Hungarian Falls on the Keweenaw Peninsula

Hungarian Falls - Middle

Hungarian Falls – Middle, photo by dcclark.

David writes that this is the middle drop of Hungarian Falls near Tamarack City on the Keweenaw Peninsula. He says that the falls are never running this well, except at just the right point during the spring melt. The Keweenaw CVB page on Hungarian Falls has directions to the falls and says:

The Upper Hungarian Falls, about 10 feet wide, is located in a beautiful hardwood forest, and drops about 25 feet over a wall of red stone. Downstream the Hungarian Creek slides over the Hungarian Dam to create an unnamed 5-foot falls just below on the far side of the river whose rock walls and ledge appear almost handmade. About 100 yards downstream is a second unnamed falls of about 7 feet into a small pool. Another 250 feet downstream a third unnamed falls drops 25 feet in a shaded canyon whose moss covered walls extend from both sides of the falls. 400 feet downstream is the Lower Hungarian Falls, the most spectacular of all the falls, that drops another 15 feet over terraced rock.

Here’s the location of Hungarian Falls on Waymarking and Upper & Lower Hungarian Falls from Hunts Guide to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

You can see this photo larger in David’s Spring slideshow. He has another photo of Hungarian Falls in winter. Check out David’s blog Cliffs and Ruins for more photos and stories.

Spring Is Falling Apart

Spring Is Falling Apart

Spring Is Falling Apart, photo by merobson.

I was driving around yesterday in Leelanau County and saw the first of the tart cherry blossoms popping out.

Check out Cherry Blossom Time in Michigan from May 2008 or dive into blossoms on Michigan in Pictures.

View this photo bigger on black or in his Trees & Flowers set (slideshow).

Michigan Morel Mania!

black morels
black morels, photo by PLskell

Peter says that he found this delicious pair black morels in Delta County in the UP last May.

Over on Absolute Michigan we have a nice feature on morel hunting in Michigan that offers some tips for tracking down these elusive and tasty mushrooms.

Our best advice for how to find morels is to attend one of Michigan’s morel celebrations. The 50th annual Mesick Mushroom Festival happens this weekend (May 8-10, 2009) and the Boyne City National Morel Mushroom Festival takes place May 14-17, 2009.

More morel madness from Michigan in Pictures!

For more photos, check out the Michigan Morel slideshow on Flickr.

Exposure Detroit May 2009 Show

Hallway on a Tilt
Hallway on a Tilt, photo by Cherie S.

The photography group Exposure.Detroit will hold the opening for their May 2009 show tomorrow night (Friday, May 8th) from 7-10 PM at the Bean & Leaf Cafe in Royal Oak.

In addition to Cherie Stangis, the show features work from Mark Orlowski, Patrick Simpson, Alanna St. Laurent and Christian Spencer.

Check out a bunch more cool B&W shots in Cherie’s Inanimate in Black and White set (slideshow).

Trout Lily alias Adder’s Tongue alias Dogtooth Violet

Trout Lilies on a Sunday Morning

Trout Lilies on a Sunday Morning, photo by farlane>

FYI, the photo that was featured here was removed, so here’s one of mine…

A good friend was telling me about trout lilies the other day as we walked through the woods. She said that they only bloom every 17 years, something I have been unable to find anything about online. If anyone has more info on this, please post a comment. I’ve been told it’s 7 years, and there seems to be support for that.

This great Wild About Gardening feature on the trout lily (Erythronium americanum) says that the name is is derived from the resemblance of its mottled leaves to the coloring on brook trout. This 4-10″ tall wildflower is one of the earliest to bloom in Michigan and is also known as Adder’s Tongue and Dogtooth Violet:

This is a plant that relies more on the spreading abilities of its underground root system (corms) than on seed production from its flowers. In fact, it takes a few years for a plant to be mature enough to produce a flower and seeds. Trout lilies have recruited the help of ants, who eat a nutritious appendage attached to each seed and leave the rest to germinate. If you wish to propagate your trout lilies from seed, you will want to follow nature’s lead, at least as far as temperature is concerned. Keep your seeds moist and give them a few months of warm followed by a few months of cold, similar to the seeds falling on the ground at the beginning of summer and receiving the summer warmth and winter cold before sprouting the following spring. Wildflowers sometimes stagger their germination over several years, so you might want to sow a few extra seeds to avoid disappointment.

These plants will naturally spread by forming vast colonies. Some wild colonies are reputed to be as old as the trees around them — two or three hundred years! Despite its ability to spread, the trout lily is not considered an aggressive spreader but rather a delight to have in one’s garden.

You can see this larger right here or in Robert’s slideshow. Even more in Flickr’s Michigan Trout Lily slideshow.

In Flight: Bald Eagle De-listed in Michigan

In Flight

In Flight, photo by Mi Bob.

