Early Autumn's Warm Gold


Just entering the place

Fox scat?

Cedar Elm

Sumac

One of 300-350 species of Smilax.  This one hanging
within a gum bumelia tree (Bumelia lanuginosa)
.


A second blooming for this Malvaceae near the front gate. 


Texas Spiny Lizard (Sceloporus olivaceus) on Limestone



     Another crappy video and even crappier audio of an osprey (Pandion haliaetus).  We were standing  out front of the Hog Shed when we first heard this one screaming high, high just off to the north.  He (or she) would dive down a ways, pause-up, and then dive down again, never really laying off the horn.  Five minutes later we noticed a second osprey rise up from perching on a tree along the boulders north of the house.  This one made the chirping rather than screaming call.  We haven't seen nor heard of the ospreys since last early spring, I think it was.  This is good.
     Where these have flown in from is anybody's guess, but typical migratory patterns might suggest they have just come down from the Rockies.
     Below is an interesting map showing the travels of three ospreys tagged in the Grand Tetons.  The red lines represent their flights down south, and the blue lines represent the trip back to the Tetons.  One of the three birds flew past our area of central Texas to the coast but never made the return trip.





First Week of November (Part 2)

And now for some of Harlin's photographic work to help us see the Creek's riparian beauties and intricacies about this time of year. . . .


Curlytop Gumweed  (Grindelia nuda)

Curlytop Gumweed  (Grindelia nuda)

Clammyweed (Polanisia dodecandra)

Clammyweed (Polanisia dodecandra)

Wild Poinsettia or Toothed Spurge (Euphorbia dentata)

Goldenrod with flood debris

Senna




Product description
Senna (from Arabic sanā), the sennas, is a large genus of around 250 species of flowering plants in the family Fabaceae. Sennas are still used as the primary ingredient in certain commercial stimulant laxatives. Senna is also the primary ingredient found in most "dieter's teas".



And some distant sandhill cranes circling their way south over The Creek.

First Week of November (Part 1)

     The four and a quarter inches of rain we had weeks ago has sustained the grasses, enlivened the Creek, introduced a completely new population of fish to the Pool, and given the courage of bloom to flowers meant to bloom now as well as to flowers not normally in blossom (Mexican buckeye among the boulders of Whitman's Rough, for instance).  No water flows above ground from the Pond to the Creek, but the water emerges from its usual spot and takes only a few feet before it's running clear and lively.







Chaste tree (*see note at bottom)

Poverty Weed (Baccharis neglecta)
Also known as Roosevelt Weed or New Deal Weed, this Baccharis grows just east of the south end of the Pond and near the sandy bank of the Bluff.  It's one of those native plants that looks like a non-native invasive species, quickly adopting any disturbed  or otherwise sorry soils that many other plants cannot survive in.  Right now it's in bloom, as it often is following late-summer rains.  After the Dust Bowl era, it was planted to help revegitate waste areas.




Jaw-dropping excitement with switchgrass.

...and with palafoxia in the wind.  Who knew?














*Here below is a copy-and-paste job from the Internet's interesting-to-know category with plenty of ideas about the medicinal uses of the chaste tree.  To cut to the chase, this plant has been used to treat both female infertility AND the occasional overactive libido of monks.  Whether or not there is any relationship between these two indications is your happy guess.


