Plant Packages

Summary

This text highlights the natural wonder of springtime, focusing particularly on how plants develop and emerge in a beautifully packaged manner. As students and families take walks in the woods, the narrative encourages them to observe how young plants are protected and nurtured before they unfold into leaves and flowers. It draws parallels between the care plants take in unfurling their 'packages' and the protective instincts of a caregiver. Each plant is uniquely wrapped, whether it is a papery envelope, a woolly roll, or a fan-like fold, helping it thrive in varied environmental conditions. This often intricate and aesthetically pleasing process is suggested as a potential subject for educational activities, such as school exhibitions where children could share plant specimens they've found. The aim is to inspire appreciation and deeper understanding of plant biology during the early spring months.

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On your walks through the woods these spring days I want you to notice the neat and beautiful way in which plants do their packing; for the woods now are full of plant packages,—little bundles of leaves and flowers, done up with the greatest care.

Some of these have just appeared above the ground. Others have burst from the branches of the trees and shrubs.

Of course, a plant does not like to send its young, delicate leaves and flowers into the cold world without wrapping them up, any more than your mother would like to send your baby brother out for the first time without a great deal of just such bundling-up.

And so well wrapped are many of these plant babies, that it is not an easy matter to guess just what they are, what kinds of leaves and flowers will appear when the wrappings have been thrown aside.

Sometimes the package looks like the sharp-pointed object in the picture at the head of this chapter. Soon the leaves push their way out of their papery envelope, and before long our friend Jack-in-the-pulpit himself appears.

Sometimes it is such a woolly roll as you see in the next picture. This roll soon uncurls into a pretty fern.

The beech tree folds its leaves like fans. The preceding picture shows you how carefully and cleverly the hobblebush packs its young leaves.

During their babyhood many leaves wear a hairy coat as a protection from both cold and heat; but when their green skin becomes thicker, they throw this off.

Most of these plant packages are very interesting and beautiful, and well worth your attention. I wish that during these weeks of early spring the country schools would hold exhibitions of these babes in the woods, asking each child to bring what he considers a good specimen of a plant package.