Showing posts with label dragonfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dragonfly. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Bugs on plants and one good fence…

I was looking around at the photos I’ve taken in the last couple of weeks and found that I have been taking a lot of shots of bugs.  There’s a bear and a bobcat roaming around our neighborhood, but I am only getting bugs.  Oh, well…guess I’m hanging around in the wrong places.  But since that’s what I’ve got, I will post a few bugs today. 
 





One problem with bugs is that they refuse to be fenced in.  Still I want to participate in Good Fences on Theresa’s Run*A*Round Ranch Report so I am also posting one good fence.  This fence is there to keep people from driving into Quaboag Pond in Brookfield, Massachusetts.  It seems to be working for that, but it would do nothing to keep the bugs out or in.


Wednesday, July 16, 2014

The Milkweed Menagerie…

Last year, after being away from home for a little while, Greg and I returned home to find this growing in the pachysandra near our house.


I soon found out that it was a milkweed plant and what I learned about it made me glad that it decided to plant itself in our yard.  I won’t go into all the ins and outs of what makes this plant interesting, but what ultimately made me decide that I wouldn’t pull it out was that it is the life blood of the subspecies of butterfly called the Milkweed Butterfly, which includes the Monarch Butterfly.
 Somehow in the back of my mind, I knew that Monarch’s were having a hard time and I learned that, aside from climate change, a further reason for their struggle is that milkweed – so important to the Monarch’s success – is disappearing.  I figured since our yard is no showplace, it might look better with a few Monarchs hanging around.  So I left it.
Well, long story short here.  This is our second year of encouraging the milkweed to grow.  We have not had a Monarch yet.  But I am going to share with you the variety of creatures that are benefiting from our crop.
This is a Great Spangled Fritillary.  I think he’s rather magnificent.


And what I like best about him are his eyes.  They match his outfit.  The first thing that popped into my head when I saw that were lines from the song In the Merry Old Land of Oz.

We can make a dimple smile out of a frown
Can you even dye my eyes to match my gown? Uh-huh
Jolly old town.


We’ve also seen a lot of this little fellow this year.  He’s a Silver-spotted Skipper butterfly.  I think it looks like he’s sporting a fur cape.


Here’s an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail.  This guy is beautiful from the top and the bottom and from inside and out.



It hasn’t been just butterflies who like our milkweed.  Today I saw this Hummingbird Moth.


There have been many honey bees.  Yay!!


And dragonflies of all colors and sizes.


This dragonfly was on a nearby wildflower.  I wanted to post this picture because after I uploaded it, I noticed the little bumps all down its tail.


Are those eggs?


I don’t claim to be an Entomologist.  I just poke around on the Internet to find this stuff out.  If you see any mistakes here, please let me know.

But, here’s the bottom line.  If you see milkweed in your yard, I’d like to encourage you to leave it be.  You will see some pretty neat creatures this summer and it makes a really nice photographic subject in the fall as well.  Not only that, but the birds find it to be a nice sturdy perching stick.  Milkweed...a plant for all seasons.


Saturday, September 3, 2011

Finding my place on the food chain…


“Mosquitoes remind us that we are not as high up on the food chain as we think.”  ~Tom Wilson

I’ve been informed by a reliable source that the mosquitoes that have been driving me bonkers the last few days are not here because we got so much rain during Tropical Storm Irene.  Those mosquitoes have yet to hatch.  Oh, joy!  The ones that are making me crazy right now may have been blown in during the storm or maybe they were here all along waiting for me to take the dog for a walk.  No matter!  Wherever they are from, I wish they would go back.

I am an animal lover.  I don’t kill spiders.  I know that everything has its place in this world.  But I HATE mosquitoes.  It seems that if I am sitting in crowd of people, I’m swatting away while everyone else is sitting and having fun.  They love me.  I don’t love them.  Greg gets that look on his face and says stuff like, “It’s because you’re sooo sweet!”  Right!  Damn bugs!  Just leave me the BLEEP alone!

But here I’m going to put a positive spin on the old mosquito thing.  The one good thing about them is that some of my favorite creatures consider them to be a real delicacy.  Swallows, bats and most especially dragonflies eat them with great relish.  The last few days, the dragonflies have been out with a vengeance.  Usually when I approach them with my camera, they say, “Sorry, Charlie” and fly away.  Lately, probably because they are too full to fly, they have been sitting there posing for me.    Aren't they beautiful?!