Black-eyed Susans

Black-eyed Susans

Black-eyed Susans

Here’s another black-eyed Susan picture. They sure do well in our yard, and we might need to cut them back a bit after they finish blooming, so that they don’t take over completely. The black-eyed Susan is the state flower of Maryland, by the way and in case you didn’t know. A good choice, I think. There are a couple dozen Rudbeckia species and they are named after Olof Rudbeck the Younger (1660-1740) and his father, Olof Rudbeck the Elder (1630-1702), both professors of botany at Uppsala University. The name was given by Carolus Linnaeus, who was their student.

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Dark Phase Tiger Swallowtail

Dark Phase Tiger Swallowtail

Dark Phase Tiger Swallowtail

At the risk of overdoing one subject, here’s another picture of a tiger swallowtail (Papilio glaucus). As you can see, this looks a bit different to the others I’ve posted lately. There is a dark phase which occurs in females through much of its range.

This little lady was playing hard to get, moving to the top of the buddleia (butterfly bush) and staying on the far side as I circled trying to get a good look at her. This is the best I could do, and it isn’t bad, anyway.

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Tiger Swallowtail on Tiger Lily

Tiger Swallowtail on Tiger Lily

Tiger Swallowtail on Tiger Lily

As I left for work this morning I saw this tiger swallowtail butterfly (Papilio glaucus) on a tiger lily (Lilium lancifolium). I didn’t think I could let that opportunity pass without at least trying to get a picture. I took quite a few, starting relatively far away and working in a bit closer as she didn’t fly off. I am pretty happy with a good number of the images.

She kept circling the flower and would occasionally open her wings, but most of the good pictures show her in profile, like this. I did get a couple that are mostly of the butterfly and don’t show the entire flower, but I thought I’d use this one here. A few were closer still and in them you can see the individual scales on the butterfly’s wing.

It’s turned quite hot the last day or three and I was glad to get my photo-taking out of the way in the morning. That way I didn’t have to do it later in the day or even when I got home. My car said it was 101°F at 5:30 PM.

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Ammophila nigricans (Thread-waisted Wasp)

Ammophila nigricans (Thread-waisted Wasp)

Ammophila nigricans (Thread-waisted Wasp)

I saw this chap on the gooseneck loosestrife (Lysimachia clethroides) but at first is wouldn’t come close. I stood for a while without taking any pictures and eventually it came near. I managed to take quite a few pictures but most of them either aren’t in focus or don’t show enough of the wasp to identify it. This is an Ammophila nigricans, one of the thread-waisted wasps. It’s a fairly large wasp and, as you can see, is characterized by a long, very narrow “waist” and the brown coloration on its abdomen.

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Megachile, Leaf-cutting and Resin Bees

Megachile, Leaf-cutting or Resin Bee

Megachile, Leaf-cutting or Resin Bee

This is one of the leaf-cutting or resin bees in the genus Megachile. There are over 1,500 species world-wide and about 130 in our area. While I could eliminate a few species from consideration, I really have no idea which of them this is. It’s a little but not tiny bee, measuring about 12 to 15mm in length (I didn’t actually measure it with a ruler or anything).

This is one of a growing number of bees and wasps that is now enjoying the mountain mint (Pycnanthemum muticum).

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Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)

Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)

Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)

It was a long but somehow beautiful day to end a long week. We celebrated a life and we welcomed our Daughter home from her first foreign trip without us (a little tired but not too much the worse for wear). I took a few pictures in the yard, including a few of the black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta) which are coming into their own, blooming profusely.

My camera doesn’t handle white balance very well in a picture like this, with so much bright yellow. I really need to find my neutral grey card so I can take a reading and set the white balance properly. This looks about right, though.

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Sunset Colors

Sunset Colors

Sunset Colors

It’s been overcast all day after a mostly rainy day yesterday. This evening, however, the light turned the most remarkable color. It’s hard to describe what it was like, but later in the day, as the sun started to set, the light out our back windows was the most orangy green I’ve ever seen. It was green because it’s been a very wet summer so far and everything is so lush. But the light had an orangy, pink tinge to it that was absolutely wonderful over that lush green. I ran to get my camera but much of the light had gone by the time I got outside. This picture is looking nearly straight up with a very wide angle lens, and shows the source of the colored light, reflecting off the clouds. It doesn’t come close to doing it justice, so we’ll just have to remember how beautiful it was, although this photo is a small reminder.

