Monday, January 20, 2020

What is it Wednesday archive: November 13, 2019



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
November 13, 2019. 



And the answer is....



This is the egg case of a praying mantis. 

In the late fall, a female mantis lays between 12 and 400 eggs, then covers them with a frothy substance that quickly hardens, creating this case. A hardened egg case is known as an ootheca and protects the eggs inside from weather and predators throughout the winter. In the spring, the nymphs hatch from the eggs then emerge from the case, ready to hunt.


We found this case when removing tree shelters from places where we had planted American Chestnuts. When we saw the case on this one, we left the shelter there, so the eggs can hatch and provide the world with more of these captivating predators. 

Since praying mantises eat other insects, they can be helpful to have around gardens and houses – if you see an egg case like this, leave it where it is and support the mantis population!

For more on how LEEP can help you spot the benefits in the details of the nature around us, through school field trips, Saturday Safaris, summer camp, special events and more, check out www.Lutherlyn.com/ee


Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Thursday, January 16, 2020

What is it Wednesday: January 15, 2020



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
January 15, 2020.



And the answer is....





This is the twig of a black walnut tree, with side buds and leaf scar visible in the center (and Terra Dei solar panels in the background). 

The twigs of trees don’t get much attention, but they are distinctive – features like buds, scars, bark, and the twigs themselves have different sizes, shapes, colors, and textures in different tree species.  Here we see the distinctive shape of the leaf scar of black walnut twigs – sometimes described as a monkey face or Mickey Mouse shape.

The varying features of twigs are so distinctive they can help pinpoint tree identification. In fact, in winter when there are no leaves on deciduous trees, these usually unnoticed features are actually the best  clues for identifying tree species. 

The bark of a tree can help with identification, especially in some species which have distinctive bark, but bark can be variable and difficult to use as an identifier without a lot of experience. The general shape of a tree can be a clue too...but the twigs give us the best information for identifying trees when there are not leaves on them. 

You can learn how! Join LEEP for a Winter Tree ID Saturday Safari on Saturday, February 1, 9:30 am – noon. We’ll also estimate the ages of some trees and learn how to determine how healthy a whole forest is. Registration deadline is January 27th! For more info or to register, check out www.Lutherlyn.com/safari.




Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Monday, January 13, 2020

What is it Wednesday: December 11, 2019



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
December 11, 2019.



And the answer is....


This is a jelly fungus, most likely either tree ear (Auricularia americana) or jelly leaf (tremella frondosa).


This is a great example of how mushrooms can be tricky to identify. These two different mushrooms have similar characteristics. Sometimes the only ways to tell them apart for sure is with the color of the spores or even the shapes and sizes of microscopic features. Because this specimen has so many lobes growing together, my guess is it is probably jelly leaf...



...but up close it just looks so ear-like!

In addition, common names can often be confusing - but fun! Auricularia americana can be known as tree ear, wood ear, jelly ear, cloud ear, or black fungus; Tremella frondosa can be known as jelly leaf, leafy brain, and brown witches butter; and sometimes the same common names can refer to a few different species  that are similar but distinct, or even different mushrooms altogether.  

If you’re not planning to eat the mushroom, it’s fun but not essential to identify it. But at LEEP we do like to at least try to identify items we encounter in nature. One reason is that it helps us (and others) be able to better relate to the natural world: when something has a name, we see it as an individual, something we have a relationship with, maybe even a friend (or sometimes a foe). This shapes in us a different understanding of nature, and often one that is more inclined to care for the natural world – something we think is an important part of being people of God!  “That weird fungus that I couldn’t figure out” doesn’t create much of a relationship: jelly leaf or tree ear does, because it helps us see it as an individual of God’s creation, connected with other individuals and systems of God’s creation.

For more on how LEEP can help you develop relationships with the natural world, through school field trips, summer camp, Saturday safaris, and more, check out www.Lutherlyn.com/ee


Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Thursday, January 9, 2020

What is it Wednesday: January 8, 2020



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
January 8, 2020



And the answer is....



