Showing posts with label Aphrodite Fritillary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aphrodite Fritillary. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2013

Whites Continuing to Shimmer Throughout A Sweltering July


Bid farewell to July with a stroll through the gardens still shimmering in white . . . more mature blooms . . . some nearly fading . . . the buzz, broods, trills and furls relaxing into August along the fringe of summer. July passed with days of torrid, sultry heat. Amazingly I withstood it all and each day went about the gardens and fields, during the hottest hours, in search of butterflies, discovering new species to add to my list.



As the Bluebird couple's second brood continues to grow within the nestbox, hydrangeas swell into soft, full panicles attracting bees and butterflies alike. In the background the flowers of Japanese Tree Lilac are fading. Yucca filamentosa L. is beginning to ring its waxy bells with the other shimmering whites.


Gooseneck loosestrife Lysimachia clethroides, in the middle garden is a favorite white of many butterflies.


Aphrodite Fritillary . . .  a frequent visitor to the white patch of tapered starry panicles. 


Very unusual here to see a Little Wood Satyr sipping nectar in the gardens. They are mostly sighted skipping around low to the ground. 


Numerous sorts of Skippers are seen flying and nectaring within the gooseneck raceme. In the eight by ten feet, or so, swath of flowers, just in front of the Bluebird nestbox, there might be up to 40 or 50 tiny butterflies darting about. Comical interplay abounds.


Here a Pearl Crescent, also in some numbers, approaches a content Skipper . . . a chase follows. Butterflies can be very territorial or could this little butterfly be thinking the Skipper is one of her/his own.


Days become weeks with the stifling heat blowing open silky petals of snowy white. 


The Hydrangea paniculata 'Swan' graces the middle garden just behind the nestbox.


Large heavy snowballs fall within this old fashion favorite. 


A Cimicifuga 'Candelabra' catches the light in the upper garden.


Earlier July


End of July


'The Swan'



Among the globulous buds of Cimcifuga, a Summer Azure comes in for a landing.




Birds are going for the Viburnum berries which are spilling over into the white pom-pom-like blossoms of Hydrangea.


Tree Hydrangea inflorescence begins with a chartreuse hue. 


Looking down towards the lower garden another Hydrangea paniculata is still offering a show . . . now in full white display. 



A Greater Spangled Fritillary harvesting Hydrangea nectar.


Milkweed's bouncy, bountiful and beautifully fragrant orbs have come and gone with not one sighting of a Monarch butterfly.




A Common Whitetail dragonfly rests on the birdbath. 


Meadowsweet offers tall, white, flame-like plumes up nearer the farmhouse and studios. 


My first ever Baltimore Checkerspot! Gorgeous crescent moons and other patterns on its wings. After a champagne lunch, my dear friend and bubbly cohort, Eva, and I took a walk about the gardens and there it was, a good twenty feet away from us, just resting in an overgrown section of the north field! I will be writing about this butterfly and other unusual guests in a later piece.

For now, Happy August! The days cannot get any hotter (I hope!) but the garden colors can.


Saturday, January 14, 2012

A Piece of the Center . . . Centerpieces For Katarina



Fritillary Sipping in the Center of Echinacea Bloom

 Black Swallowtail Going Into the Center

Thistle

Bluebird in Nestbox Entrance Center

Baby Indigo Bunting 

Flower Hill Farm's Black Cherry (Michael's tree) in the Center of a double Rainbow


Centerpieces for a Wedding

Playing with the notion of centers and centerpieces for Katarina 

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

A Few Wildflowers From Summer and Fall 2011


Native Wild Blueberry and Bombus (Bumble Bee)

Erigeron annuus Eastern daisy fleabane ~ ?

Mystery Most Common ~  Fleabane ?

Geranium maculatum, Wild Geranium 



Tradescantia virginiana, Virginia Spiderwort

Amsonia tabernaemontana (Eastern bluestar)

Thermopsis villosa (Carolina bushpea)

Field of Dancus pusillus (American wild carrot) and Daucus carota (Queen Anne's Lace)

Eastern Black Swallowtail Caterpillar eating Wild Carrot

Verbascum chaixii ? and Common Milkweed Asclepias syriaca



Little Skippers on Milkweed


Echinacea purpurea Purple Coneflower and Aphrodite Fritillary 

                       Eupatorium Maculatum (Joe-Pye weed) and Rudbeckia Herbstonne


Goldenrod and Monarch butterfly with mystery bug

Vernonia gigantea, Tall Ironweed

Fritillary sipping Ironweed

Monarchs on New England Asters

Here are a few of my favorite photographs of some of the wildflowers (and wild flying creatures) in my gardens over this summer and fall. 
Thank you Gail for inspiring all of my wildflower posts over this year and for all of your great work towards preserving native plants . . . through your own gardens and the brilliant articles on your blog, 
as well as, your contributions to the fabulous Beautiful Wildlife Gardens blog.
You are an inspiration to many and a gracious champion for native plants and wildlife. Congratulations on another year of informative posts for your creation 'Wildflower Wednesday.'
If you, dear treasured readers, would like to see other wildflower posts inspired by Gail, please visit 'Wildflower Wednesday' and her wonderful, wild and greatly native garden Clay and Limestone.  


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