to enjoy fresh berries from my garden today at coffee break. Saskatoon berries today.
When I got home, there were about 8 raspberries that were ripe, so tomorrow I get saskatoons and raspberries. (I wonder what Saskatoon berries are called outside of Canada…rabbit hole…Pacific serviceberry, western serviceberry, alder-leaf shadbush, dwarf shadbush, chuckley pear, or western juneberry or pigeon berry. Now we all know)
It is finally nice out. I think there have been maybe 6 sunny warm days since June began here, and it’s supposed to be ugly hot by the end of this week, but today it was sunny and beautiful. My vacation was mostly miserable weather.
What else? I cut my hair short (for me. It’s still shoulder length), my kids are getting old, and I’ve developed an affection for old lady nightgowns. One of my patients (94 years old) has 2 nighties the same as me. She looks like a prim old lady. I unbutton them a bit and look a bit like an (old) wanton (fat) cover model on a trashy romance novel.
Things I’ve been pondering: I don’t know if I remember how to kiss. I’m tired - the nursing shortage was hard to bear before the pandemic and it’s worse now. I don’t want to socialize but I’m pushing myself to because I find my mental health is better when I do. The pandemic has also ruined alcohol for me. I just don’t feel it’s an expense I need anymore. Just some things.
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Me and my NINE YEAR OLD.
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datubooty · 6 days
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wish i had some plant magic so this serviceberryjuneberry/shadbush/saskatoon berry/too many names could grow and pspsps the waxwings to the yard, but for now she’s a stringy baby who won’t produce consistent fruit for like 2 years
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