Posted on October 22, 2021October 22, 2021Home for the weekend Since the days are still warm, I’m bringing the basil and peppers and sometimes if I have time, the tomatoes (but I was rushing this morning) out for maximum sunshine. Another tiny spider on the outside work bench!
Posted on October 17, 2021October 17, 2021Free hugs Offered by this crab spider on the very small frostweed flower.
Posted on October 4, 2021October 4, 2021Tiny tiny tiny friend This little spider required the clip on macro lens. Lots of walking onions bulbs to spread around. The new buffalograss is already blooming!!
Posted on September 20, 2021September 20, 2021Evening harvest and bean test Tomatoes have started producing again a bit. Checking to see if my guess that ugly ones are bad is correct. Seems generally so, if the idea that floating beans are no good is true. Buckwheat flowers. The Chef found a third egg case today. Our spider is working hard! Here she has a grasshopper.
Posted on September 8, 2021September 8, 2021Yum Our lovely spider caught a cicada! Yum! Maybe another egg sac soon?
Posted on September 6, 2021September 7, 2021Holiday Sunday An outdoor dinner. Garden basil and oregano. Moved the chives and garlic chives that Judy gave me last year. Maybe they’ll like this spot better. Uzbek golden, little, and New Kuroda carrots. Gram helps me get seeds out. Fall seeds planted of cabbage, mizuna, greens, and cauliflower. Tomatoes and peppers for overwintering. And a few pots of Roman chamomile for the front yard ground cover. This is where I shall attempt peppers and tomatoes over the winter. This goldenrod was already here and is doing very nicely. A giant 1″+ horsefly on a backyard window sill. Never going outside again. I lied. Outside again. Chiltepin peppers. Frostweed doing alright after it died back earlier in summer. A little spider got this Eastern Tailed-Blue on the englemann daisy. Texas mallow blooming! The non native clematis. I’ll clean it out over the winter. Okra flower A bumblebee on the okra!
Posted on August 14, 2021August 21, 2021Early morning to early afternoon Briar wanted to go out around 4am. I found this nibbled out Bisbee red cowpea flower. A pair of Red-banded Hairstreaks mating. They must have started yesterday as I can’t imagine they were flying at night. Alright actual morning, the chewed up flower still opened! A bit of rain seems to have the Bisbee red cowpeas really blooming! A tepary bean flower! She had a piece of grass on her nose, silly dog. A break indoors. Gram’s really lounging hard. A close up of this hard working kitty cat. A geometrid moth trapped in the shower. I released it outside. Front porch is boring. She sits next to more strawberry runners I’m capturing in dirt for a coworker. A Pearl Crescent sits on moon and stars watermelon leaf which is speckled with “stars”. A different watermelon flowering. I forget which variety. A jumping spider patrolling the cushaw squash vine Briar investigates. An American Bumblebee (Bombus pennsylvanicus) in the loofah gourd flower. The volunteer loofah gourds are really framing the rain barrel nicely. A different loofah individual has made itself a ground cover for one of the apple trees. The whole front garden.
Posted on August 4, 2021August 4, 2021Potatoes and a butterfly Emptied two potato growing bags and found four potatoes (fine, but not worth picturing) and a toad. Sorry for disturbing you, Toad. I stopped moving bags since it was afternoon and hot on Saturday. I will do more later in an evening for Toad movement safety. This black widow spider was more productive than my potatoes with six round egg sacs generated vs my four potatoes. I put this bag back. A butterfly on butterfly milkweed. (Pearl Crescent).
Posted on August 4, 2021August 4, 2021Primary colors! The rainbow bed has blue, yellow, and red blooming now. The iris is helping but is not part of the actual beds. Paula’s plant lounge. A big bird grasshopper! Love our banana spiders. I know we have at least three big ones around the garden in the front yard. This one has used the loofah gourd tendrils for its web anchors. Or the gourd is using the web as a support. Who knows! The zinnia has opened! Looking from the red end of the rainbow towards the street.