{"id":47016,"date":"2019-04-26T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-04-26T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/a-fun-game-to-play-while-hiking\/"},"modified":"2019-04-26T10:18:41","modified_gmt":"2019-04-26T18:18:41","slug":"a-fun-game-to-play-while-hiking","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/a-fun-game-to-play-while-hiking\/","title":{"rendered":"A fun game to play while hiking"},"content":{"rendered":"
On a drizzly, breezy, cool April day, a visiting friend and I took a stroll on the Crow Point\/Boy Scout Trail. We often play a little game on our walks, saying that we must find at least three things of particular interest before we can go home.<\/p>\n
Without much work, we filled that requirement on this day.<\/p>\n
Along the lower riverbank, wide stretches of sand have washed up fairly recently, covering the grasses and sedges. These sandy swathes looked quite barren, until we spotted small red shoots emerging. The shoots were beach peas, their leaves still folded and barely raised above ground. No beach peas were evident in the nearby grassy areas.<\/p>\n
So one question was, why were they only showing on the bare sands and how did they get there? Another question was, why are they red?<\/p>\n
[How do plants breathe?]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n I was reminded of a tropical ecology course many years ago, in which the instructors speculated about the reddish young leaves of some trees. One idea was that the red pigments might somehow protect the tender young leaves from sunburn.<\/p>\n Here in Southeast, we’ve noticed that bunchberry leaves often turn red in areas exposed to sun and frost, but remain green where shaded. My companion has seen single leaves that were green where covered by a fallen cottonwood leaf but red where not so covered.<\/p>\n A further observation came from the flowering blueberry bushes, on which the amount of pink color on the flowers varies a lot. Some of the variation seems to be related to age of the flower; very young flowers are often bright pink, but older ones are pale.<\/p>\n