Showing posts with label pipevine swallowtail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pipevine swallowtail. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Wildlife Wednesday May 2018

It's the first Wednesday of May and that means Wildlife Wednesday hosted by Tina at "My Gardener Says...." as an opportunity to share wildlife in our gardens.

Male Green Anole (Anole carolinensis) puffing his dewlap which is meant to impress a mate or express dominance in the case of feeling threatened.  Both males and females have the dewlap and the female has a brown stripe down the back.


Mockingbirds have been serenading the garden daily from high in the trees.


Inspired by Sue at My Wild Australia last month here's a bit of its awesome mimicry in an audio file:



Alternately you can go to this link:

Mockingbird song - Click to open

That is the same bird throughout the audio.  Worth a whole minute to experience the full range of sounds once those vocal pipes get warmed up.  Mockingbirds are so amusing and have been known to imitate car alarms, phones, and other noises from suburban life.  They also love an audience and I've seen them repeatedly checking to make sure I'm still listening while out gardening.

Wolf Spider with egg sac crawling around a wheelbarrow.


A green-legged spider created a very large web.  I didn't get a close enough look to positively identify but it is probably not a green lynx spider which typically creates a linear or trip wire style web.


Red Paper Wasp carefully getting water.



A beneficial garden visitor if they don't bother these Monarch Butterfly caterpillars enjoying tropical milkweed.





This crew polished off the milkweeds in no time and I spotted a few Monarch Butterflies floating about the garden a few weeks later so it all worked out well.  The plants are recovering in time for another round.

Pipevine Swallowtail Caterpillar spotted yesterday probably looking for a place to attach and pupate.


Live Oak trees are beautiful but the fallen leaves are messy and impossible to remove.

I like to think all this leaf litter brings me such garden scenes as a happy Giant Swallowtail enjoying Prairie Verbena.


Be sure to visit Tina at "My Gardener Says...." to read her owl's tale and warning about how using poisons outdoors negatively affects wildlife.  Then check out the comments for more Wildlife Wednesday posts from garden bloggers.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Wildlife Wednesday March 2016

Wildlife Wednesday, sponsored by Tina at "My Gardener Says..." presents an opportunity for bloggers to gather up wildlife photos from the past month and share them all in one post.  For the first Wednesday of March my photos show that pollinators have been quite active in the garden the last few weeks.

With rosemary providing most of the blooms in the garden last month, it turned into quite the hot spot for pollinators.

Green Metallic Bee (Agapostemon), a type of sweat bee, shines bright on Rosemary Goriza flowers.


A beautiful wasp (ceratogastra ornata, I think) common to southwestern U.S.


Bee and Wasp together


Spotted Ladybeetle, didn't get close enough to count spots.


Honeybee working the Rosemary.


Buckeye butterfly enjoying damp gravel and a bit of camouflage in a low spot on the path after a rain.


Red Admiral Butterfly on the always popular Gomphrena 'Fireworks'.


Pipevine Swallowtail on Salvia 'Hot Lips'.


Monarch Butterflies have been with us all winter, this one was at the gardens where I volunteer each week.  They seem quite happy with our mild winter this year and, barring a late freeze, we should see quite a few as they make their way north this spring.


For every plant there is a pollinator.  Tiny fly on a just right tiny anemone.


Birds have made themselves scarce since a cat took up residence in the back yard so I keep an eye out when on the road.  I spotted a Roadrunner near Fredericksburg, Texas.  Interestingly, roadrunners are members of the cuckoo family.  Roadrunners are classified as Greater or Lesser depending on size.  Probably a Greater Roadrunner since the beak is so prominent.  One of the few animals that will prey on rattlesnakes, they are welcome in the garden.  Just like in the cartoons, their legs do appear to go around like wheels when they run fast!


That's the wildlife roundup from my garden, please join Tina at "My Gardener Says..." for more fascinating wildlife in gardens from faraway places.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Wildlife Wednesday: Butterflies and Insects

For my first Wildlife Wednesday post of 2015 we're taking a look back at butterflies and a few other insects from last summer.  Wildlife Wednesday is hosted by Tina at "My Gardener Says..." and offers an opportunity for bloggers to share wildlife visitors on the first Wednesday of each month.

Several swallowtails were spotted in the garden over the summer.  These Eastern Black Swallowtails enjoyed the native prairie verbena