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...When I travel at a leisurely pace I like to check on everything including dried up plants. It is amazing what one can learn from examining them. The species name of this Avena can not be determined from the dried spikelets. All that is left are the dried glumes. Even the leaf blades were too damaged to revile any clues. However, later on I did find some native Stipa. This was a great find as invasive grasses have taken up 99.9% of the grassland niche.......Occasionally Horehound, Marrubium vulgare (pictured), can naturalize itself. More surprising to me was the Catmint, Nepeta cataria, that I found nearby. This species too can naturalize itself, however this seems to rarely occur in our area.......Nicotinia acuminata var. multiflora, an invader, can be weedy in waste areas. All or most parts of this species are densely glandular-hairy, and extremely sticky......
............As we head into the autumn and winter months the bark of Arctostaphylos species attracts my attention. Even within a species there can be interesting differences in the bark. This bark is peeling in a very attractive and interesting way. When I finally make it to the coastal mountains there are many species of Arctostaphylos with many different characteristics to their bark to see.......