(Around here, anyway.)
Despite the fact that we’ve had above-normal temps most of the past week, even reaching the 70s Friday and Saturday, surprisingly, Mother Nature has not dipped her paintbrush into the green paint just yet.
Meanwhile, Chicagoans were dying the Chicago River green and Detroiters were painting shamrocks on the sidewalks in Corktown for today’s Saint Patrick’s Day parade, so there’s something green to cheer about. And, then there is green beer, if you’re so inclined.
So what’s a Blogger to do when Terri’s Color Challenge this week is “green” – hmm?
Well, this blogger went back to photos from a walk taken in early May 2024.
And, unlike those folks using dye and paint, I assure you there are no green tints on these photos, even if the featured image appears suspiciously bright green. It was just a sunny day when the grass was a lush emerald green, polka-dotted by dandelions … it’s the Spring-y day we Michiganders and most Midwesterners dream about in the Winter months.
I don’t have as many photos from that walk to use in this post because coincidentally, I was photographing trees in blossom at the Botanical Gardens in advance of Terri’s June Color Challenge: Pastels. That post, entitled “Pretty in Pink. #Wordless Wednesday #Springtime at the Botanical Gardens” can be found by clicking here.
Spring was all aglow around Heritage Park.
The historical area had their usual “Celebrate Spring” banners on all the lamp posts.
The leaves had unfurled – there was new growth everywhere, even soft green needles on the evergreens.
The turtles were sunbathing on their favorite ramp, the sun glinting off their green shells.
Near the Little Red Schoolhouse, a Double-crested Cormorant was perched amidst gorgeous reflections of red and green from the schoolhouse and grass respectively.
But he soon flew off that pedestal when the fountains in Coan Lake were turned on.
There was a field trip in progress at the Petting Farm and lots of oohs and aahs at the Alpacas in the barnyard.
For me, it was all about the babies that day.
I’d already been to this park multiple times checking out Mama Goose to get some photos of her nesting, then with those sweet goslings.
Of course, I wondered how the little darlings were coming along – well, you can see for yourself below. These cute pics of Mama’s offspring will tide you over until the 2025 batch of goslings comes along.
You’ve heard of herding cats? Well, I was smiling as I watched Mama chasing those babies to round ‘em up. With her head down, those goslings knew she meant business and they marched forward, in step with her. 🙂
They plop down suddenly, then are upright again seconds later to waddle around on oversized feet for their tiny bodies, so you can see why Mama needed a rest. She settled herself down for a small nap, having gathered her wee ones around her. But then Mama likely saw me, or my shadow, looming large and was on guard once again. But, isn’t the gander, er … “Papa” supposed to be guarding his family – where the heck was he?
Papa Goose, a/k/a “The Town Crier”.
Papa Goose was up on the roof of Maggie’s Sweet Shop telling the world about his goslings, much like a human father might be showing pictures on his phone or handing out cigars. Do fathers still hand out cigars for new babies?
The anticipated births were eggstra special too!
In the Springtime it’s all about the babies, right? You probably remember seeing this lamp post in past blog posts. It seems to be a popular place to raise your young if you’re a Sparrow. And, when birds, Robins especially, like to take liberties and build nests in the most inopportune places, (for homeowners anyway), obviously Heritage Park doesn’t care that Mama Sparrow builds a nest, sits on her eggs, then feeds her young inside the lamp post. A few years ago, I watched her going in/out to get food and bringing it back for her nestlings. This is not the only lamp post that is brimming with nest fixin’s for future baby birdies.
Enroute to the Botanical Gardens to check out the blooming trees, I passed the Petting Farm.
I follow a Facebook site called “Heritage Park Photo of the Day” and Dave Gorgon takes a photo almost daily of happenings at Heritage Park. A few days earlier, Dave posted a photo of a Mallard drake protecting his Missus as she was sitting on a nest. He suggested if you saw the pair to give them some distance. I went to check them out, knowing the pair would complement this topic of Spring babies.
The Petting Farm had posted this sign about giving them privacy …
… so I did, by merely zooming in on them, noting how protective the male was of his mate by positioning himself front-and-center. A Mallard hen will sit on a nest, incubating the eggs for about 28 days.
The next time I was at Heritage Park and I stopped to see if the nest was still there and unfortunately one of the eggs had not hatched.
So it was all about baby time on this trip and I hoped for one last shot of babies … baby Barn Swallows that live 18-23 days in a nest tucked in the rafters of the covered bridge and sometimes return even after fledging.
No nestlings that day, but I always look up whenever I cross Coan Lake using that bridge.
As mentioned above, I’m joining Terri’s Monthly Color Challenge: Shades of Green.



































































































































































