When I drove up into the mountains this month, it was through the area burned by the Creek Fire in 2020. The year following that devastation I’d also passed that way and shared a picture or two here. This time, four years later, I mostly noticed a couple of the plants are thriving in the changed landscape. Along the road scores of milkweeds were lined up, and lots of young oak trees. I didn’t manage to take a picture of a little oak, but I got close enough to the milkweeds to see two kinds of bright insects on them.
The oaks in this case were the daughters of acorns that sprouted soon after the tall canopy above them had burned off. I read that “…fire directly promotes the establishment of oak seedlings by reducing competing understory vegetation, releasing needed soil nutrients and reducing numerous pathogens.” source
I think the ones I saw might be black oaks, Quercus kelloggii; the photos I found online.


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Refrain, sirrah, from cutting the oak,
the mother of acorns;
refrain,
and lay low the old stone-pine,
or the sea-pine,
or this rhamnus with many stems,
or the holly-oak,
or the dry arbutus.
Only keep thy axe far from the oak,
for our grannies tell us that
oaks were the first mothers.
-Diodorus Zonas, 1st century BC, Italy
Translated by William R. Paton, The Greek anthology, Vol III

In The Odyssey Homer refers to a legend that men were sprung from oaks or rocks,
e.g. “But tell me of your family, since you did not spring
from a tree or a stone as in the ancient tales.”
Homer’s Odyssey XIX.
I like the idea of oaks being the first mothers and am heartened by the regrowth you witnessed after the fire.
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You actually found a parallel to your oaks and acorns: an adult and youngsters of just one insect. The milkweed bug (Oncopeltus fasciatus) has adopted the same color scheme as the monarch butterflies, perhaps as a defensive mechanism. (If that butterfly tastes bad, that bug might also taste bad.) The large one is an adult; the smaller are nymphs. One species, two stages!
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I was wondering if that might be the case – thank you, Linda !
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Never heard of the Milkweed Bug. Interesting how oaks grow and thrive after wildfires go through the area.
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That’s fascinating about the fire igniting the oaks regeneration. I had no idea about that. I’m glad things are growing back. Those fires are so tragic.
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