I go out looking for bugs to take pictures
of. These are Black Bean Aphids on a thorny Black Locust sprout with their ant
caretakers.
I thought I’d found some kinda crazy orange spider. Then I realized it was a milkweed beetle caught in a web.
I did find one of these black and yellow beauties — in the middle of the day no less. I usually only find them in the early morning when the dew coats their webs.
Plenty of spiders make a stablilimentum in
lots of beautiful patterns. It was originally thought its purpose was to help
stabilize the web. Now it’s thought it serves as a warning beacon to keep birds
and bats from flying into it. Recent studies show that with a stabilimentum, a
spider doesn’t catch near as many insects so they must have a very good reason
for making one.
I knew this could very well be an old web
but I went looking for the spider just the same and there she was, making a bug
burrito!
You can see the silk coming from her spinneret.
“Peg, is he supposed to look like that or is
he sick?” you wanna know.
I know, right! That’s what I wanted to know
too. I asked the insect group on Facebook.
“It’s a leafcutter bee,” I was told. “Instead
of collecting pollen on their legs they pack it onto hairs on the undersides of
their abdomens.”
Leafcutters burrow in the ground to lay
their eggs and it’s thought they line the cell with leaves and that’s how they
got their name.
This is a Black Swallowtail ‘pillar. I brought
him into my butterfly house but I’m getting worried about him. I found him on
Queen Ann’s Lace so I brought some of that in too, but I don’t think he’s
eating and he hasn’t made his cocoon yet.
Rather than have him die I’m gonna take him
back to where I found him.
And this one? I think it’s a Pearl Crescent
but I recently learned that there’s another butterfly that looks almost exactly
the same. And that would be a Silvery Checkerspot. The main difference between
the two is the Checkerspot has a row of small black and white dots along the
edge of his wing. But I think that even the Pearl Crescents have a little of
that marking too.
Great
Spangled Fritillary.
Spitfire is a mighty hunter! He brought this in one morning. I don’t think it’s a short-tailed mouse, I think it’s a vole.
I’d just fed the cats when he came leaping
over the fence with his catch in his mouth. We were heading out to do a little
shopping and I hoped it’d be gone by the time we got home.
The Aldi Review this week showed they had a
special buy on children’s face masks with different characters on them. I’m
always looking for things to stuff in a goodie box for our grandson Andrew and
thought this would be something he could use, especially since he’s started
back to school.
“Do they have to wear masks?” I asked that
handsome son of ours.
“No. Not yet anyway,” Kevin answered.
No matter. I’d get them anyway. Maybe he
could use them when they go shopping or, if they instituted a mask policy at
school, he’d have them.
You know what a shopping trip means, don’t
you?
“Road pictures?” you guess.
Yep.
The new bridge opened and this is the first
time we crossed it.
A long line of traffic and flashing lights
told us something was going on up ahead.
Skid marks. A wrecker. A wreck?
I had my zoom part way out so I got kinda closeup
on the wrecked front end. I haven’t heard any particulars on this accident.
Do you remember the building I showed you
where the guy put a steel frame around it and they wouldn’t let him tear it
down because it was on the historical registry?
I don’t know what’s changed but it’s gone
now!
I showed you a picture of this garage before the doors were on and there were a couple of old cars inside. I wondered if the one peeking around the center post wasn’t a Mustang. Turns out, it was — is!
I had to Google who made it. You might’ve already known it was AMC.
And we saw this old grocery-go-getter!
The Aldi’s store I was shopping at hadn’t
gotten the masks in. It wasn’t a total wasted trip. We found a few other things
to buy anyway — and I got a couple of masks at Walmart.
When we got home, I went to take Itsy out. I
see Spitfire dressed his vole. I wondered why then saw it move. I’m guessing
he tried to get away and was in the weeds when Spitfire caught him again.
Tiger wanted to go out. Spitfire can be possessive
about his kills. I wondered how he’d react to Tiger nosing around it.
Tiger spotted it, maybe smelled it too, and
laid down. Spitfire kissed noses.
I didn’t hang around. I figured if Spitfire
was gonna give him a lesson then he could just give him a lesson and I wouldn’t
interfere. I went back inside. That didn’t stop me from checking on them
though.
I hadn’t heard any yowling or hissing or
crying so I thought Tiger just knew not to mess with someone else’s kill.
Was I surprised to see Tiger had the vole?
Yes!
Yes, I was!
He played with it for a long time.
Not all cats will eat voles and maybe that’s
why Spitfire gave it up. He won’t eat them. But Tiger did! He ate it! I made
him stay out for a while after that. Just in case he puked.
I was out getting food for my Monarchs when I see this guy. This is a Banded Net-wing Beetle. Can you see the texture on his wings? Someone thought it looked like netting and that’s how they got the name.
The ridges are very brittle and rupture easily
when they’re attacked which releases a defensive chemical. They’ll also reflex-bleed
from the leg joints when attacked. That just means he does it on purpose.
