Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Dale Bowman

Reading signs of seasonal change: Caterpillars, hedge apples, fall mushrooms

A black caterpillar—harbinger of doom?—spotted Thursday at 31st Street Harbor after the Chicago Fishing Advisory Committtee meeting. (Dale Bowman)

Larry Conn pointed to a black caterpillar climbing the concrete wall Thursday at 31st Street Harbor at the end of an outside meeting of the Chicago Fishing Advisory Committee.

That was the first of a crush of signs of seasonal change/folklore myths over the two days before the autumn equinox Saturday.

The idea that dark woolly bears are a harbinger of winter doom has been debunked, but I can’t help myself and check them as fall approaches. Here’s the thing: I’ve seen them from all-white to the all-black one at 31st Street Harbor. There are different species. I suspect the one we saw was a giant leopard moth caterpillar, not an all-black banded woolly bear.

The cavalcade of caterpillars continued that evening.

My wife showed me the first black swallowtail caterpillar crawling and eating on the dill she plants each year for them. She had given up hope of seeing one this year.

A black swallowtail caterpillar eating on Karyn Bowman’s dill, planted for them. (Dale Bowman)

Then Friday morning, in unexpected rain, I joined Paul Strand at public land open to mushroom hunting south of Chicago. He had a hen-of-the-woods spot to share.

Strand, who recently retired, had a long tradition of using his birthday as a personal day to hunt hen-of-the-woods with great success. I liked the staff Strand had fashioned from a broken stiff fishing rod, perfect for lifting vegetation to see hidden mushrooms, and he had a point on it for picking up trash.

Mushroom hunting is allowed at many Illinois Department of Natural Resources sites (check first) but is prohibited at area forest preserves, park districts and dedicated nature preserves. You need permission before hunting on private property.

We could tell by a faint trail leading to his spots and by finding one already cut that somebody had beaten us.

But we had other bounty.

We found chicken-of-the-woods, which I did not pick because it looked older and beaten up. But I cut from the spread of honey mushrooms we found.

As we looked at secondary spots near other old oaks, I saw my first fallen hedge apples of the year. I kept one to take home to my wife.

One of the hedge apples found while hunting mushrooms Friday. (Dale Bowman)

Hedge apples are the fruit of the non-native Osage orange, once used to make fencerows.

I have a long tradition of bringing one home for my wife every time I find one. She half-believes hedge apples have magical powers. More possible is that they are a natural way to discourage insects and bugs.

I stand by what I wrote about my tradition years ago: ‘‘I sometimes feel like a beaver lugging a gnawed downed birch back to his mate.’’

I sauteed the honeys in garlic and olive oil as a side, garnished with homegrown parsley, for Friday pizza night.

Freshly picked wild honey mushrooms, sauteed with garlic in olive oil, then garnished with homegrown parsley. (Dale Bowman)

Hall of Fame

Two Chicago-area people — Deanna Bazan (‘‘The Outdoor Ed. Lady’’) and Ed Pfaff (Montgomery village forestry supervisor) — are among five to be inducted next spring into the Illinois Outdoor Hall of Fame, the Illinois Conservation Foundation announced.

Invasive reminder

Work by Loyola graduate student Alex Quebbemann and Prof. Reuben Keller led to confirmation of invasive starry stonewort (starrystonewort.org/about/) at Jackson Harbor. One patch covered at least several hundred square meters. That’s a sharp reminder to clean your boat thoroughly before moving to another water (transportzero.org).

Illinois hunting

Archery season for deer and turkey opens Sunday.

Fall color

The fall color report from Wisconsin (travelwisconsin.com/fall-color-report) on Tuesday had Nicolet Wolf River Scenic Byway as well as Forest and Merrill counties at 75%.

Stray cast

Listening to Bears talk begins to feel like cleaning water fleas from lines.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.