Wednesday, August 21, 2024

The Surprise of a June Day in August





Gulf Fritillary Butterfly








American Snout Butterfly, Libytheana carinent


Pearl Crescent Butterfly


I don't think I would want just three summer days as a butterfly,
but it sounds like music on the page.






Bumblebee and tiny Mason Bee
on Monarda fistulosa


Bumblebee and non-native Honeybee


Green Sweat Bee


Carpenter Bee


Carpenter Bee, Green Sweat Bee, tiny Mason Bee
You can see the difference in size from big to tiny.
































Bumblebee








Common Green Bottle Fly, I think, with Green Sweat Bee.








This Carpenter Bee has wings that are further apart.






















I used to look at August as the most insufferable month of the year, but months aren’t always logical these days.  Something peculiar is happening.  A giant portion of June leaped forward into August, and part of August is falling back into June.

As usual, I’m at my garden table on the back deck at the same time the neighbors’ children have burst forth from the school bus to wreak havoc on my wellbeing.  Larger green cicadas are fewer in late summer, and revving up their song of love sounds gentler than the hordes of spring red eyed cicadas.

It is so pleasant this week, 81 degrees F. at 3:30 in the afternoon.  The heat can still be felt though, until breezes pass across the deck playfully ruffling my hair.

A squirrel is busy chattering, as a female cardinal has lighted onto a viburnum twig to pick at the yellow cream berries slowly ripening into tiny pale pinks before turning into an ocean of dark blue.

Cottony clouds are passing over to dim the sun intermittently, and it feels wonderful to be liberated from the four walls of stuffiness indoors.  Traffic is picking up, as it always does this time of day, past the house next door, and is joined by the noise of a light aircraft passing over head and fading away.

Mud dauber wasps are flying about, no doubt looking for mud and spiders.  While we have mud for the taking, the poisoning of the ash tree every other year decimated the spider population for now.

A group of leaf-footed bugs have been spotted on the coralberry bushes where the ash tree trunk once stood, a few are mating, and others sucking juice from the berries.  It has been the first time in thirty odd years that I have spotted any creature enjoying any part of the bushes.

Blue-Eyed Grass has been ordered to fill the containers of non-native herbs, along with something new to me - Scrophularia marilandica (Late Figwort).  Deemed not front yard worthy, it will be tucked into the back garden in semi-shade to hopefully surprise us next year, as it is a magnet for attracting insects with the nectar refilling in the flowers quite fast.

A chickadee chirps off and on, and if it had babies in the bird box this year, I missed it all.  The American dogwood has ripening berries this year, and although sunburned a bit, it is surviving with the extra watering.  It does get shade past 4:00 in the afternoon, but next year maybe not so much with the position of the spring sun.  Then it will most likely die.

A Spicebush Swallowtail was spotted early afternoon along with a pair of American snout butterflies (Libytheana carinenta), and as I sit here typing, I am noticing many turned under leaf edges on the Spicebushes, signaling each is a sleeping bag type protection for a baby Spicebush caterpillar.

I think potter wasps are their worst enemy, as a baby caterpillar will fit nicely into one of their mud creations.  It is the way of nature, isn't it.  Fairness has nothing to do with it.

What a fiasco!  I just noticed sprays of water shooting up around five feet into the air at the ground birdbath, as about fifty blackbirds, six or seven at a time are flapping away madly taking short baths, one wave after another,  before moving into the neighboring trees.  It all ends in less than a minute.  That actually took my breath away… sigh.

The mosquitoes have descended upon me like a wave of blood suckers out for the kill.  I’m out of here!






Later instar nymph
Brown Marmorated Stink Bug, Halyomorpha halys
Detected in the US in 1998 and are now widespread.











Pink Turtlehead


Wild Senna, Senna hebecarpa





Clematis viorna


Seed heads, and I think the brush looking ones
are from flowers that weren't pollinated.





Snail


Viburnum nudum 'Winterthur'





Ironweed, Vernonia fasciculata



Joe Pye Weed going to seed.


Juvenile Cardinal


Beauty Berry 





Coralberry


Leaf-footed Bug






























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16 comments:

  1. ...you remind me of entomology class back in he '60s. I wish that I saw more butterflies.

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  2. Butterflies, Bees and Beautiful Blooms & Berries -- thanks!

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  3. I always delight in your thorough grasps of nature in its varied forms, especially entomology, and the wonderful pictures that accompany your narrative. Thank you.

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  4. What a lovely post, Yvonne. I feel like I'm out in the garden with you. I love your descriptions and your photos tell the story so beautifully. Oh, the things you know!

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  5. What a lovely post, beautiful photos from your garden. I love all the flowers and the bees and butterflies. Take care, have a great weekend.

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  6. It's nice to have a good place to sit outside and enjoy the nice weather and beauty that surrounds you! Lovely post!

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  7. Hello Yvonne,
    I am stopping back to say thank you for linking up and sharing your post. All the Butterfly images are beautiful and I love the Monarda Take care, have a great weekend. PS, thank you for leaving me a comment.

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  8. Hello. Beautiful butterflies and great photos of insects.

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  9. You had me with the opening quote from John Keats! Thank you for the lovely nature moments too!

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  10. Hello Yvonne ;)
    Thank you for the moments shared in your usual place in the garden where you share so much of natures beauty. The butterflies, bees, beetles bugs berries and birds, all contributed to your post, not forgetting the flowers and your descriptive text that drew me into your garden as if I was hearing the chattering of a squirrel, and seeing the blackbirds bathing, with the humming of the bees in the background that never fail to sooth and captivate my senses.
    Just lovely Yvonne!
    My best wishes
    Sonjia.

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  11. What a delightful surprise to encounter such a variety of butterflies and bees! The Gulf Fritillary and American Snout butterflies are particularly striking, and it's lovely to see the bumblebee and mason bee busy on the Monarda. Nature’s little wonders truly make each day special!

    Read my new blog post: https://www.melodyjacob.com/2024/08/best-ways-to-style-pink-shorts-for-chic-spring-summer-look.html Thank you.

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  12. Haha … those mosquitoes can ruin anyone's moment of serenity. Your photos are a lovely peek into nature.

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  13. What a wonderful post, Yvonne. Your beautiful photos and narrative tell a great story. Thanks for sharing and have a fantastic week.

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  14. We don't mind the sound of children in the afternoon. I think it's because our now grown up children have long fledged the nest and sometimes the days are very quiet in our little cul-de-sac. The poor stink bugs. No one likes them and they even stink? What a terrible life for them. Maybe there should be a Stink Bug Day in the US where everyone could get to love them just a little?

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  15. Beautiful photos ~ bumblebees, butterflies, birds, floral and wonderful nature series ~ thanks.hugs,

    Wishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
    clm ~ A ShutterBug Explores,
    aka (A Creative Harbor)

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  16. You have seen more insects than I have here in Holland. The flowers were also very beautiful. Mosquitoes have not bothered me at all. Nice writing also about the garden with your musings. Next time i hope to see a squirrel on your website. 😉Greetings from my 2 websites.

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