“Peg, how are your caterpillars doing?” you ask.
How are my babies doing? I’ll tell you how
they’re doing!
I only had one butterfly born all week long.
Another male. I usually let them stay in the safety of the butterfly house
until they’re almost dry, then take them out to the flowers and park ‘em. But
by the time I got around to this guy he was rarin to go. It was all I could do to hold on to him long enough
to get a picture!
When I decided to go back to my old
butterfly house, I had to clean it out first. There was still caterpillar scat
on the bottom that I didn’t clean because I didn’t have any caterpillars in
there. Now I had to clean it. I pulled out a couple of dried-up milkweed leaves
and find this guy squiggling around on the bottom.
“What is it?” you wonder.
I know, right! I wondered too. Did
it come in with the milkweed leaves? One thing’s for sure — it’s not a Monarch.
I put him in an old cup with a leaf until
I could decide what to do with him.
A
couple of days later I noticed the one chrysalis that had been hanging there
for a long time was open. Then I knew what my little ‘friend’ was.
Yeah, was.
He died, turned brown, and shriveled up
after a few hours alone in the cup. No big loss though. This is one of the predators
of the Monarch. This was a Tachinid Fly maggot. The flies lay their eggs on the
caterpillars and that’s what they eat.
I’ve found a few dead Monarch
caterpillars when I was out getting leaves or caterpillar hunting and wondered
if that’s what happed to them too.
I had one caterpillar hanging in a j from
the top of the house so all day long I’d been watching for his chrysalis to
form.
I was shocked when I looked in and saw his
shed skin hanging and he was gone! Then I saw something wiggling in the milkweed
leaves and there he was. This guy was a failure! He was supposed to clip the
skin so it would fall and instead clipped his anchor.
I laughed, shook my head, and got a piece of
string. I looped it over the tail end, knotted it and hung him up. Pretty soon
his chrysalis hardened and he was happy and sleeping.
Saturday morning, I had three Monarchs born!
Two healthy females.
And one not so healthy.
Sigh and sadness.
I’m finding out that there’s a learning
curve to raising Monarchs. When I transferred this one to the birthing house, her
tail came off the chrysalis and I didn’t have anything to hang her by. So I
just left it in the bottom of the cage. When she emerged Saturday morning, I knew she needed to hang for her
wings to dry so I helped her get up to the top. When I thought she was anchored
pretty good, I left. After a while when I checked on her, she’d fallen. I helped
her up again. But the damage was done. Her wing won’t unfurl.
I Googled it. Her chance of emerging from a fallen
chrysalis were so-so. At least that in and of itself isn’t an automatic death
sentence. But then to have fallen when she was pumping her wings was the final
blow.
“What are you going to do now?” you ask.
The insect page said put her in a sandwich
bag and let her sleep in the freezer.
Another suggestion is to let nature take its
course. She’ll never be able to fly. Birds learn that Monarchs don’t taste
good. So maybe she’ll teach a young bird that they taste bad. If he’s tasting
her, he’ll leave a healthy one alone.
The other suggestion was to keep her and
feed her honey water. She may live for weeks but she’ll never loose the desire
to fly. Some think that’s more cruel than the freezer method.
I’m leaning toward letting nature take its
course. At least then she’ll get to experience the wind and nature around her and
the taste of flowers rather than a cage and her life will have some meaning.
But I’m learning. If I ever have
another chrysalis that won’t hang, I’ll super glue a string to it!
Do you see this patch of milkweed? Do
you see how far it is from my house?
I took Itsy out front to pee and when
I was coming back in, I found a Monarch ‘pillar right outside my door! How the
heck did he get so far away from his food source? I put him in the butterfly
house.
Maybe they’re seeking me out! Maybe I’m a
caterpillar whisperer!
We usually take the golf cart to check the mail. If the mail’s not here yet we use that as an excuse to go for a ride down to the lower bridge — not that we need an excuse. Sometimes we pass the mailman, sometimes we don’t.
I took this picture of the
neighbors house. She always has so much going on and I can only imagine the hours
she puts in keeping things looking nice — at least weed-free. But an umbrella
on the porch? I don’t get it.
“Why so many locks?” I asked and mulled it
over.
It’s a way to join a too-short chain. Then another idea hit me. “Maybe it gives
keys to a bunch of different people!”
It’s on the hunter’s property so they get a
key. The guy that comes and fills the tanks that fuel the generators needs a
key. Security needs a key. Maybe there’s a maintenance crew too.
I wonder if they know they can have a bunch
of keys made for the same lock.
I’d gotten my flu shot when we went shopping the other day. But Mike couldn’t get his because the Medicare website was down and he woulda hada pay for his.
CVS called the next day and said the website
was up again and Mike could get his shot.
That meant an extra trip to Towanda. Here’s
a few road pictures from that trip.
