Swamp thing! A dead tree retains grandeur as a spring storm gathers.
Frog Bog in Legacy Park: City of Decatur, Georgia, USA. 3 May 2025.
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Album: Let Me Tell You 'Bout It (Blue Note, 1961)
Swamp thing! A dead tree retains grandeur as a spring storm gathers.
Frog Bog in Legacy Park: City of Decatur, Georgia, USA. 3 May 2025.
Labels: Decatur, Georgia, intimate landscape, marsh, Pic(k) of the Week, southeastern US, tree, urban park, wetlands
The vibrant yellow and green foliage of a native Rising Sun redbud tree, in spring.
Trailhead Community Park of the East Decatur Greenway: City of Decatur, Georgia, USA. 7 May 2025.
Cercis canadensis —commonly known as the eastern redbud tree— is a large deciduous shrub or small tree in the legume family (Fabaceae), native to eastern North America.— Missouri Botanical Garden.
The Rising Sun™ cultivar —Cercis canadensis (JN2)— was discovered in a Belvidere, Tennessee nursery in 2006. Of unknown parentage, it had been planted from collected seed and was growing in a row of nursery seedlings. Unlike a 'standard' Eastern Redbud tree, the Rising Sun grows only 8 to 12 feet tall (2½ - 3½ m) but is drought and heat-tolerant.
Rising Sun's abundant pea-like, rosy pink flowers appear in early spring before the foliage. Its heart-shaped foliage emerges deep golden orange and matures through shades of orange, gold, and yellow to a speckled lime green. New leaves appear throughout the summer, resulting in a continual mix of colors. The fall foliage is yellow and orange.
— Wikipedia.
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