A LOVELY SPRING BOTTOMLAND
A successional, wooded bottomland in the forested Welsh Mountains near New Holland, Pennsylvania is a lovely place to visit in mid-April because of flowers and leaves developing on trees, shrubbery and smaller plants in the moist soil of those woods. Several kinds of deciduous trees and other, smaller kinds of plants obviously adapted well to damp soil and shade. Dominant trees in those low woods are black gums, red maples, shagbark hickory, black walnut, pin oaks, white oaks and tulip trees. Spicebushes are common in the shrub layer. On the dead-leaf covered forest floor, skunk cabbage leaves carpet lower spots on the woodland floor with their tall, broad, lush leaves in the middle of April. Leaves of May apple plants grow in colonies here and there, and looking like the umbrellas of elves gathering in the woods. Little groups of fiddle heads on cinnamon ferns grow and unfurl near the skunk cabbage and Ma...