Passing Joanie’s courthouse, at least that’s where she works, I see the tree guys are working.
“Are they trimming them or taking them down?”
I asked Mike like he’d know.
Someone
who did know what was going on was Joanie.
“We got in this morning and a big branch had
fallen,” she told me. “They’re taking down both big trees 😭. I love those shade trees! They took out all my beautiful rose
bushes along the river too. They suck!”
It’s sad to see them go.
The big winds that took down the branch were
remnants of Laura, the hurricane that hit Louisiana and Texas. Mike’s got tons
of branches to pick up here too. But branches aren’t the only thing it left
behind. It brought me a rainbow.
Looking in the opposite direction.
Getting our flu shots wasn’t the only
excitement here at the Luby household this week either! Mike got his hair cut!
Yeah, baby! Excitement! I can’t stand it!
All kidding aside, we tried a new girl. She’s
not new new. She’s been cutting hair over twenty years. She’s just new to us.
Road pictures.
Paula has a little shop at her house.
“Can I walk around your property and take
pictures while you cut Mike’s hair?” I asked.
“Sure!” she immediately agreed then asked, “What
are you taking pictures for?”
“I blog,” is my standard answer and usually
satisfies people.
Paula’s place is beautiful! A huge garden,
tons of flowers, several fruit trees.
I saw this beauty. This is a Hackberry Emperor.
I found out some interesting things when I researched this butterfly for you.
Hackberry is the only host plant for Hackberry
Emperor butterfly to lay its eggs ant the only food the caterpillars eat.
They’re a member of the brush-footed family.
That’s the largest family of butterflies with more than 6,000 species throughout
the world. The forelegs have a brush-like set of hairs on them and that’s how
they get that common name.
Another common name for them is four-footed
butterflies because they are known to stand on only four legs while the other
two are curled up so it looks like they only have four legs.
But you wanna know the most interesting
thing I found out about the Hackberry Emperor?
“What’s that. Peg?”
The adult butterflies sip moisture and
minerals from mud and they’ll land on people to drink sweat for salts. They feed
on tree sap, fermenting fruit, dung, carrion, and rarely flower will you see
them on flowers.
I guess I got lucky.
We decided to go to the Westside Deli in Dushore
for lunch and took back roads.
I think this place used to be a bar.
Mike, looking all dapper with his fresh haircut and beard trim, sat on the patio while I donned my mask, went in, and ordered for us.
“What’d’ya get?” I know you wanna know.
Mike got a bacon cheeseburger and I got the cheesesteak
with everything.
Someone told me they had good jalapeno
poppers here but when I ordered them, I was told they didn’t have them.
“We have Rattlesnake Bites.”
“What are those?” I asked.
“…jalapenos…”
I don’t remember what she said but I heard
the word jalapeno so I ordered them. What I got was jalapenos sliced, batter dipped, and
deep fried with a side of canned cheese. I ate a few. Mike ate a few. But we
left most of them sitting on the plate.
After we ate, we swung past the graveyard
and said hello to Momma, Pop, and brother Mike. My beloved Aunt Marie is here
too, just on the other side, along with several other members of the Soden
clan.
“Let’s take Marsh home,” Mike suggested.
I was surprised. He doesn’t like the Marsh
Road and normally doesn’t take it unless I beg. On the way out of town this old
house sits. I snapped its picture and remembered the time I saw a cat sitting
in the broken kitchen window.
“How do you know it was the kitchen?” you
ask.
“Did you see the refrigerator?” Mike asked.
That’s how I know.
“Can we stop?” I asked.
Mike pulled over. I got out and walked back.
I peeked in the kitchen window. The fridge
is an old Crosley Shelvador.
I think I see an old stove back there!
Is that a light over the clock? And P on one
side and S on the other. For the life of me I can’t think of one stove manufacturer
with those initials — but then again, I’ve never heard of Crosley either.
I hear you laughing at me. You think I make this
stuff up.
“Peg! Don’t you think that means pepper and
salt?” you say.
All I can say is I’m glad I could make your
day a little brighter.
Slowly. Mike’s never done any stonework
before so he has to figure things out as he goes along.
Originally, we were going to try to
incorporate an existing slab of concrete into the design but it sits much too
low. Mike tried but it gave us a big dip in the patio. So, we’re going over
top.
Me?
In my free time I’ve been trying to shorten
the sleeves on a couple of shirts for Mike.
I wasn’t careful enough when I cut the sleeves
off the first one and when I tried to put the hem in it gave me problems. I
tore it out like four times. Then I decided to start over with a fresh shirt (and
tutorial videos on YouTube) and in no time at all I had one done.
“What’s wrong with long sleeve shirts?” you
ask.
Mike’s long arms, that’s what. The sleeves
on a long sleeve shirt are always too short for him. I picked up several long
sleeve shirts at a yard sale so it’s well worth my time to shorten them for
him.
With that, let’s call this one done!
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