20160818 Some bugs and blooms along Hwy 529

We got behind with keeping the blog up to date with lots of other pressing things —- like making some photos.  Here are the results of a leisurely trip up Hwy 529 a week ago, with minimal text.  I want to get these up on the blog, mainly as a record of what is seen in mid-August around here.

This critter had been eating the Evening Primrose petal —

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—- and is in the process of launching for another foray … or perhaps heading home with a full belly!

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A beetle on milkweed …

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And a ladybug on milkweed …

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Bald-faced hornet on milkweed …

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Unidentified wasp, not even in this wonderful resource:

http://www.scorpionfly.ca/plants/wildlifegarden/Beneficial%20wasps.html

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This looks like a Great Black Wasp:

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First time I’ve noticed the interesting hooks on the reproductive structures of Goatsbeard.

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Fireweed with visitor …

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Wild Sarsaparilla with its (apparently) sweet, spicy seeds…

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Dragonfly, stopping to chew its food …

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Banquet at the Joe Pyeweed patch….

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Another dragonfly, this time hanging on to a milkweed leaf…

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I suspect that the above female are laying the eggs for the last generation of Monarchs to hatch before they head south.   Mary Holland has a very nice article on the subject of the last generation.

https://naturallycuriouswithmaryholland.wordpress.com/2016/08/22/eggs-of-migrating-generation-of-monarchs-hatching/

 

 

20160819 A trip to Port Loring along Hwy 522

We went to Roxy’s in Port Loring for a taco salad lunch.  I should’ve made a photo of the plate as it was a home-made taco in the shape of a bowl filled with a very nice Mexican salad: tomatoes, olives, onions, lettuce, cheeses, chilies, refried beans, sauces and served with a generous dollop of sour cream.

Along the way we stopped to make some photos of the scenery along Hwy 522.

The light westerly wind aloft was gently lifting the moist air evaporating off of Georgian Bay to form very nice Cumulus clouds.

The swamp/lake just west of the Lost Channel Road.

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Across from Young’s Road.

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Lucky to see some joy-riding at the Ess Narrows Bridge!

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Last week’s rain has had a great greening effect on the streambanks…

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And it has refloated this patch of waterlilies:

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Looking West from the North Road outside of Loring.

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Now looking east, further north along the North Road …

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After lunch we stopped to investigate this Model T Ford being loaded by cable boom crane:

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Aha!  No driver.  A roadside attraction concocted by a local farmer.

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What a windshield design!  Before the days of air-conditioned truck cabs.

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A  little further along Hwy 522, westbound, we see a stormcloud building up over Brooks quaint little acre.

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This reminds me of How Green was my Valley (before the coming of coal):

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Ess Narrows again, this time looking south.

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And, finally, late in the day, the wind has died down and blue sky returns from the west.

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All of the above were taken with the FZ1000 camera, giving the long lens (and the bugs) a rest.

Earlier today I came across this wonder World Wildlife Fund Sequence:

https://vimeo.com/50672419

I think you’ll enjoy it, especially the cute ending!

 

20160816 Trip to Parry Sound on a rainy day

We attended to some neglected dental issues in Parry Sound, and on the way back we took our mind off of some discomfort by stopping to view some scenes,  some close-up and some further away.

Thistles attract a wide variety of bugs — in addition to Goldfinches when the seeds are mature.

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A hoverfly is leaving this Chicory blossom just as the shutter clicked …

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This very small dragonfly posed for several minutes before resuming its foraging for flies.

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Yellow Pond Lily or Spatterdock has been blooming for at least 6 weeks and continues to provide food and habitat for a wide variety of wildlife, including these beasties:

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This might be a bald faced hornet:

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Tamarack cones are maturing and will soon release their seeds to the wind.

(Laricina is Latin for larch-like. Tamarack comes from an Algonquin word, akemantak, meaning “wood used for snowshoes.”)

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The berries of the northern wild raisin are ripening, good food for ruffed grouse especially.   Last year with the loss of the blueberry and chokecherry crops these berries were eaten by bears very early in their cycle.

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After another day of gentle rain the fungi and lichens, including these complex British Soldiers were fruiting.

