Sunday, May 13, 2012

Petals, Wings, and Another Fallen Tree

The Fringe Tree has exploded with flowers. So lacy and delicate!


Golden Ragwort
The name is a little shabby for such a brilliant flower.


Jacob's Ladder
(My grandnephew, Jacob, gets a kick out of this one.)


Hiding beneath the Mayapple canopy...


are flowers, soon to be apples.


Common Blue Violet


The Large-flowered Trilliums have faded to pink and are gone now. I'm glad I took the time to appreciate them when they were in their prime. It's a long time till next flowering!


Wild Blue Phlox
distinguished from non-native Dame's Rocket by 5 petals, instead of the Dame's 4.


Wild Columbine
Butterflies and hummingbirds sip nectar from deep inside the spurs.


Wild Geranium


Shellbark Hickory
Not exactly petals, but every bit as pretty.


Lightning knocked the top off of the maple across the river.


Two days later, heavy rains swept the top downstream.


And when the river fell, it left behind a dandy turtle-sunning log!


Moths are out and about. This is a Baltimore Bomolocha. The caterpillars feed on Red and Silver Maple.


Fall Webworm Moth caterpillars feed on many types of deciduous trees. The cats form weblike tents in branches; unsightly, perhaps, but not damaging to the trees.


A friend raised some Cecropia Moth caterpillars last Fall. She said they ate like little piglets and she had a hard time keeping them fed with leaves. She gave me two cocoons this Spring, which we tied to a Juneberry outside the back door.
Although I didn't see the hatch, I saw the moth soon thereafter. I suspected this was a female, since she had small antennae.


My suspicions were confirmed the next day when I saw her (on the left) mating and compared her much larger abdomen and his large, feathery antennae. They remained together for a day, then disappeared. There are eggs, probably around 100, somewhere on the property, and I hope to see some caterpillars throughout the Summer.

2 comments:

Opossum said...

Viewing Bankside blog your blog is like visiting a wondrous alien (but actually the very real) world of awe.

grammie g said...

Hi Jain...What a awesome post!!!!!
The Fringed tree is gorgeous, but so are all the flowers !! I especially like the artfulness look of the Shellbark Hickory photo..nice!
The moths are wonderful ....the Cecropia's are fabulous...I like your story about them !!
Grace