Showing posts with label turtles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label turtles. Show all posts

Monday, October 30, 2023

brown county bounty

Forget peak leaf week...I think we hit peak leaf DAY when we went to Brown County State Park this past week!


Colors were amazing.








Others were haunting the trails, too.

red-tailed hawk

"woolly bear" caterpillar

painted turtles

And why not?  It was almost 80 degrees!  At home, I continue to see insects everywhere...and it was so warm the other night that I heard tree frogs singing...kind of unusual for late October.  

spotted cucumber beetle

milkweed bug nymph

oleander aphids

But I don't think I'll be seeing them for long.  In the span of a few days, we're going from 80 to 23 degrees, and the hard frost will kill everything in the garden and send these bugs into hibernation.  It's amazing that we've had flowers for this long!  I gathered up a big armful today for the last bouquets of the season.


The kittens have been loving the sunshine...


...but they will like curling up by a warm fire, too.  We'll see what happens over the next few days.  Have a great week!  







Monday, March 21, 2022

Ephemeral Emeralds

Late March...some rain...a warm spell...I knew that ephemerals would be popping up!  Like the name suggests, ephemerals are woodland wildflowers that are here-and-gone.  In a brown landscape with not a lot of green growth, they are little gems scattered in the forest.  I love seeing their little faces every year!

Rue Anemone

Spring Beauties

Cutleaf Toothwort

Harbinger-of-Spring

Red Maples are budding out!



The woods are alive, finally!  This spring peeper is singing his heart out.



I've seen so many southern leopard frogs!


Turtles everywhere.  Todd, with his eagle eye, sounds a "turt alert" when he spots one from the trail.



Are these geese making a nest?


This freshwater snail is working his way through the debris on this submerged leaf.


Insects are stirring, too.  These water skippers are killing two birds with one stone, makin' babies and having a snack simultaneously.


A pair of predacious diving beetles, clasped in an embrace, dove for cover as I leaned in for a photo.


Interesting creatures.  They can't breathe underwater, so they bring air down with them, storing it within their bodies.  It has to be just the right amount.  Too much and they would be too buoyant, and not enough, they would drown.  They're called water tigers for their somewhat brutal hunting methods...floating limply in the water until prey (fish, tadpole, etc.) passes, and then, quick as lightning, biting.  They inject a digestive juice that partially liquifies their victims, making them easier to eat.  

I spotted another fascinating insect yesterday.  This is a violet oil beetle.  Not just a pretty face!


They're also known as blister beetles because they secrete a corrosive liquid from their joints if bothered, causing skin to blister.  Their life cycle is absolutely fascinating!  Any Creepshow 2 fans?


Young oil beetles have tiny grappling hooks on their legs, and after burrowing out of the ground, climb onto the nearest flower.  They wait for bees and hook onto their bodies, hitching a ride back to the hive.  There, they gorge on eggs and prepare for pupating.  They're so interesting...the Czech Republic even had a violet oil beetle stamp!


I love being out in the woods in spring, and so does Borga!  




After more than a decade of dragging us around, she's finally starting to slow down.  She's pretty tired after an hour, and she no longer leads the pack...she's content to trot behind Todd.  Sometimes she even lets me walk in front!  Hopefully this will be a very active spring for us, and she'll have lots of opportunities to stretch her legs.

Have a great week!  

Monday, April 12, 2021

the annual mating game

 Spring!


A much-need rain turned torrential.



The birds tried to keep dry under the shelter of newly-leafed branches....


...but my outdoor seedlings took a pounding and had to be repotted.


The warming temperatures have brought out the lovebirds!  These two earthworms are makin' babies!


Have you ever wondered what that pink band on earthworm bodies is for?  It actually moves during reproduction, producing mucus.  The worm's eggs stick to the mucus and then passes them over the seminal receptacle of the male, thereby fertilizing the eggs.  

These two cabbage white butterflies caught my eye with their fluttering mating dance.




Male cabbage butterflies inject a hard packet of sperm, which makes up 13% of their body weight (for comparison, this is equivalent to a 5-gallon bucket for a human).  The hard packet helpfully contains nutrients that the female butterfly uses for nourishment.  Clever!

Todd and I disturbed this (nesting?) pair of geese on the back pond.  



I miss our South Carolina "goz" so hopefully we'll see babies later this spring!


There are nesting bluebirds along the fence line...


We've seen turtles peeking out of both the back and the front ponds...



...looking for mates?

We're planning a spring garden expansion.  Here's a big delivery of compost...


...and I've been hurrying to get hardy annuals into the ground as weather permits.


It's nice to enjoy the plants that don't take these exertions...the perennials that faithfully return every year.  




We're loving the redbuds coming on and all of the green that's suddenly (and delightfully) crowding our senses.  Hooray for spring!