Showing posts with label spiders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spiders. Show all posts

Monday, October 23, 2023

tangled webs

 Lots to see this time of year, and not just kitten cuteness.

Even before the leaves started changing, they were thinning out, leaving space for dramatic rays of sun to burst through.

But now we've got real change!  Just a few days ago, our hiking trail was barely touched with color...


...and now the trees around are property are fully ablaze!






Because it's been so warm, there are still plenty of insects around.  Hornets still active in their nests...


...and I'm seeing lots of spiders around.  Look away if you're spider-averse!

spiny-backed orb weaver

tiny crab spider on celosia

bright-eyed daring jumping spider

They leave their prey wound up in webs around the porch, like tiny mummies...pretty appropriate for the season.  


I was so inspired that I bought a couple yards of spider web fabric to make a skirt for next fall. No spiders, but lots of insects caught in the sticky strands...reminds me so much of late autumn!


We might have a frost next week, and we'll lose the spiders until next spring.  Well, except for the chipboard spider that I've taped to the inside of a living room lamp.  That guy will probably be around until December!  :)


We've been checking the trail cams and getting lots of deer...raccoons...possums...and, of course, our chogs.


We have SO MANY tracks in the snow here...it will be exciting to see to whom they belong!


Snow seems pretty far away, though.  It's been so mild, and it will be close to 80 this week. Unbelievably, the flower garden is rallying and putting on a lot of new growth! 
 
new yarrow getting ready to bloom

only a few dead patches of bachelor buttons

So lots of bouquets...more baking...

healthy pumpkin bread recipe from Well Plated

...and as usual, more kittens.



Blue skies, moderate temperatures, beautiful colors...have a great week!





Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Gutter Flutter

It's 65 degrees right now, but with the wind it feels positively chilly.  I'm comfortably wrapped up in a shawl, even as I have all the windows open to flood the house with the wonderful fresh air.  Fall is my favorite season, and I'm loving it - chilly breeze and all.

I've been knitting like crazy in preparation for the Christmas season, but also because nothing feels cozier in the fall than to curl up with a ball of yarn at your side and a project in your lap.  Here's a peek of a few things that I've been working on:

 

I don't think I've ever had so many knitting projects going at the same time!  I'm already looking ahead to future projects.  I keep saying that I'm going to start knitting for myself, and I'm going to start with a pair of fingerless gloves...something that sounds really good right now!

We're doing our end-of-season yard work, too.  Todd has been up on the roof, cleaning the gutters.


We've both been working in the beds, weeding and pruning, and Todd swept up the paint chips from our recent house painting.


We spent an hour in our little swinging seat this weekend, looking out over the water and enjoying the wonderful weather.  Starting next weekend, our board games will be played down there, with a roaring fire going in the outdoor fireplace.  A double hooray for fall!

We can see the changing seasons in the insects, too.  These brown shield bugs are all over our screens.


They want inside, a warm place where they can overwinter.  They're harmless to us, but destructive to crops.  They're actually native to Asia, but came over here sometime in the 1990s, probably in shipped goods.  They have no natural predators here, so they've been able to spread quickly!

Spiders, of course, are everywhere in the fall.  This beauty is Neoscona crucifera and lives just outside our bedroom patio door.


Lots of spiny-backed orb weavers around...


...and lots of tattered web remains in this late season.


It's fun to be working and observing outside in the fall, but fall baking is a great joy for me too.  Hearty stews and homemade bread, roasted chicken, squash and late-season root vegetables are all nice, but it's the sweets that hold a special place in my heart...starting with pumpkin bread. 

I have a favorite recipe, of course (recipe here), but I kicked it up a notch this week by adding 1/2 teaspoon of cardamon, leaving the ground cinnamon at one teaspoon, and adding a cup of cinnamon chips.  I can't believe how much that improved an already-wonderful recipe.  Letting it sit a day or two makes it even better.


I do decrease the white sugar by one cup now, because 2 cups of sugar plus (or without) frosting is plenty for us.  But if you're feeling indulgent, go for it!  Just don't forget those cinnamon chips...they really take it to the next level. 

Have a great week! 

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

the itsy bitsy spider

If you're squeamish about spiders, I'm sorry about the following photos.  I actually felt the same way you do.  Growing up in the country, we had loads of big, hairy wolf spiders everywhere, especially in our garage (where I liked to play) or around the wood pile.  My grandpa and I had an insect collection and even though spiders aren't insects, we pinned several of them to the collection board.  I shuddered every time I passed by!  I felt the same way about praying mantises.  But I forced myself to learn about why I didn't like them.  I read about them and photographed them, and while I certainly don't like to be surprised by either one, I've developed a grudging admiration for them.  

Let's face it - spiders are EVERYWHERE.  They spin beautiful webs and eat a ton of bothersome insects, like mosquitoes (some estimates show that an average spider eats over 2000 insects per year!).  Although I'm still not a fan of big, hairy spiders, I do enjoy looking at the smaller ones. 

This little spider has made a comfortable nest in one of my nasturtium leaves.  He's got a nice mottled body and translucent legs, and a pretty nice setup for catching gnats and other tiny insects!


I spied this tiny green spider curled up in a cluster of hydrangea buds.


He's a green jumping spider (Lyssomanes viridis), also known as the Magnolia Green Jumper.


His eyes are on top of his head in that reddish spot - see them?  They have terrific vision, like all jumping spiders.  I think he's a beauty!

This Opilione rests in the heat of the day under a basil leaf.


He's a harvestman, a creature I've always called a "grandaddy longlegs".  However,  while Opilione are in the class Arachnid, they are not considered spiders.  They have a solid instead of segmented body, do not spin webs, have just a single pair of eyes, and no venom glands.  Their bodies are actually nicely colored, like a pebble:


I have to admit, they still creep me out.

I finally got a good shot of a Venusta Orchard Spider abdomen:


Gorgeous!

Even if you don't see a spider, they are most likely close by.  Living in the woods, we have lots of webs, even between the boards on our deck:


This little house spider spun a web on the outside of one of our windows.  She made her egg sac, which hatched yesterday:


Still, I'm glad this is outside and not inside!

I've obviously had spiders on the brain lately, and this dragonfly nearly gave me a heart attack last week when he landed on our back screen...at first glance, I thought he was a spider!


We've had more great rain lately.  Mushrooms are springing up everywhere.


My ferns are loving it.  I have three kinds.  This I call "bronze"...


This is "alligator":


This is "maidenhair":


The hosta flowers are starting to open up.


My hydrangea is budding out more and more, in a beautiful deep blue.


The clearance hydrangeas I bought at Lowe's all died.  I left them in the ground, though, because sometimes...


...you get lucky and they come back.

The rain has caused some significant yellowing of the gardenia flowers.  Hopefully some sun will bring them back.


My little toad has moved from the side to the front of the house!  I stumbled over him in the front path.


I've done some indoor crafting because of the rain.  A friend's older son was getting braces and I decided to make him a card.  I'd seen this grill "pinned" as a Father's Day card on Pinterest.  I liked the way it looked and decided to pun with it.


The grill was easy to make.  A circle cut in half, with a brad in the corner for a hinge.  Construction paper flames.  The wheels were the eyes from my owl paper punch.


The inside:


I used a clear embossing marker to draw on the braces and heat embossing powder to make them shiny and raised.


Get it?  Grill?  I was very amused!

Hope you can do something creative today...have a great week!