- Desperate for Fossil Fuels: King Coal
- How NOT to Be Poisoned By Your Food
- The Most Refreshing Summer Tea
- More Home Made Condiments
- Preservation: Home Made Condiments
- Herbal Recipes for Tea and Medicine
- Herbal Recipes for Tea and Medicine
- Feeding The Hungry - Part 3
- Feeding The Hungry - Part 2
- Feeding The Hungry - Part 1
- Activities
- Agritourism
- Alternatives
- Biofuels
- Building
- Cash Crops
- Cheesemaking
- Community
- Conservation
- Container Gardening
- Cooling
- Cooperatives
- Cultivated Herbs
- Dairy
- Doors
- Emergency Preparedness
- Endangered Species
- Energy
- Environment
- Family
- Farm Policy
- Food Production
- Food Safety
- Food Storage
- Future Planning
- Garden
- Glazing
- Goats
- Harvest
- Health
- Heating
- Herbal Medicine
- Holidays
- Home Buying
- Home-Products
- Homestead
- Hunger
- Independence
- Indoor Plants
- Landscaping
- Livestock
- Log Construction
- Maintenance
- Medicine
- Nutritition
- Planters
- Porch Plants
- Rare Plants
- Recipes
- Renovating
- Repair
- Rural Development
- Schools
- Soap Making
- Solar
- Timber
- Time-Management
- Tools
- Transportation
- Vacations
- Water
- Wild Foods
- Wild Herbs
- Wind
- Windows
- Wine
- Yard
The Excitement of Discovering an Endangered Species
February 4th, 2008
…right there in the yard for all to see!

I visited the daughter of a dear friend of mine last summer. It was her 12th birthday party, which I wouldn’t have missed for the world - I’ve known and loved this young lady since before she was born. The party was held on a stretch of flat lawn below the house, which is a ~70-year old timber frame atop a tall knob in Asheville, North Carolina.
There’s a path with timber-crossed bark-backfilled steps winding down the hillside from the house to the lawn. At one point along the path there’s a little grove of tall hemlocks, blue spruce and Frasier firs with a rhododendron mid-story boundary that’s cool even in the heat of summer. An old rope swing that doesn’t look strong enough to hold anyone anymore dangles from a lone oak’s limb, a little shady clearing off the main path. There, blending unobtrusively amongst the firs and hemlocks was a different kind of tree - different enough to catch my attention sharply that day. So I collected a needled twig hoping to identify it when I got home.
Filed under Conservation, Endangered Species, Homestead, Landscaping, Rare Plants, Yard | Comment (0)