The garden in front
of our house -
Hum-m-m, how
do I give it justice?
We mow the
weeds by the street, so diligently,
and pretend
it’s grass without any class.
And add a lovely
row of mulch to give definition,
between those
wild ones with heads still attached,
and those
defiant rebels mowed to a wee bit of stubble,
and still - we
never, ever pull ourselves up into first class.
That row of woody
chips has melted quite a bit,
crossing the
line of demarcation into enemy territory,
and causing a teeter-tottering
effect when walking,
if
you dare…
to stare at the
flowers that aren’t always there.
I sit on the
porch in the cool of trees
that have
defied the pruning given each year,
boxing with
the eves when the wind is high.
Next year, I
suspect, they’ll be half way to the moon.
I’ll just
watch it all engulf me,
as if I am food
for thought for dinner,
While cicada
songs crescendo and decrescendo around me,
As the earth
spins into that world of darkness.
What the..?
A spider spins
its silk, back and forth, between chair and door,
A mosquito
comes with friends to eagerly dine,
A cockroach silently
scampers past the toe of my shoe,
While a
strange feeling sends shivers up and down my spine.
Has it passed
through the grapevine -?
That
invitation to come and dine as you are
With some
daffy lady still on her front porch,
As the
darkness curls around and swallows her up.
Joe Pye Weed flower buds, Eutrochium fistulosum
Hibiscus moscheutos, the Swamp Rose-mallow
Flower buds with fuzz that sparkles like sugar,
or appears as if velvet.
Tiger Bee Fly, Xerox tigrinus
Bee Flies are true flies.
The female tiger bee fly deposits her eggs in places
where carpenter bees have laid their eggs.
The bee fly larvae eat the carpenter bee larvae.
Always the mallow flowers have been light pink.
I think seeds that fell from the seed pods last fall sprouted this year.
The flower colors are variable in the white, pink, and red range;
so one never knows what color of flowers the new plant will have.
Anavitrinella pampinaria - Common Gray Moth
Moths enter a state of torpor to rest.
Torpor is a resting state where the insect
slows its brain function, metabolism, and heart rate.
Mourning Doves, Zenaida macroura, at the bird feeder
Not the best photos, but I'm working on improving them.
American Goldfinch, Spinus tristis
Northern Mockingbird, Spinus tristis
House Finch, Haemorhous mexicanus
Insects are attractive things and very human, or perhaps we men and women are like bugs. I have known dragon flies, swift-motioned, gleaming; and hornets, unbeautiful but effective; some people are like honeybees, engaged in sweet unselfish labors, while others are crickets that only chirp; some are butterflies, flashing in the pure light, while others are noisome, creeping things that lurk in dank shadows. Some persons are fireflies, lighting up dark places for others, while there are those who are house flies, inquisitive, annoying, noxious... Yet there isn't anybody who isn't interesting, and so there is no bug that doesn't repay you for studying it. I wonder what insect I am like?— my family would doubtless say a mosquito.
~Dorothy Scarborough, "Entomology on a Country Porch," From a Southern Porch, 1919
Rose Mallow Bees resemble bumblebees,
These bees do not resemble bumblebees,
therefore, I do not know what kind of mallow bees these are
that visit my rose mallow flowers.
There is a third, much smaller bee in the flower
that ignored the mallow bees fighting.
At first glance, it looked like a ball of bees rolling around and around,
but it turned out to be just two bees.
I observed this behavior on three separate occasions.
I think this is a mating behavior, where the male bee
rests in the mallow flower, waiting for a foraging female bee.
Males will chase away or fight with other males
that try to land on their flower.
I could be wrong :)
They could be protecting their food source.
Twice one of the bees flew away and one bee stayed.
Once both bees flew away.
These bees are solitary bees, meaning the females
nest individually in hard-packed soil.
Eggs are deposited into brood cells
provisioned with masses of pollen and nectar,
Predation in the larval stage is most commonly from
parasitoid wasps, fire ants, and assassin flies
This is a mallow bee after the other bee
it was fighting with flew away.
This is a mallow bee resting or hiding in a flower,
maybe waiting for a female mallow bee to visit.
This is a bumblebee resting with its legs clamped to the flower petal.
Along the fence behind the house.
Autumn Minaret Daylily
Flower stems are as tall a me.
Phlox paniculata 'Jeana' with Carpenter Bee
Bumblebee on Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea
Unripened berries of Spicebush, Lindera benzoin
Bumblebees
Phlox paniculata 'Laura'
Bumblebee on Hairy Sunflower, Helianthus hirsutus
Stylophorum diphyllum, commonly called Celandine Poppy.
It blooms late spring, and usually goes dormant before summer's end.
These patterned leaves are showing signs of drought stress.
Plant Hopper Nymph (True Bugs)
Order Hemiptera, Family Aconaloniidae
Feeds on juices of seeds and plants.
Secretes a filamentous wax from glandular tissue
at the tip of the abdomen.
The waxy coating sticks to their preditor,
and while the preditor is cleaning itself off, the nymph excapes.
They don't stick to spider webs,
and the waxy coating also helps them float in water
and swim to safety.
Pale Bordered Field Roach, Pseudomops septentrionalis
Native to Mexico
A rare example of a new invasive insect that is not a serious pest.
