Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts

Monday, August 14, 2023

do the dew

 The back flower garden is finally coming into its own.

I weed the holes at the base of the plants occasionally, but mostly I just stand back and let it sprawl!





I make big bouquets once a week for the house and the porch.  Cheerful color everywhere.


Lots of company in the garden.  The usual birds...

ruby-throated hummingbird, female

goldfinch, male

both!

wood ducks...momma has left, just the little ones remain!

And so many butterflies, of course. Just too many to list...there's a constantly-fluttering cloud over the garden rows.  At least twenty-five...thirty?...forty...at any given time!  They even share.

one...two...three.


I've found so many interesting insects lately.  The banded tussock moth caterpillar...


...and the parent moth!


A mating pair of eremnophila aureonatata wasps.


The eggs are laid in the ground, and the female includes a paralyzed caterpillar so that the newly-hatched larvae have a nice snack right away!  

Sweat bees sting...
augochlora

...but they're great pollinators.  And despite the tiger bee flies, we still have plenty of carpenter bees!

still shaking the morning dew from his eyes!

Check out that pollen pack!


We're getting pretty regular rain in between our hot, humid August days...and the dew is really heavy lately.

dew-covered leaf hopper






...so pretty.  We're both loving the natural beauty here!  So much color this time of year.

our daily morning hike path

celosia leaves in the garden

fallen sunflower petals

Looking forward to more discoveries in the last two weeks of August.  Have a great week!  




Monday, June 12, 2023

"fish" scales and this plant is...male?

 Babies!

Barn swallows are reusing the old nest in the white barn.  There are nests elsewhere...the air is full of dipping and swooping barn swallows in the barnyard!


More babies in our front junipers.  This is a song sparrow fledgling.


The parents are protective...maybe making a nest directly by the front door wasn't the greatest idea?


This paper wasp queen is making a nest, too.  She's been out and about, searching for wood fibers (any source of wood, even cardboard!).  She masticates the wood with her saliva until she has a ball of pulp...


...which she'll use to start building one of those papery grey wasp nests that are found in so many places.

Turkeys are gobbling in the early mornings, and scavenging during the day when the hunting is good!


I see the same deer almost daily.  


It's easily recognizable because of its strange appearance.


These warty clusters are called deer fibroma, caused by a papillomavirus.  It doesn't affect the health of the deer and can't be transmitted to humans.  It's just unsightly, not harmful!

Butterflies are out and about!

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail female

Great Spangled Frittillary 

Someone dropped a wing recently and I love examining them in detail.  Butterfly wings are covered in tiny scales, like a fish.  That's why their scientific name is Lepidoptera, from the Greek Lepido (scale) and ptera (wing).


Gnats are out in their mating swarms, which are tiny but mighty!


If you look closely, they almost look like they're holding hands in tiny joyful dance circles!


More garden work.


I'm a little concerned with my direct seeding.  The soil is healthy, but the top of the rows are covered in dry,  crumbly clay chunks.  I planted 22 pumpkin seeds but only 2 came up (I'm going to start more in flats this week...seedlings transplanted into the rows are doing just fine).  I planted over 200 sunflower seeds on Saturday.  On Sunday, we got our first real rain in a month, but hours of torrential downpours that likely washed the seeds away.  Sunflowers germinate quickly...if I haven't seen any in a week, I'll probably (sigh) fill flats with seeds and transfer the seedlings.  The garden will be beautiful...maybe not 'til August, though!  Next year, at least, we'll have our system in place and can get things planted a month earlier.  I've been working on more container planting.  The chogs ate all of the hyacinth bean vines that I planted, the week after eating half of my tomatoes.  I'm putting morning glories in their place.  On the front porch, I planted a pretty vine called purple bell vine.  They look normal from above. 


But at eye level?  I'm pretty sure this is really a purple penis plant.


I guess it's a conversation piece?  :)  This week I get the dahlias planted...the last of our landscape fabric comes in, and I fill in the rows with all available seedlings, and seed more if there's room.  Excitement!  The whole garden should be seeded and growing within a week!  We're all ready for a rest.


Have a great week!







Monday, September 12, 2022

the latest web series

One of the many things that I love about fall is the increased insect activity as they rush to feed, mate, and nest (or die) before cold weather hits.  Ladybugs will hibernate under tree bark, in rock piles, or in any tight place where they can avoid the frost and the wind (including your walls!).  


Most adult grasshoppers die after laying their eggs in the fall.  You see them in great numbers, hurrying to do what they need to do before a killing frost.


I didn't even notice this guy until I leaned in to admire a thistle plant!


All around, insects are mating as quickly as possible, as our nighttime temperatures dip into the low 50s. 

Both caterpillars and spiders spin webs inside of leaves.



Getting that nectar while they can!



I'm seeing more fall berries, too.




Increased deer foraging...


...and the first touches of color here.




Still, the flowers are going strong in the garden...


...with just a few starting to show signs of going to seed.


It's a great time to take a walk through the back fields...


...or just enjoy the view!


Next week looks miserably hot but at least the days are moving along and October will be here soon. 

Have a great week!