Just when I thought all the different varieties of Daffodils had bloomed, these small white flowers opened:
They look much like orchids and are perhaps my favorites of all the varieties:
Alongside a nearby road, I saw large, wet areas filled with Marsh Marigolds in bloom:
This road is rife with wildflowers every spring, so I make sure to pay it a visit. Here's a close-up of a Marsh Marigold plant:
And on the same road each spring, I also find huge quantities of White Trilliums, officially and accurately called Large-Flowered Trilliums:
They are spectacular, including some with a pinkish hue:
The town or county had mowed the edge of the road this year, yet there was still a band of Trilliums along the side and beyond the mowed strip, creating quite a spectacular display:
Back home in my lawn, Wild Strawberries began to bloom in abundance:
A new species of Violet appeared in my lawn, this one with smaller leaves and pale, smaller flowers. I went to my field guide to identify it but was unable to do so. I'll just call them the small, pale Violet:
Winthrop, New York is so small that it doesn't qualify as either a town or village. I guess that makes it a hamlet, but a new Dollar General store just opened there and local wags call it "The Winthrop Mall." I noticed the other day that they have several designated parking spaces for Amish buggies, complete with horse manure (AKA road apples) to prove they are being used:
The fantail pigeons are happy and healthy. They still have not produced babies, but I have all the birds I need and am not anxious for more:
This lady, however, is trying to have a successful nest:
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