On a Turtlehead Plant, Chelone lyonii 'Hot Lips'
not yet blooming.
They only live outdoors where they are scavengers,
and do not harm plants.
Five-lined skink, Plestioden fasciatus
Natural habitat is moist woody places with a place to sun.
Sunning in front of neighbors fence on our concrete wall,
where the huge blue flowered violets grow.
Orb Weaver Spider on a front porch column.
Begins to spin a web at dusk, and takes it down by daylight.
It hides during the day.
And,
of course,
my most favorite critters
taking over Dustin's bed before he passed away ~
Miss Charlotte and sweet Austin.
* I'm working on our desktop computer whose chair hurts my pinched nerve beyond toleration. My Dell laptop is being sent to their service center to fix a hard drive problem. My first cataract surgery is this coming Monday, and right now my neck is giving me lots of problems. I'm going on with the surgery anyway, as I don't think feeling better is on the table any time soon. I love all of your blogs, but my laptop has been impossible to work on for months, and I am so far behind on catching up that it's not going to happen. I'll comment on days I feel okay.
Love you all.
Thank you for all the lovely comments you have left me in the past.
This Post Is Linked To:
Beautiful descriptions of the world you live in. Nice flowers, bees, lizards etc.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Delete...Google lens thinks that the insect with the red head is a Cockroach - Pseudomops septentrionalis. I few years ago I planted a "Little Joe Pye Weed," it's now 6 feet tall!
ReplyDeleteWow! You're right about the cockroach. Thank you. It's a very pretty cockroach.
DeleteThe world of insects is never boring, with always new species to discover. Everyone with a backyard has an insectarium right at hand and endless hours of pleasure await the curious mind.
ReplyDeleteHow true. Everytime I enter my garden, I'm learning something new. I always have the need to know. Some find it irritating, I find it exciting.
DeleteGood luck with the surgery. I've had cataracts removed. Your poem is wonderful!
ReplyDeleteYour rose mallow bees look like our hornets from last year! What beautiful flowers. Yay, summer!
Thank you. It is always encouraging to hear that cataract surgery has gone well. Summer does give us lots to enjoy, and I know you embrace it happily.
DeleteI enjoyed your great opening poem and beautiful photos as always!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. I'm glad you enjoyed my post.
DeleteWhen we were in Costa Rica, we removed a giant moth from our screen with a spatuala and placed him outside. He stayed on the spatula until dusk that night. Torpor!
ReplyDeleteGood luck on your surgery. Your words, so eloquent and expressive, combined with your beautiful images, makes for a wonderful post!
ReplyDeleteWonderful verse, photos and captions!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes with your surgery and get well soon!
Hello Yvonne,
ReplyDeleteYou have a lovely way with words describing your garden. Wonderful captures of the pretty flowers and all the insects. Love the cute kitties. Good luck with your surgery, sending prayers. Thank you for linking up and sharing your post. Take care, have a great weekend. PS, thank you for leaving me a comment.
You must feel so great knowing you are feeding so many pretty birds and providing flowers for the insects! You have a beautiful place to enjoy nature!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pics and poem! I'm sorry you're going through a tough time. I hope your surgery goes well and you start to feel better soon.
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful poem and photos.
ReplyDeleteThe cataract surgery is really not too bad, I've had it on both eyes.
I wish you a lot of strength in the coming time.
Greetings Irma
ReplyDeleteSome reading for you Yvonne.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_ringing
Thank you for another brilliant post. You really are a remarkably talented lady with your poetry, super photos and your knowledge of the natural world. Good luck with your op. My wife had both eyes done over 12 months ago and she described the op as uncomfortable but she's more than happy with the results now.
I enjoyed reading your beautifully written poem. Great photos and narrative, a very enjoyable post. Good luck with your surgery, it realy is easy to get through and recover from. I had mine a few years ago. Take care!
ReplyDeleteWonderful poem. I can tell you put a lot of work into it.
ReplyDeleteI hope all your procedures go okay and you can get back online without undue pain.
You have a whole world in your garden, plants and insects.
I've been learning about bees. I have a volunteer gig working for a biology professor at the University of Oklahoma setting out various colored cups of a water detergent mixture and then collecting them and putting the insects caught in the mixture in sample jars. He is really interested in the bees in particular. The ones he really likes are two to three millimeters long. I didn't know that they came that small. I wondered why he give me a milipore filter to filter the liquid. He says get all the small bugs that I can.
Beautiful natural at its best. I like the Bugs and a Five-lined Skink.
ReplyDeleteLovely poetry and gorgeous floral photos ~ favorite is the kitties photo ~ adorable ~ Xo
ReplyDeleteWishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores
aka (A Creative Harbor)
Your garden is Bliss!
ReplyDeleteLove the buds and great shots with the bee! #Mcow
ReplyDeleteI really, truly enjoyed your opening, poetry, descriptions, it read like a song playing in my head, and it really struck home with me especially mowing what does seem like more weeds than grass this year! It's just crazy. Your photos all about are dreamy and as lovely as your words. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteSo much beauty in the world you live in, Yvonne.
ReplyDeleteLove your poem and gorgeous photos.
Hugs and blessing