Tag Archives: nature
Fall butterfly flurry
Looks like the butterflies have decided to take one more stab at Summer 2013 in Toronto, even if Autumn officially started this past weekend.
- Doing his own version of the bat signal
- Flitting from flower to flower on a sunny day
- Sunning himself in the shadow of a chain-link fence
- Cooler weather means more time resting in the sun
- Checking out some late blossoms
- Little guy decides to rest on a wooden fence rail
- Clinging wrong to spread the wings fully
- Peering through purple poseys
Never surrender (summer)
Even as the overnight temperatures in Toronto reach the mid-single digits Celsius (about 40 F), a few die-hards–human, animal and vegetable–have refused to give up on the beach.
- A lone gull skirts the water as the Scarborough Bluffs rise in the distance
- Buried in the greenery, a grasshopper takes a rest
- Flowers brighten the sidewalk
- A sparrow grabs a bit of sun and seed
- Framed by nature, the sailboat catches the breeze
- A wader dares the waters of Lake Ontario, sandals in hand
- A handful of wasps (hornets?) latch onto the last flowers of summer
- A monarch stands bright orange against the sand
- As the milkweed prepare to explode their seed, a snail and lady bug rest
- A bumble and hornet visit the same hangout
- A yellow rose gives one last burst of glory
Not yet, autumn
As the air turns chilly in Toronto and cloud obscures the sun, a last reminder of some of the botanic splendour from this past summer.
- I can see where people get the idea of plants as predators
- The twin icons of a once whole trunk
- A beautiful rose awaits its final bloom
- Like fractals, the stars were made of stars
- The yellow of the petals seemed to glow
- Berries awaiting a dining insect, bird or mammal to spread their seed
Photo synthetic
Crunchies in a ravine
You had to know these were coming…more creepy crawly crunchies from my recent walk through the woods.
- Faced with such small petals, the bumbles steps were quite tentative
- I was going for the thin layer of slime holding it to the leaf
- Another wasp looking for a bit of wood pulp, no doubt to repair a nest
- Another menacing creature crawling from the darkness
- It often amazes me how agile these creatures are for their bulk
A Bug(gy) Life
There is a scene early in the film Ace Ventura: Pet Detective where Ace calls out to all of the animals living in his apartment and they swarm from every crevice to give him the world’s biggest group hug (scene was totally ripped off in Evan Almighty). Well, every once in a while (aka daily), I feel the same way with insects.
Insects—and here I also include arachnids—love me. I don’t know why, they just do.
The best I can figure is that there is something in my personal chemistry—blood, sweat, breath, pheromones—that drives bugs wild.
When I go to the local beach to work—hard life, I know—I cannot sit on a bench for much more than an hour before I become a buffet for biting flies. And when I get home from the local park or ravine, I invariably find a couple small beetle hitchhikers somewhere on my clothing. That I have not yet contracted Lyme disease eludes me, although I am grateful, because that shit’s nasty.
When my grandmother’s seniors’ complex became host to a bed bug invasion, I became the canary in a coal mine. After her place had been sprayed, it was my duty to sit on her couch and see if the fumigation had worked. If there was a bed bug within 1 km of her apartment, it would find me within 10 minutes and leave its mark as a large red welt. I was bed bug fly paper.
As luck would have it, I also seem to attract spiders, which is fine as long as they focus their attentions on the various flies and other critters and not on me. So far, so good.
Perhaps this life-long attention from creepy crawlies has made me immune to the sociological ick-factor and has in fact turned into a fascination with them, as my many photographic blog posts would attest. In short, I like bugs. (I’m not quite ready for a love connection.)
On one of my recent walks through a local ravine, I ran into a young gentleman who also wandered the woods with a camera. As the conversation proceeded, we shared our interests—his was birds. When I told him mine was bugs, he was confused. It made no sense to him that anyone would be interested in insects. He wasn’t questioning my sanity, just my logic.
Other people who wander with me, however, do question my sanity as I approach a flower bed covered in bees rather than run the other way as they do. Or as I walk into a swarm of dragonflies rather than swat them away as a nuisance.
I wish I could explain my interest. As I believe with all other life forms, I believe there is an inherent beauty in the specialization of bugs to their environments—their shapes, decorations, behaviours. It probably doesn’t hurt that they will also stay still when I’m trying to examine them, rather than scatter as most other animals will.
Having recently moved into a basement apartment (as mentioned in the previous post), I will have the opportunity to test the limits of my fascination…and undoubtedly of my camera lenses. Should be fun!
Winged warriors
As I continue to live without a telephoto lens, I find my winged colleagues in the nearby ravine are doing their best to help me with my photography. I could still use a bit more help…or at least a closer vantage point.
- Unfortunately, he was so far away the resolution isn’t great…I like the composition though
- The cropped version was nice, but I prefer having a bit more background context
- Even the sparrows proved challenging to photograph today
- Two tiny sparrows commune in a tree
- This young lady wasn’t sure she wanted her photo taken
- …but then decided to show me her good side
I know I wood
Another lovely morning and another traipse through a nearby ravine, checking out the flora and fauna (as well as a few protists, dirt and water).
- While not large, the ravine remains lush in late summer
- The fruit almost looks like a red cephalopod reaching for prey
- I liked the way the branches crisscrossed the leaves like nerve fibers in a green brain
- Tiny flowers that look wilted, they are hard to focus on
- Love the primary simplicity…no variegation, no shade, just pure colour
- A droplet of water is a lagoon within a single petal
- An ancient leviathan rises from the soil…or it’s an odd stump
- The bee was not my goal with this image…promise
- The yellow contrasts the purple beautifully
- I find focusing on a bunch of buds difficult
- This was going to be a bee photo, but guess what…




















