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And, finally, two scenes along Skerryvore Road, off of Shebeshekong Road.

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Mary Holland just wrote an interesting article about Great Spangled (and other) Fritillary Butterflies.  Violets, eh?   Every plant has its relationships.

 

20160813 A rainy day in Britt

We had a day of much needed gentle rain.  So we got the camera out to see what we could see.  Some samples from along the side of Riverside Drive:

Lone drop on this Goldenrod showing the rock outcrop behind …

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The base of the stem indicates a Chokecherry.  If the base were more like an eggplant it would be a Blackcherry.

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A pair of hollyhock blossoms …

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Red pine needles are very firm, hold up under the drops.  White pine needles behave quite differently…

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Highbush cranberries are ripening.   This photo shows the origin of the botanical name for this plant, Viburnum trilobum   (three lobed leaf)

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My sister put me onto this exceptional photographer of birds in flight:  (Click on the images to see more, especially the hummingbirds:)

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/earthpicturegalleries/8269306/Birds-in-mid-flight-photographed-by-Roy-Hancliff.html

And a friend sent this link along.  More exceptional photography:

http://www.wired.com/2016/08/xavi-bou-ornitographies/

Click on the little arrows to see a nice variety of bird flight patterns.

 

20160809 Birdies, bugs, blooms, berries mid-summer

We haven’t been out much in the hot winds of mid summer.  But we did take some short drives to see some interesting beasties over the last few days.  What we saw:

A potter wasp on milkweed leaf …

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Female monarch taking nectar, possibly before laying eggs on the milkweed leaves.

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Little bee picks up the shaft of sunlight illuminating part of the butterfly’s left wing.

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Sand digger wasp taking nectar from milkweed blossoms —- along with two little friends!

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One of the many Duskywings (Columbine?)commonly seen in Ontario.

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Yes, we have curious pigeons in Britt also.

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And lots of grasshoppers in the hot dry weather ….

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Hoverfly?

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Chokecherries are ripening now, much to the delight of wild critters.P1420884-1

Hollyhock near fisherman Eddie’s place …

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Riper chokecherries, ready for making jelly (or wine).

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Highbush cranberries, ready for stinking up a kitchen in a few weeks.

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Virgin’s bower …

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…. with the beautiful “granulations” in the petals …P1430061-1

First time that I’ve ever seen a flock (about 20) of these birdies.

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Rictal hairs …. a giveaway to an insectivore used to catching prey in the air…  An Eastern Kingbird.

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The first time I’ve ever seen a Goldfinch taking a larva possible to stock up on protein, as they have a very late breeding season.

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All as this old crow eyes the photographer warily…

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We need some rain to see these Ghosts of August!

 

 

20160728,29 Brandy and Sunrise

We went for a boat ride with son Paul and doggie Brandy.  Here is Brandy relaxing in her favorite spot on Floatboat II:

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This morning we went for a scenic drive before sunrise.   This is a view of the Still River about 30 minutes before sunup.

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This is a view of the East end of Byng Inlet, looking towards the CPR trestle a little later:

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Back to the Still River a few minutes before sunup:

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Looking South West a few  minutes after sunup.

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Fiery skies at that time of the morning!

20160725 Local fruits, nuts, blooms, scenes

The high winds we’ve been having have slowed down picture-making.  But we did get out for a bit of sight-seeing.

Hard to resist these beautiful water lilies:

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Tansy is blooming along the roadsides now …

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And lots of Fireweed with lots of visitors, in this case a hover fly:

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Either Prunus serotina or Prunus virginiana.    I think the latter, judging by the finely serrated leaves.

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This Corylus cornuta is almost ready to harvest.   But it looks like some sort of borer got to one of these hazelnuts already.

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Virgin’s bower, wild clematis is becoming quite common along the roadsides …

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Early morning along the Still River:

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We have been noticing a lot of grasshoppers flying around lately.  Here is the explanation:

https://naturallycuriouswithmaryholland.wordpress.com/2016/07/25/grasshopper-wings-growing/

 

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20160722 Riverside Dr and Forest Access Rd

We inspected Riverside Drive to find these scenes:

A male Monarch, a bee  and Fritillary sharing milkweed nectar:

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Flock of juvenile Canada Geese dabbling for wild rice seed before it surfaces.   This is not a good sign as it indicates a shortage of goose feed before the seed heads of the wild rice emerge above the water surface.