As yesterday’s Traverse City Record-Eagle reported:

The bald eagle is now off both state and federal endangered species lists for Michigan. But the federal Bald Eagle Protection Act of 1940 makes it a crime to hunt, kill or otherwise harm them.

Fewer than 100 nests existed in the state in 1969, DNR officials said. In 2006, there were nearly 500 occupied nests, and the number is growing.

The Michigan DNR page on the Bald Eagle in Michigan has lots of information about their seasonal behavior (they are beginning to hatch their eggs right now) and documents the history of the bald eagle in Michigan:

Before European settlement, bald eagles probably nested in all regions of Michigan where food was available. In the early 1900s they were described as being “generally distributed,” but “nowhere abundant.” A decline through the early and mid-1900s was probably related to slow but consistent loss of suitable habitat and available food, and predator control by humans. These eagles are so disturbed by the presence of humans near their nest that they may be induced to abandon the nest, or even chicks that have already hatched. By 1959, the species was considered, “largely restricted to the northern half of the state.”

Through the 1950s, the slow decline accelerated dramatically, until suddenly, bald eagles were on the brink of extinction in the lower 48 states. The population crash was due to several factors that had reduced reproductive success of nesting pairs, but was mostly the result of increased use of pesticides with chemicals such as PCB and DDT. These chemicals affected the eagles in many ways, including causing them to delay their breeding until it was too late in the season, or even to not breed at all. Eggs that were laid often had thin shells, causing them to break in the nest. At its worst in 1967, only 38 percent of the Michigan population of bald eagles were able to raise at least a single chick. Productivity must be at least 70 percent for a bald eagle population to remain stable.

Recognition of the plight of bald eagles in the US and its cause finally occurred in the 1960s. By the 1970s DDT had been banned in the US. Intensive monitoring of eagles in Michigan began in 1961. Although bald eagles had been protected at federal and state levels since 1940 and 1954, respectively, they received much greater protection after the ratification of the Endangered Species Act in 1973, and the Michigan endangered species act in 1974.

Reproductive success began to improve and in 1975, the 70 percent productivity mark was reached, although it dropped off again soon after. The population remained at around 86 nesting pairs through the 1970s. In 1981, the population at last began to increase. The 1999 survey found 343 nests that produced 321 young. The productivity was calculated as 96% (young per nests with known outcomes). But some problems still exist. Eagles nesting along the Great Lakes coasts have higher contaminant levels in their blood than inland nesting pairs.

The American Bald Eagle information site has all kinds of sighting information from Michigan and will help you find places to see bald eagles.

If you’d like to check them out from your computer, you can see the above photo background big or in Bob’s Eagles set (slideshow, check out the Bald Eagle slideshow in the Absolute Michigan pool and/or Michigan Bald Eagles on Flickr.

No Swimming … yet

No Swimming.

No Swimming., photo by telemudcat.

Also swimming is out for all but the thermally insensitive today, sand castle building is A-OK!

Get this photo bigger right here or in Kevin’s Big Blue Marble set (slideshow).

Houston, We have Tulips!

We have tulips!

We have tulips!, photo by StormchaserMike Photography

Holland’s 2009 Tuliptime Festival starts today and runs May 2-9, 2009. In addition to parades, music, celebrations of Dutch heritage, kids events and fireworks and somewhere around 6 million tulips, they are celebrating the 80th anniversary of Holland’s signature celebration this year. All who attend are entered to win all kinds of prizes including a trip to Mexico, $1000, dinner for 6 at the B.O.B., a night at the JW Marriot and a party at New Holland Brewing!

You can get Mike’s photo bigger or check out his whole Flower set (slideshow).

If you’re still feeling tulip mania, check out past tulip posts from Michigan in Pictures, the tulip slideshow from the Absolute Michigan group and Absolute Michigan’s tulip page.

More spring wallpaper on Michigan in Pictures

Driving off in a Chrysler

Chrysler 300 – Walter P. Chrysler Museum, photo by MikeRyu

And then there were two…

Yesterday the Chrysler Corporation announced a plan for their acquisition by Fiat and filed for bankruptcy. Wikipedia’s Chrysler entry has a good overview of the company from its founding in 1924 by Walter P. Chrysler as a result of his reorganization of the Maxwell Motor Company through the building of the company into a global powerhouse, the Lee Iaccoca led rescue of Chrysler to the stumbling Daimler-Benz & Cerebus era.

The Walter P Chrysler Museum has a much more detailed timeline and all the Chrysler brands (Hudson, Valiant, Nash, Chalmers, Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoto, Imperial, Jeep, etc).

See this picture bigger in Mike’s slideshow of photos from Mike’s visit to the Chrysler Museum and see thousands more photos of Chryslers right here.

Among the blossoms

Among the blossoms

Among the blossoms, photo by gerrybuckel.

Gerry says that this little hummingbird seemed to like her weeping cherry tree blossoms.

See this larger right here or in her slideshow.

Check out more spring