Dang it there was some really cool pieces! I’ll have to keep looking for driftwood. At one part of the creek tons of it piles up so it’s a legit pile of great pieces of driftwood
What if you got some cedar roots that are totally dried and no sap? The tree has been dead for almost a year and the roots are not rotting and are preserved but there’s no sap
Ahhh that’s odd, the ones we have wild in Georgia make little like puffballs and the seeds are tiny and blow away. I’m still not sure what kind I’ve seen here. They’re all very similar.
I don’t think honeysuckles produce berries. But they’re really cool vines and like water. They typically grow in clay so their ground is waterlogged for days sometimes. I’d imagine they’d do great in a chameleon enclosure :)
You’re really pissing me off. Any time I legit say anything you come out of the woodwork and criticize my every move. I’ll go to an old post and you pop out of nowhere and find small things I say to make a big deal out of. I’m tired of it. Muck off. I get occasionally tuning in to help but you...
They use scientific names obviously but they’re not always gonna spit out ‘Magnolia Grandifloria’ or ‘Quercas Virginiania’ they’ll use common names, I took forestry and botany classes and had the opportunity to meet and learn from a lot of folks in Florida on the subject of botany. They’re not...
I don’t think I have any right now but I can later this afternoon, I’ll have to go out to the creek to get pictures. I believe it’s River or Cane Switch
I find the most similar photographs under the search ‘cane’ instead of bamboo, but cane and bamboo are essentially the same thing.
No, I didn’t mean a common name. I meant folkname, like I said. It’s a name people in the Southeast have just attributed to any vining plant with flowers.
In Florida everyone calls hibiscus just ‘Honeysuckle’ I know because I lived there.
Yes, all species of Lonicera are referred to as Honeysuckle. Especially in Appalachia. Although, even trumpet vines are referred to as Honeysuckle.