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Male Twelve Spotted Skimmer at rest between meals…

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Clouded Sulphur and Paper(?) Wasp share Goldenrod nectar.

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Nice Cumulus clouds are building from daytime heating over the rocks.

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In the previous post I identified that Hawk as a Broad-winged Hawk.  It might be a Merlin.  Any advice?  Many thanks for help.

If you like close-ups of insects and blooms, try this set of images.

 

20160717-21 Some birdies, bugs and blooms around Britt

Here are some close-up (and one far-away) sights seen over the last few days.

First a very special and uncommon Indigo Bunting in a leafless tree, next to the one that it(?) was in last year.  It stayed there a few minutes, sang a brief song and disappeared.  It is a real challenge to photograph against a bright sky because of its structural coloration.  One of these years I hope to see one when it is downsun from me.

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This bouquet of Clematis virginiana (devil’s darning needles, devil’s hair, love vine, traveller’s joy, virgin’s bower, Virginia virgin’s bower, wild hops, and woodbine) reflects sunlight a little more simply, showing the structure in the petals.

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And this Ringbill Gull stopped close enough to the car to let us photograph the structure of its iris.  [You may have to click on the image to see the iris up close.]

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This  orange belted bumblebee, Bombus tenarius, is seen with increasing frequency, possibly because I am learning to pay more attention to roadside blooms, a thistle in this case.

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This is the first male Widow Skimmer I’ve seen this year …. very fleetingly as it lit for only a few seconds.

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Which was very different from this Lancet Clubtail, who hung onto that purplish stem for almost a minute, perhaps chewing up the flies that it caught out of the air.

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The Black Eyed Susans at Wrights is a delicatessen for lots of bees, bumblebees and hoverflies:

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I came across this juvenile Broadwinged Hawk on the gravel road across from my place a couple of days ago.  Instead of flying off, it eyed me in the car and then approached quickly…

(Sorry, no iris with this one when you click on the image for a close-up.)

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I carefully drove away, turned around and found it again, this time in the grass at the side of the road.   I didn’t notice the bug  near its mouth until I saw this image on the computer:

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And it wasn’t until I saw the following image on the computer that I realized why this bird displayed such strange behaviour.   It had suffered an injury to its tail and couldn’t fly properly.   So it stayed on the side of the road and captured insects for its protein needs, until it heals and can go after its normal prey: https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Broad-winged_Hawk/lifehistory

Broad-winged Hawks eat mostly small mammals, amphibians, and insects. They watch for food from perches on tree limbs (often below the canopy and in the forest interior) as well as places such as utility poles near forest edges. When they spot prey, they swoop down to snatch it from the forest floor. They only occasionally hunt on the wing. Their most frequent prey items are frogs, toads, and small rodents, but they have a broad diet that includes invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, and birds (mostly nestlings and juveniles). Their invertebrate prey includes mantises, crickets, grasshoppers, caterpillars, ants, junebugs, click beetles, ground beetles, flies, spiders, earthworms, and crabs.

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When I pulled into the driveway I saw this grey grasshopper, as yet unidentified:

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A distant sparrow on pagewire fencing at Burwash, but which one?  Song?   Savannah?   Vesper?   (I think Vesper.)

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Distant Belted Kingfisher, a very elusive birdie…

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Murdoch River, again, this time in heavy rain…

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Recently I was on a photography website conversing with a California photographer who is also a “content” photographer.   This is what he said:

I don’t control the subjects in my photos and conditions often limit my choice of my position relative to the subject.  When I see a subject I like, I do the best I can in the circumstances to get a good picture.  When I’ve captured the image, I try to appreciate the result for what’s worthwhile about it.  I don’t worry much about how it falls short of perfection.

Have a look at his and his partner’s photography:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/bill_lesley_photos/

http://naturelover.smugmug.com/

Nice, eh?

 

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