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Lilium ‘Stargazer’ (The Stargazer Lily)

Lilium 'Stargazer' (The Stargazer Lily)

Lilium ‘Stargazer’ (The Stargazer Lily)

We have day lilies (Hemerocallis), tiger lilies (Lilium lancifolium), and a few Asiatic lilies in our yard and they are all beautiful in their way. They are mostly orange, although we have a few yellow day lilies. Although they were formerly considered to be in the same family as lilies, day lilies are not even in the same order any more. Anyway, I group them together in my mind, because they have somewhat similar flowers and of course the names are a link.

This flower, though, stands alone (in our yard, anyway). It is so different in terms of color that it seems less like the other true lilies than do the day lilies. It’s currently growing in a pot but we’ll be planting it when we get a chance. At least that’s the theory. We really need a small patch of these, not just one, but one thing at a time.

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Dark Orange Day Lily

Dark Orange Day Lily

Dark Orange Day Lily

It was a beautiful rainy day today, considerably cooler although still fairly muggy. I was sort of busy at work so I didn’t get out. When I got home I took a picture I’ve been meaning to take for a while. I like day lilies in all their forms but I think this is one of my very favorites. I really love the deep orange, which is much more striking then the plain bright orange of the “standard” variety. The droplets of water on the petals are a small bonus.

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Popillia japonica (Japanese Beetle)

Popillia japonica (Japanese Beetle)

Popillia japonica (Japanese Beetle)

This is not a friend of mine. Japanese beetles (Popillia japonica) are highly destructive plant pests. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, “the Japanese beetle was first found in the United States in 1916 in southern New Jersey. Since then, it has spread throughout most of the country east of the Mississippi River, as well as areas in Arkansas, Iowa, and Missouri.”

I have to admit that I find their metallic green exoskeleton to be quite pretty but I equally admit that I rarely take the time to admire them. I’m usually more intent of killing as many of them as possible. Fiends.

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Wild Raspberries

Wild Raspberries

Wild Raspberries

The other day I mentioned that I picked and ate some wild raspberries and that I planned to go out to pick more when I had the chance. We’ll, I finally got out again today and picked a nice big tub of them. It was pretty hot out but fortunately I was working mostly in the shade rather in bright sun. Still, I worked for these. I think it was worth the effort, though. Don’t they look good? They aren’t huge but they are very tasty.

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Thelesperma Flowers

Thelesperma Flowers

Thelesperma Flowers

I didn’t take a lot of pictures today but did get out into the back garden of some friends. This is a Thelesperma, probably T. filifolium (stiff greenthread) growing there. It is a close relative to Coreopsis. In fact, until recently it was considered to be part of that genus. To be honest (hey, why not), I’m not completely sure this isn’t a Coreopsis, but I think I have it labeled right. Anyway, it is a nice bi-colored hybrid and I like the airiness of the photograph.

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Airborne

Airborne

Airborne

Our friend, Dave, took two other friends, Jon and James, up in his plane this afternoon. He had to return the plane to Frederick and get his car, so they flew with him, along with his oldest son, Conor. I drove them to the airport where the plane was and took some pictures of them as they took off. I underestimated how much runway this larger plane needs to take off as compared to the smaller planes that take off so very quickly and easily. They got off the ground just before they got to where I was by the runway. The picture taken right before this is a little better in terms of showing the plane. I was trying to keep up with them as they hurtled towards me and I’m afraid that the framing is a bit off. Still, I like this one because you can see James in the cockpit. Another future pilot, perhaps?