We thought this view of the benches, seen looking down from the top of Chapel Rock, looks a bit like the “wifi” symbol!

Image result for wifi symbol free


It reminded us of this quote:, shared by a middle school student describing their experience at an overnight school field trip: 

“There’s no wifi in the forest,
 but I promise you’ll find a better connection.”  

We agree! What do you feel connected to when you experience the natural world?

For more on how LEEP can help you find a better connection in the forest, through school field trips, Saturday safaris, summer camp, retreats, special events and more, check out www.Lutherlyn.com/ee



Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Monday, January 6, 2020

What is it Wednesday archive: December 18, 2019



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
December 18, 2019



And the answer is....


This is the burr of the burdock plant. 

Burrs are seed pods which have tiny “hooks” that allow them to cling to animals and people that brush against them while passing by. By hitching a ride on passersby, the seeds get dispersed further away from the parent plant, allowing the plant to spread and survive in more places. Clever!


Burdock’s burrs have relatively large and visible hooks, which make them a nightmare for getting out of clothing, hair, and fur, but very effective at spreading their seeds. They were also the inspiration for the creation of velcro hook-and-loop closures – compare the two sometime! Nature’s clever designs often become inspiration for clever human designs.

For more on how LEEP can help you learn about the clever designs in nature and their functions, through school field trips, summer camp, Saturday safaris, and more, check out www.Lutherlyn.com/ee.


Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Thursday, January 2, 2020

What is it Wednesday: January 1, 2020



Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.


Each week's What is it Wednesday post 
will also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
 after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes with additional bonus information. 

In addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday 
on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog, 
we will be reposting old editions,
creating a What is it Wednesday archive. 

This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
January 1, 2020.



And the answer is....


This is a skunk cabbage shoot, growing through ice in a wet area along the Semiconon Creek. This photo was taken in December just before our Christmas warm spell. 

The skunk cabbage shoot is a protective leaf wrapped around the hood (spathe) and flower (spadex) of the skunk cabbage blossom. 

Skunk cabbage blossoms (a former What is it Wednesday feature) can begin to emerge in February, often pushing through snow to do so. A chemical process in the plant actually warms up the earth around the blossom so it can survive. 

Before the blossom emerges with this heat production, the shoot protects itself from the surrounding cold with a layer of waxy thick protective leaves.


Most trees and shrubs produce their buds in the fall, so they are ready to open when the weather warms in the spring, and some herbaceous plants like skunk cabbage have shoots at or just below the surface of the earth, ready to grow when the conditions are right. 

The new year’s growth comes from the past year’s beginnings.

May good things blossom for you in 2020 - Happy New Year everyone! 



Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

What is it Wednesday October 23, 2019: Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription

On October 23, 2019, our weekly What Is It Wednesday post featured this photo: 




Can you identify what's in this photo?


Each Wednesday morning 
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
 the Lutherlyn Environmental Education Program posts a photo. 


Readers have all morning and afternoon 
to make their best guess about what the photo is. 

Around 6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.

And this week's answer is ....





 This bottle is an artifact found by students in 2018 
at one of Lutherlyn’s archaeology sites. 
It was found at the site of an 1800’s settler homestead 
near the historic Venango Trail

When students visit this archaeology site as part of an education program at Lutherlyn, they get to participate in archaeology by digging at the site and sifting their work to see what they unearthed from the past. Afterwards, we clean and catalog the artifacts, and in the case of especially notable finds, do some research to find out what more we can learn about and from that artifact. 


It may be a bit hard to see in the photo, but the letters on the side of the bottle 
(near the top of the photo) 
are “RCE MD” 
and the letters on the front of the bottle 
(near the bottom of the photo) 
are “E” 
and then on the next line “TION”. 

It is exciting whenever we find artifacts with letters or numbers imprinted on them, because often just a few letters or numbers can lead to a much fuller understanding of what the artifact is and what it tells us about the lives of the people who used it in the past.

