Aug 212014
 

For some reason, I dragged my heels this morning as I set out for Piney Woods Church Road. Maybe the reluctance was a product of the time of day — a busy Thursday schedule compelled me to choose the late morning for my outing.  Maybe it was the building heat, with temperatures rising into the low 90s.  For whatever reason, my enthusiasm was dampened as I started off down the road.  I found some new blossoms I had not photographed before, but mostly nondescript (even by my open-minded standards).  Then I began noticing all the pollinators busily roaming from flower to flower — sweat bees and solitary wasps.  The sweat bees seemed to be focused on pollen collection, while the wasps appeared to be gathering nectar.  I suddenly realized that we all had our work to do — pollinating or photographing, it makes little difference — to keep the world going.  They had their morning work, and I had mine.

 

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Aug 212014
 

On my morning walk down Piney Woods Church Road today, I encountered this wasp with the most slender waist that I have ever seen, apparently gathering nectar from a Hoary Mountainmint.  I mistook it for a Thin-Waisted Wasp at first, but an expert at BugGuide on Facebook set me to rights.  It is actually a species of mason wasp, Zethus spinipes.  Researching this species further, I was astonished to find that relatively little is known about it.  Supposedly it nests in abandoned burrows of other insects, but this has not been confirmed.  One source, a web page from the Extension Service of the University of Florida, even cited a source on the genus dating back to 1894, though noting that it was likely in error.  If anyone is looking for a biology research project at the MS or PhD level, Zethus spinipes is certainly available.  

 

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Aug 202014
 

I ventured out to Piney Woods Church Road this afternoon after an intense thunderstorm.  The air was delightfully cool, and thunder still rumbled overhead.  I found great delight, as I often do, in photographing droplets of water.  I was delighted to discover this one water droplet with a tiny spider, a few millimeters across, just below it, clinging to a slender thread.  I was reminded of an astronaut on a space walk above our blue-green sphere.

 

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Aug 192014
 

Under gray skies and light drizzle, I made my way down Piney Woods Church Road this morning.  I noticed quite a few leaves, and small pine branches, that had fallen overnight, including this stunning sassafras leaf. It reminds me that autumn is approaching, although a heat wave is due to strike us first, with temperatures in the mid-90s for the next week or so.  I much prefer the crisp blue-sky days of mid-fall.

 

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Aug 182014
 

After a busy day in Atlanta, I dashed off to Piney Woods Church Road in the early evening.  Thunder was already rumbling in the distance, and the air was amazingly muggy — akin to my experiences walking through tropical greenhouses at botanical gardens.  As I continued on my way, the sunlight was dampened by approaching dark clouds.  I took a few photos, including this one, then high-tailed it home again.  There has been thunder nearly continuously since my return, though we have yet to experience the brunt of a storm.

 

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Aug 172014
 

So far this year, I had not found myself on Piney Woods Church Road shortly before a storm.  It is not that I hadn’t hoped for this; rather, my dislike for lightning is greater than my desire for a dramatic image.  Today, though, I was walking with a neighbor down the road, feeling uninspired, when the dark sky of an impending storm practically demanded to be photographed.  The result is this pastoral scene, complete with blooming crepe myrtle, just a couple of minutes before the storm hit.  (I had just enough time to race home along a neighbor’s pasture fence and through the woods.)

 

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Aug 162014
 

I was up early today, walking Piney Woods Church Road prior to opening the local artists’ gallery at the Serenbe Institute Community Center from 10 am to noon (where 17 of my images are currently on display).  I am an infrequent morning visitor to the road, and I found myself captivated, yet again, by how sunlight selectively illuminated vines, shrubs, and trees while leaving surrounding areas still dark.  The result is this photograph.

 

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Aug 152014
 

Over the past few weeks, I have occasionally observed black (female) Eastern Tiger Swallowtail butterflies (Pterourus glaucus) winging their way along or across Piney Woods Church Road.  Invariably, they seemed bound for somewhere else, across a field or into the woods.  They steadfastly refused to pause long enough to be photographed.  Now, at last, Hoary Mountainmint (Pycnanthemum incanum) is in bloom, attracting varied pollinators, including solitary wasps (mentioned in an earlier post) and butterflies.  The males, and some females, are bright yellow and black.  But some females are a black and blue color variant, instead — like the ones I photographed earlier this afternoon. (I saw two or three different ones, and did not bother to record which one I was photographing at a particular moment).  Considering all the butterflies my backyard butterfly bush has attracted, I have seen precious few along Piney Woods Church Road, probably mostly due to the absence of flowers to pollinate.  For all that the Mountain Mint is rather nondescript (apart from the upper sides of its topmost leaves, which look they have been spray-painted with white), its blossoms have brought new presences to my daily pilgrimage, and I am most grateful.

 

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Aug 152014
 

This morning, my peripatetic brother sent me a slide show of alpine and subalpine wildflowers he saw on a series of hikes high in the Wasatch Mountains east of Salt Lake City, Utah.  Across my screen flashed showy flower heads in a dazzling array of colors, from violet and magenta to brilliant blues and yellows, bearing bold names like Elephant’s Head and Sky Pilot.

There is nothing like that blooming along Piney Woods Church Road right now, and I can’t help from feeling a bit envious.  There are still a few bedraggled Daisy Fleabanes, and a scattering of tired Horse Nettles.  And then there is the lowly Partridge Pea (Chamaecrista fasciculata), a plant with leaves evocative of the Mimosa tree that bears tiny yellow flowers a few millimeters across, which blossom out of its axils (the angle where the leaf meets the main stem) — roughly akin to humans sprouting flowers out of their armpits. The tiny flower hides itself well, and I had to get down on the dirt and gravel just to photograph one.  What this plant loses in showiness, though, I suppose it makes up in sheer variety of common names:  sleeping plant, prairie partridge pea, showy partridge pea, prairie senna, large-flowered sensitive-pea, dwarf cassia, partridge pea senna, locust weed, and golden cassia.  Plus, according to the USDA, it bears a seed crop that is eaten by many wild animals, from bobwhites to mallard ducks.  The plant also provides nectar (from glands at the base of each leaf, not from the flower) that provides a food source for bees in places where other flowering plants may be scarce.  And the Common Sulfur Butterfly lays its eggs on the Partridge Pea’s leaves, so that the caterpillar larvae can feed on them.  Partridge Pea is often planted for erosion control or as an ornamental.  And since the plant is a legume, it also helps improve soil fertility by fixing nitrogen that other plants need.

Maybe it isn’t so lowly, after all.

 

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