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In Memoriam — Kevin Snider

In Memoriam — Kevin Snider

In Memoriam — Kevin Snider

February 6, 1952 – July 8, 2013

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Sphinx Moth

Hemaris diffinis (Snowberry Clearwing)

Hemaris diffinis (Snowberry Clearwing)

Cathy and I went to Stadler Nursery after church today. While she shopped for a few things, I browsed with my camera, taking pictures of a few flowers that I liked. At the end of one of the tables was this white buddleia and flying around the flowers sipping their nectar, was a sphinx moth. Of the 124 described species found in America north of Mexico, I believe this is Hemaris diffinis, the snowberry clearwing.

I took quite a few blurry pictures but did get a few that are pretty decent, of which this one is the best. While I was watching, the moth never landed once. Taking a photo of a flying insect is a real challenge and you have to be prepared to end up with a lot more wasted shots than anything else.

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Guatemala Team

Guatemala Team

Guatemala Team

Dorothy left early this morning for Guatemala early this morning. We dropped her off at Church of Christ at Manor Woods at 2:00 AM and they were off by 2:30, heading to the airport. By the time we were home from church later in the day there was a post on Facebook saying they had arrived safely in Antigua. It’s going to be hard not being able to call and ask her how she is, but we’re looking forward to all the stories she’ll have when she gets home. This is the team, just before the piled into the bus and headed out.

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Fountain Splash

Fountain Splash

Fountain Splash

For those who don’t like pictures of the creepy crawlies, here’s a non-insect, non-spider photograph. It’s interesting that people who are given the willies by spiders or most insects often don’t have any problem with butterflies. They are pretty, to be sure, but they are still basically just bugs with big wings.

In any case, this is a picture I took in the evening after dinner. We went to Baskin-Robbins for ice cream and then sat watching the fountain. There were no children playing in the fountain, as there so often are, but Cathy and Dorothy at least put their feet in the spray.

This picture is of a spout of water against the darkening evening sky. It’s a photograph that makes me strangely happy.

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Eumenes fraternus (Potter Wasps)

Eumenes fraternus (Potter Wasps)

Eumenes fraternus (Potter Wasps)

This is becoming one of my favorite wasps. I’m not sure why, but it is. I think I like the simplicity, along with the distinctiveness of the markings. It’s also such a fragile little thing. I say little, but it’s not all that tiny, measuring a good 15 to 20 mm in length. I suspect it’s also got a sting that I don’t want to experience.

Now that the mountain mint (Pycnanthemum muticum) is starting to bloom in earnest, it’s starting to attract the usual suspects. So far, in addition to bumble bees and this potter wasp, I’ve seen a one four-toothed mason wasp (Monobia quadridens) and a few great black wasps (Sphex pensylvanicus).

On a somewhat irrelevant note, the Latin name for this genus of wasp always reminds me of the third play in the Oresteia, by Aeschylus, called The Eumenides. The Eumenides are “The Kindly Ones.” That’s irrelevant, however, as the genus in this case is a different, although similar word. They are apparently named for a Greek general and scholar, Eumenes of Cardia (ca. 362 BC—316 BC).

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The Butterflies Are Back

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio glaucus, female)

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio glaucus, female)

With the reliability of summer following spring, the tiger swallowtails have returned just as the buddleia (butterfly bush) started to bloom. There are flowers open on two bushes so far with a promise of many more to come. We’ve had the little cabbage whites for a while now but today was the first day I’ve seen a swallowtail in our yard. This is a female. The males don’t have the band of blue spots on their hind wings. Getting a picture that is “just right” is hard. they move about a bit, but this one, with the wings lit from the other side, is pretty good, although the colors in the wing are a bit washed out.

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Bumble Bee on Coneflower

Bumble Bee on Coneflower

Bumble Bee on Coneflower

Three days out of four with more than one photo posted. Don’t you feel privileged? Okay, perhaps not. In any case, here is a third picture for today. In addition to going out for a late lunch of raspberries and photographing a tiny fly, I went into the back yard when I got home and photographed bumble bees. They are going crazy on the gooseneck loosestrife (Lysimachia clethroides) and the purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea). I’m pretty happy with this picture, although I think a smaller aperture would be better. The depth of field is just short of what I would like. This was taken with the ISO set to 800 with an exposure of 1/125 sec. at f/5.7.

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