Posted on June 18, 2022June 18, 202206/15/2022 to bee or not to bee, plus “freeloader flies” Before I left for work, I saw two bumblebees on the culinary sage flowers. Local bee expert José Montalva helped confirm the identification as Bombus bimaculatus (two spotted bumblebee) and sent me a very helpful article on the status of this and other bumblebee species in Oklahoma. It’s more of an eastern species so it is very cool to have them here on the edge of their range. This is also the third bumblebee species for our yard. This was the best picture though not the best identification angle. Big pollen bags on her legs! A little wasp on the purple coneflower. On campus, I saw several Fiery Skippers on lantana. Here’s another Fiery Skipper on campus lantana. Back at home, the blue flax is thinking about blooming! The Chef made egg drop soup with garden walking onions as a garnish. Car ride!! Saw a friend. Wow! Little lumpy beetles are on a lot of flowers right now. They’re cute. In the evening I saw one or two more two-spotted bumblebees, this time over on the perennial coreopsis. I didn’t manage to get a good picture of the spots in the evening. But I got some decent side views. Lightning bug! A paper wasp. An immature assassin bug eating some sort of probable pentatomid bug. Zoom in though and you’ll see several kinds of flies!! I’m not sure, but I think they might be some kind of kleptoparasitic fly that steals nibbles from bigger predators.
Posted on June 18, 2022June 18, 202206/18/2022 onion time Oops. We disturbed this big beautiful toad. The toad hopped over our onions to nestle down under some bean plants. We turned the soaker hose on after we were done harvesting to make sure any other plants we disturbed weren’t too upset, and hopefully that will keep the toad safely into the cooler night too. Three kinds of onion! The shadiest bed has Inca pea beans planted over Thomas Laxton sugar peas which we removed as they were getting mildewy. Now the pea beans have room to grow. Our supervisor chose a shady, cool corner. Left are the dried Thomas Laxton sugar peas for next season. To the right are Oregon sugar pod II (the original kind I had) from earlier this spring. I am going to bleach them to prevent transfer of the mildew to next season. We also put the plant waste in the city yard waste bins as their composting gets much hotter than ours.
Posted on June 12, 2022June 12, 202206/12/2022 yard Maybe Phacelia? I found at least four leaves full of my amazing tree hopper friends. Each leaf had a different set of adults or immatures. Adults get taken care of too. Babies!!! The leaf bends where the treehopper eggs were. Lace bug Frogfruit east of patio is doing well. Just moved a piece there this spring. Nice true bug Dog flower highly mobile. Monarda future flower bud?? Baptisia and okra Rudbeckia maxima from Abby has a new leaf. A planthopper (Flatidae) on curly dock. First time for this family in the yard?? I used to see them regularly at home. Rattlesnake master still lives. Passionvine (seeds from Bartlesville) doing well in their second year. Tiny bee on butterfly milkweed Hedeoma in with Datura.
Posted on June 12, 2022June 12, 202206/11/2022 The Chef made no bake lemon curd/ cheesecake layered parfaits with homemade whipped cream, farm share blueberries, and homemade granola for a garden tour. Prepared the night before in the fridge. Perfect for the tropically humid day. A wasp carrying a caterpillar Spittlebug Hello Tuqu This young man. Two Texas dandelions from home! White specks are elderberry petals. Bee fly Possibly a baby Grindelia leaf?? A second Coryphantha sulcata seedling came up!!!!! Lace bug (Tineidae) on giant ragweed leaf. Nobody home… …except for this crab spider! My keeled treehoppers have a big family!! Soooo manyyyyyy Shackleton and Briar disagree about social distancing. A nice jumping spider. It’s on a houseplant that is outside for the summer.
Posted on June 12, 2022June 12, 202206/12/2022 a walk in the park Just a bit of prairie here at Ruby Grant Park in NW Norman. Oh wait! A box turtle!! It is good pollinator habitat and good prairie too. I heard one Eastern Meadowlark singing and at least one Dickcissel. A weevil on green milkweed pods. A family of baby milkweed bugs on green milkweed pods. We looked but didn’t find any Monarch butterfly caterpillars. Sideoats grama grass. Abby has suggested this is bottlebrush squirrel tail grass. It has very exciting seedheads! Thanks to Mom and Abby for identifying this as Apocynum cannabinum, or dogbane. There was a lot of it along the trail and we saw the dogbane beetle that eats it too! Possibly prairie acacia? A non native lady beetle on the acacia. Really great stands of Rudbeckia amplexicaulis here!
Posted on June 10, 2022June 10, 202206/10/2022 exciting friends I wasn’t sure at first if this was a bit of debris on a bird seed sunflower stem. But I saw it walk!! It’s a plant hopper! I think it’s Entylia sp, possibly carinata if I understand bugguide saying there’s only one species and it’s quite variable. That’s the species shown in the new Abbott and Abbott Texas insects book. Spittlebug adult! The most special flower. A beautiful white lined sphinx visiting the non native verbena. I love the different wing angles the camera catches. Side view. Slime mold very happy after 3.46″ rain in the past seven days. Blurry but you can see two seedlings: the winecup above with three leaves and the lyre leaf sage with two seed leaves. Working on my ground covers out front around the raised beds.
Posted on June 5, 2022June 5, 202206/04/2022 unexpected excitement Saw a great little jumping spider on the ironweed leaves. An interesting bee or velvet ant male or something, on white avens leaf. It was one of the nervous kinds who keeps flicking their wings constantly. The rain of the last few days prompted the Missouri fluttermill primrose to bloom again! The Chef and I cleared leaves off the patio. In several places they were up against the wood siding which is not great as they are essentially composting. Here Briar holds down a leaf pile for us. We leave the leaves in the rest of the yard as that is best for a healthy woodland environment! The worst offending area of leaf collection next to the house. This is after I pulled out the bulk of leaves. Our compost pile should be happy now! An extremely tiny planthopper that the Chef found on the outdoor work bench. The last round of tepary beans I planted are coming up. The big thrill of the day… The horse crippler cactus in the rock garden has bloomed!!!! I imagine this means it’s either happy here or thinks it’s about to die. Hopefully the former. Since I just planted it this spring I wasn’t expecting it, and its flower bud was not obvious, or grew in really fast the last few days when I wasn’t looking with the rain.
Posted on June 4, 2022June 4, 202206/03/2022 Lyre leaf sage sprouting where I have sprinkled it in front yard. Who’s this lurking in the buffalo grass? Shackleton of course! He persuaded the Chef to go outside. The Chef decided it was so nice out we walked to Braum’s for dinner. Then we walked to the duck pond and saw some geese and their baby goslings! Close up of the babies. There were a lot of winecups around the duck pond! Great to see. Possibly smells nice too? The end.
Posted on June 2, 2022June 2, 202206/02/2022 New book in the mail! The Social Wasps of North America by Chris Alice Kratzer. It looks very useful. Awards for bravery all around tonight. Shacks walked right past Briar and she stayed put. Purple coneflower finally opening up! Ironweed is budding, seems early?? This is one of two dill seedlings in the herb bed. Pretty sure now that this is the Mexican sage from Judy. Whoa, standing cypress about to bloom! The just-planted two leaf senna doing okay. The older two leaf senna seems to have gotten nibbled. I’ll have to consider if I should put some Vaseline around it against earwigs or a wire cage over it maybe for rabbits. A non native moss rose (Portulaca). Dog behind.
Posted on May 31, 2022May 31, 202205/31/2022 intriguing new variety A new hairy garlic is flowering along with its typical colleagues!