Chaste Tree Berry : The People's Pharmacy®

October 18, 2005   http://www.peoplespharmacy.com/2005/10/18/chaste-tree-berry/

Chaste tree is a large shrub (up to twenty-two feet tall) native to the Mediterranean and southern Europe. Although it flourishes on moist riverbanks, it is easily grown as an ornamental plant in American gardens, where its attractive blue-violet flowers are appreciated in midsummer.
The Greeks and Romans used this plant to encourage chastity and thought of it as capable of warding off evil.
Medieval monks were said to use the dried berries in their food to reduce sexual desire. As a result, it was also referred to as "monks' pepper."
Although Hippocrates used chaste tree for injuries and inflammation, several centuries later Dioscorides recommended it specifically for inflammation of the womb and also used it to encourage milk flow shortly after birth.
Current use of chasteberry is almost exclusively for disorders of the female reproductive system.
Oddly, the conditions for which it is most commonly recommended, premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and peri- or postmenopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, are associated with completely different hormone imbalances.
Two authors publishing the results of a survey of medical herbalists were led by this observation to suggest that chaste tree should be considered an adaptogen, possibly affecting the pituitary gland.
Usually the dried berries are the part of the plant used. In some Mediterranean countries, leaves and flowering tops are also harvested and dried for use.
Active Ingredients
No one constituent of chaste tree has been isolated as responsible for its medicinal effects.
The berries contain iridoids as glycosides, including aucubin and agnuside.
Flavonoid content is highest in the leaves (up to 2.7 percent) and flowers (nearly 1.5 percent).
The berries contain almost 1 percent of flavonoids such as casticin, isovitexin, orientin, kaempferol, and quercetagetin.
It is perhaps surprising that chaste tree does not contain plant estrogens. Instead, progesterone, hydroxyprogesterone, testosterone, epitestosterone, and androstenedione have been identified in the leaves and flowers.
The essential oil of chasteberry may be responsible for its distinctive spicy aroma. It contains monoterpenes cineol and pinene, along with limonene, eucalptol, myrcene, linalool, castine, citronellol, and others, plus several sesquiterpenes.
An alkaloid, vitricine, is also an ingredient.
Uses
Animal research has shown that extracts of chaste tree berry have an effect on the pituitary gland of rats, reducing prolactin secretion. This has the impact of reducing milk production, exactly the opposite effect suggested by some of the ancient texts.
As a result of these studies, chaste tree has been suggested to treat conditions associated with excess prolactin. In a clinical trial of chasteberry for menstrual cycle abnormalities attributed to too much prolactin, the herb normalized both the cycle and the levels of prolactin and progesterone hormones.
It is also believed helpful for premenstrual breast tenderness, a condition linked to excess prolactin.
Several uncontrolled studies in Germany have shown that chaste tree extracts can reduce symp-toms associated with PMS. In one of these studies, the investigators reported higher blood levels of progesterone as a result of treatment.
If chaste tree can normalize hormone levels, it may be helpful for perimenopausal women with unusually short cycles or heavy bleeding. Dr. Susan Love considers that it may be worth a try.
No clinical studies to date have determined the effectiveness of chasteberry for menopausal symptoms, but many medical herbalists in the United Kingdom use it to treat hot flashes.
These practitioners also prescribe it for female infertility, but there are no data to indicate if chaste tree is helpful for this problem.
Although studies are lacking, the antiandrogenic effect of chaste tree berry is the rationale behind the use of this herb to treat acne in both men and women and its very occasional use to reduce an overactive libido.
Dose
The usual dose is 20 to 40 mg of the herb, or its equivalent.
If using a tincture, take 20 drops one or two times a day. Capsules or tea (one cup) may be used instead if it is more convenient.
Taking chasteberry shortly before bedtime may increase early morning melatonin secretion and improve sleep.
Chaste tree berry is slow acting. Two or three menstrual cycles, or a similar amount of time, may be needed to evaluate the effects.
A standardized product from Germany is available in the United States under the brand name Femaprin.
Special Precautions
Pregnant women should not take chaste tree berry.
Although one study indicated that this herb does not affect the composition of breast milk, nursing mothers are advised to avoid it. Despite its traditional use to increase milk production, the likelihood that the herb suppresses prolactin could make nursing more difficult.
Herbal practitioners may recommend that chaste tree berry not be used by women with hormone-sensitive cancers (breast, uterus). Anyone with such a serious condition should certainly be consulting an expert for advice before self-treating with any herb. Pituitary tumors also come into this category.
Adverse Effects
Side effects are uncommon, but itchy allergic rashes have been reported.
A few patients may experience mild nausea or headaches, especially when starting treatment.
A few women have complained that the length of their cycle changed, and in rare cases women experience heavier menstrual periods.
Possible Interactions
In general, chaste tree berry should not be combined with exogenous hormones such as oral contraceptives or menopausal hormone replacement therapies (Premarin, Prempro, Premphase, Provera, etc.).
Animal experiments indicate that compounds that act on dopamine in the brain may affect or be affected by the herb. Such drugs include Haldol, a medication for psychosis, L-Dopa or Parlodel for Parkinson's disease, Wellbutrin for depression, or Zyban for quitting smoking.
No clinical consequences of interactions have been reported.