Cape May County Explorations

By the way fellers, ladies, and lurkers, as you guessed already, I don't know any more about trees and bushes than you do. In fact, this interaction with you is helping me a lot. You help confirm my analysis after I get the things home. Now, here is a branch from a bush that I never even knew existed untel the great NJ naturalist Karl Anderson spoke to me about it. I saw it on a list of a survey he performed in West Jersey, on the inner coastal plain. I found this in Cape May County on Dias Creek, and puzzled over it quite a bit. The leaf shapes are not the same throughout. I finally got it, but I forget how I did it; maybe through an image search on the net. Recognize it?

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I have see that plant before many times but have never sat down and identified it
 
By the way fellers, ladies, and lurkers, as you guessed already, I don't know any more about trees and bushes than you do. In fact, this interaction with you is helping me a lot. You help confirm my analysis after I get the things home. Now, here is a branch from a bush that I never even knew existed untel the great NJ naturalist Karl Anderson spoke to me about it. I saw it on a list of a survey he performed in West Jersey, on the inner coastal plain. I found this in Cape May County on Dias Creek, and puzzled over it quite a bit. The leaf shapes are not the same throughout. I finally got it, but I forget how I did it; maybe through an image search on the net. Recognize it?

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Spicebush?
 
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Good German, how did you figure it out?
Work has had me leading many hikes between here and the northern counties over the years so I've seen it quite a bit, but I also think I first learned to ID it when I was still living in Passaic County over 45 years ago. The arrangement of the fruit is what caught my eye.
 
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As soon as I saw this tree on a slope to a swamp, I knew identifying it would either be impossible or readily determined. The leaves are all crowded towards tthe branch ends. Now, 4 days later, I give up. I think it's a hybrid oak; possibly Q. falcata and Q. phellos, both common down there.

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The search indicates "Differential Grasshopper". Munching on Phragmites.

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Great Picture Bob. I am not an insect or a plant person. However it seemed so weird to see a grasshopper on a plant normally found near a salt marsh. I understand phagmites can grow in other places too. I was just trying to assimilate them being from two different ecosystems. I would have never dreamed of making the connection.
 
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