Showing posts with label gall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gall. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

our sweet Claudia

It's been a tearful week here on the homestead.  Claudia, our beloved barn cat, is not doing well.  It's hard to qualify the exact issue, other than she seems to have aged rapidly.  She's not eating much.  Her fur is extremely dry and matted and she does not like to be brushed like she used to.  She has a stiff, arthritic walk and spends most of her time asleep, but not in her usual spots on the porch chairs.  I suspect that she's unable to jump up like she used to, so we've made a soft place for her on the ground.  She stays there, but spends more time in secret cubbies under bushes and locations unknown.  I've heard about animals going off to die somewhere and have been really fearful.  This week, Claudia is getting tons of wet food treats and head rubs.  

I caught my first glimpse of Claudia in July 2019.  She was feral...

fleeing our first encounter

...but quickly got used to her new family.


We both love her so much and are trying to sneak outside as often as possible to give her the love and attention that she deserves!

I'm glad that she's finally getting some warmer weather.  It's been so chilly and rainy this spring.  Some flowers have loved it...


my 'Roguchi' clematis

late-blooming poppies

lambs ear

...but most flowers have been unhappy, including my poor annual cutting garden.  My last-minute planting of the easiest flowers - zinnias, cosmos, marigolds - have produced a handful of seedlings, a few desultory sunflowers (how?!?), and weeds.  It's too late to plant more seeds.  The garden is toast this year.  At least I can take a break from the seeding, potting up, and planting out of grumpy seedlings that don't tend to make it past the first few days.  Next year I'll start over with new seed and hopefully will have better luck.  

Tons of critters around, at least!  In the frequently foggy mornings...


...I see lots of deer.

eyeballing my sunflowers...

Some cool caterpillars...

grub worm

bronze cutworm moth caterpillar 

...and other insects.

syrphid fly

eriophyes tiliae, the red nail gall mite

another gall wasp, the wool sower

I've found some really exciting spiders, too (skip the next few pictures if you're spider-averse)!

This is a northern male black widow spider, only slightly venomous and less aggressive than the female.


Ditto this red ant-mimic spider.


Check out this wolf spider and her egg sac!


Todd has informed me that we have "record humidity" settling in for the next few weeks, so I'll be spending less time outside...and more time inside with these guys...

Frances and Calliope, an uneasy truce

Frances nap

...and just outside, with this gal.


Have a great week!


Tuesday, May 14, 2024

snakes on (an inclined) plane

 All sorts of brambles are flowering right now...




...which inspired me to make a berry cobbler!


Actually, looking at brambles led me to an interesting adventure this week.  We've got multiflora roses growing all along the fence line.  They're invasive, but at least they're pretty in bloom.  I love how they wind around our birdhouses.


I went in for a closer look at this particular birdhouse, and...someone looked back!


It's a harmless young black rat snake.  They, of course, will eat bird eggs, although I'm not sure if any bird was nesting here.  It might just be temporary housing for this guy, and at this size, it's a perfect fit for him!  

On our front porch, a small Cope's tree frog rested before his big nightly solo.  We have so many frogs here, with 2 ponds and a stream and lots of trees.  I don't usually see them on the porch, though!  


I've seen other little fellows, like this praying mantis nymph, just an inch long.


A green stink bug watched from nearby.  I actually haven't seen too many insects yet...other than ticks...so I'm loving all of these visitors right now!


Todd and I are continuing with our daily walks, and the trail is so pretty.  


It's lined with the Indiana state tree, the tulip.  This time of year, they're dropping their flowers.  I love to pick them up and put them in water.


I love the variety of trees there.


Different trees, different galls.  These bullseye spots are caused by the oscellate maple gall midge.


The midge, which looks similar to a mosquito, laid eggs here.  The eggs hatched, and tiny maggots live on the leaf tissue, which creates the raised circles.  

Galls are so cool, and all so different.  Here's another that I found recently, caused by eriophyid mites.


I always keep an eye out for something new, even though we walk the same path every day.  I usually find it!  

Even at home.  For example, Frances paid no attention to the barrier I stacked in the upstairs window sill, to keep him away from the screen.  He wanted to stretch out, so he simply stretched over the barrier and busted out a convenient hole in the screen for his paw.  Ah, that's better!  

terrible cell phone pic!

That was definitely a new one for me.  These cats keep us on our toes!

Have a great week! 









Monday, July 31, 2017

Caraway eyes and robber flies

It's anniversary time!  I believe this is our fourth anniversary in the South.  One year we went to the coast, and the other years to the mountains in North Carolina.  This year we'd originally planned to go to the coast, but had some unexpected expenses come up last minute that made it seem a little less than prudent.  We then thought we might head to the mountains to hike, but my still-healing ankle made me a little hesitant to try really steep inclines.  We finally settled on a simple day trip to Athens, Georgia, to see the state botanical gardens.

I love that water lilies are always in bloom on our anniversary.



We saw lots of beautiful dragonflies.  These are both in the Erythemis simplicicollis family, with the common name pondhawk.  Isn't that a great name for a dragonfly?



Another great find was this robber fly who'd captured a carpenter bee.


Also called "assassin flies," they can easily catch prey in flight and insert a neurotoxin to subdue it.

Here's a lovely grasshopper!  His striped eyes remind me of stubby caraway seeds.



Finally, we saw some aphids deliriously sucking the fluid from a lily, little legs kicking in pleasure. These guys know how to have a good time!


I was really delighted to spot a lizard that I've never seen in South Carolina:  a five-lined skink. Check out that tail!



Skinks are tiny...only about 8 inches long, and almost half of that is tail.  They can detach these tails if needed, to avoid a predator.  Scientists theorize that this is the reason for the brightly-colored hue of the tail, to direct predators to that end of the body.  The skink can lose the tail with no problem...the head, on the other hand, is indispensable.

I saw my first cotton flowers - so lovely!  I love the clasping leaves and the way the light shines through the petals.



Beautiful light all around.



Their hydrangeas aren't doing much better than ours at this time of year!



Star-shaped seed pods...


---more lovely spirals.


I spotted this bulbous fungus on a juniper fir.  It's apple cedar rust gall.


Left to its own devices, these will sprout pretty cool-looking orange fingers.  They'll dry and then send spores everywhere. It's best to remove these as soon as possible!

After our easy walk around the gardens, we gorged on steak tacos at a hole-in-the-wall restaurant, then went to a local nature preserve to hike more.  A stomachful of steak and 95 degree temps do not a pleasant hike make.  We only made it a mile or two before I threw in the towel.  I truly felt like Michael Scott on his Cure For Rabies Fun Run. It was better to be at home - in air conditioning!  I did give Todd one of his anniversary cards a little early (he gets several!).  This was probably influenced by the fact that I've started watching Breaking Bad again.



I love making cards and don't do it nearly enough!

Otherwise, on the homefront, our goz are taking regular practice flights.


All except for - gulp! - a certain flipper-winged goose, who has been ominously absent from the group this week.  Maybe he's got a cozy nest at the other end of the pond...I'll continue to keep an eye out for him.

Have a great week!