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Bedtime butterflies, I like that. :yeah: |
Bedtime Butterflies?
More like night terrors if they get into your woolies.:timeout:
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The only moth I like comes with two tiny Japanese women. :haha:
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Small Copper
http://i.imgur.com/GbysCLn.jpg
Photographed today when I visited the 'hotspot' on my bike. There was a very large stand of Fleabane which had attracted a number of other species, such as Common Blues and Gatekeepers. |
Found a little 'Small White' butterfly in the birds water bowl today, so I put him on the bird table to dry (there's no seed in the bird table at the moment so the birds don't even look at it), he then promptly kamikazed into the lawn, so I picked him up again and put him in the Buddleja where he seemed more content. It's not called the Butterfly bush for nothing after all. :yep:
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Very nice colors. I have been seeing them a lot lately. I decided to include this guy who in Florida, is big enough to qualify as the state bird :)
https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/i...iWCQp3a2Fg0nM_ |
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lol
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I just evicted a Hawk moth from the front lobby...
Big sods aren't they? :haha: |
http://i.imgur.com/w38240J.jpg They're monsters (not my photo)
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Quarantine lifted...partially
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Regions that are out of the quarantine include areas south of Imola Avenue, areas west of Mt. Veeder Road, the Carneros region, and portions of Eastern Napa County." Precisely my turf! Now for the Glassywinged Sharpshooter pest...http://gis.napa.ca.gov/Html5Viewer/Index.html?viewer=egvm_html ( Map) |
Guns and Roses
In responding to Nipplespanner's "Pandora's Box" gun-thread comment I came across this:https://scontent-sjc2-1.xx.fbcdn.net...41&oe=56995E6D
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I haven't seen any around here in DE, but I need the sphinx moth to pollinate my 2 Night-blooming cereus plant's blossoms.
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=...fo0&ajaxhist=0 Above is not mine but is the same flower. They bloom only after dark and thru the night giving off a scent that smells like heaven. When daylight comes they're done and close only to die if not pollinated. If the blossom has been pollinated by the sphinx moth or a bat, then it will produce fruit. Which one needed, I have no idea. LOL http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=...=0&FORM=IARRTH |
That's a real esoteric hobby you've got there... top man :up: How did you become involved in this, GT182?
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Gardening for insomniacs!
HUH! In Bride of the Water God by Yun Mi-kyung, a night-blooming cereus is referred to as the "Loneliness of the Night" and refers most specifically to Epiphyllum oxypetalum. Do try to keep up! https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...front-long.JPG The flowers are described as being paired, so if one flower is plucked, another flower will die somewhere else. Therefore, they are also given the nickname "short-lived love". If you 'd just keep up with esoteric romance trivia you wouldn't need to ask such simple questions:O:. Even Armistead and Wolfertz know this stuff! At least have a Dutchman's Pipe Cactus in your conservatory:hmph: http://pics.davesgarden.com/pics/200...thy/aecd30.jpg Naturally I lean toward the Sonoran Desert Cereus Peruvianus myself http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/wp-c...s2-400x300.jpg...being a High Plains Drifter Rider of the Purple Sage anti-hero type. A word of caution: do not ever attempt to induce any of your inamoratii into field-trip night-viewing these baby's; They'll think your on some cheap 'make' and clobber you! (FYI the Peruvianus is pollinated by a moth...but I'm bats about 'em anyhow!)
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