In this case, we knew of a similar bottle that had the name Dr. Pierce printed on it and we guessed that the RCE MD referred to Dr. Pierce. A quick search showed that his “Favorite Prescription” – a medicinal tonic for women – was one of the most popular remedies of the late 1800’s, and explains the TION. This bottle once held Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. 

Dr. Pierce himself is a fascinating figure, as is the history of medicinal tonics of the late 1800’s. Many of them were little more than alcohol or opium solutions, and did little good or even caused harm by including ingredients like mercury.

Ray Vaughn (R.V.) Pierce graduated from The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, and afterwards practiced medicine in Titusville, PA during the oil boom of the 1860’s. He later moved to Buffalo, NY, and became one of the most successful purveyors of medicinal tonics of the late 1800s.

A summary of the Nickell Collection of Dr. R.V. Pierce Artifacts states, 

“Perhaps the most significant accomplishment 
of Dr. Pierce was his ability to market 
and sell his medicines more successfully 
than almost any other physician 
at a time when availability of home remedies and nostrum cures were at their height. 
His descriptions of illnesses and their symptoms, with just the right amount of 
medical terminology and human pathos for cures, made them seem 
authentic and scientifically possible.… 

Another marketing skill employed by Pierce was that of the testimonial. 
His advertising, which includes his book, 
The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser 
(essentially an advertisement for his various products), sold millions of copies, 
and included testimonials from patients whose claims of near-miraculous cures 
convinced millions of people to try the remedies of Dr. Pierce.” 

(Nickell Collection of Dr. R.V. Pierce Medical Artifacts, 
New York Heritage Digital Collections)


Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription was a tonic aimed specifically at the ailments of women. In some cases it was labeled “Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription For the Relief of The Many Weaknesses and Complaints Peculiar to Females” and it claimed to ease symptoms of “nerves” and the nervous systems as well as the female reproductive system and overall weakness and illness.

While much of the public eagerly believed these claims and others like them, many did not. Dr. Pierce was accused by Colliers and Ladies Home Journal of being a “quack” and was sometimes referred to as the Prince of Quacks. Pierce sued Ladies Home Journal for these accusations and what he claimed were false reports of the ingredients of the Favorite Prescription including opium, digitalis, and alcohol. He won the case.

Pierce later served as a NY State Senator from 1878-1879, and in the US House of Representatives 1879-1880. In these roles he advocated for free enterprise and against the Pure Food and Drug Act that was eventually passed in 1906.

In addition to the peek that the life of Dr. Pierce gives us into the “wild west” of medicine in the late 1800s, learning about Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription also allows us a window into the lives of women of that time period. Initially upon hearing of the Favorite Prescription, I imagined women primarily making use of it for such ailments as “malaise” and other maladies that could be seen as a reasonable emotional response to living the very constrained and also demanding lives that many women faced at the time. But many of the testimonials included in Dr. Pierce’s advertising refer to very serious illness, often including serious complications of childbirth, that were debilitating to women. (See the newspaper ad testimonial in the last link below for an example of this.) Whether these testimonials were the genuine outpourings of actual women, or fictions created by Dr. Pierce, they paint a picture of the sometimes dire health challenges facing women, and the meager abilities of medicine to respond to them at the time.

All of that leads to questions relating to our find at the archaeological site at Lutherlyn. We know a bit about the family who owned the property where the site is located, from 1838-1877. The patriarch of the family, Michael Heckert, had two wives (one who died, and one whom he married after becoming a widower) and four daughters.

What did they experience that caused one or more of them to need a medicinal tonic? 
Were they searching for a remedy to a serious ailment, or were they simply curious to see if Dr. Pierce could make their life a little more manageable? 
Did they believe Dr. Pierce had the solution to their problems or were they skeptics? 
Did they buy it from a local store, or a traveling salesman, or even from Dr. Pierce himself? 
Did they find relief?  

It is fascinating how one small artifact can open up such a window into the past, and raise so many more questions.









Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!