It's prime season for insects! It's been too hot (and I've been too busy) to get out with my camera much, but I've seen some great specimens close to home.
soldier beetle...a great pollinator!
scorpionfly...this is a female and she doesn't have the cool scorpion tail that males have!
sweat bees
honey bees...look at those beautiful wings!
He's getting bigger and bigger...
It's not too late in the season for baby birds...
red-winged blackbird babies in our front pond
...and new flowers are blooming, like this milkweed.
In the woods, blackberries are ripening...
Barnabas
Pepita is doing really well with cat introductions.
fierce feats of strength
...but she's spending a lot of time like this, unfortunately:
The vet couldn't fit her in for almost three weeks after the adoption, and when they finally saw her, they determined that she was crawling with parasites (despite frequent wormings). Right now, she has giardia and hookworm. Because she'd just had a flea treatment, we can't even give her the hookworm medicine for another week. She's getting two doses of antibiotics daily for the giardia, but reinfection is SO easy. I have to bleach her crate daily. Water and food dishes have to be treated with boiling water daily. Her bedding (including car blanket) has to be washed every other day, and so do all of her toys. The floors have to be mopped daily and the carpets have to be vacuumed. When she goes potty, we have to pick up everything and treat the location with diatomaceous earth (to kill the hookworms/giardia parasites that would otherwise worm their way into the soil and instantly reinfect her). We have to wash our hands CONSTANTLY, because humans can catch giardia (although it's unlikely). In short, everything has to be spotlessly clean and she cannot go around other dogs, because she'd infect them.
We had to reschedule her puppy class and we're sad that we can't do our planned socialization around town. Hopefully she'll get a clean bill of health at her next vet visit in two weeks, because I've read horror stories about puppies having giardia for MONTHS and needing constant antibiotics (and constant cleaning to prevent reinfection). It's daunting but we're really hoping for the best. The good news is that she's cheerful and active and shows no signs of being infected...that's a good sign! We really want to expand her house boundaries but every room she goes into has to be deep-cleaned daily, so she's going to have to wait for the vet's go-ahead.
Thankfully, giardia transmission from dogs to cats is rare.
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