By the Shed Door
Fencing Lessons
Puppy in the Woodpile
Wauw-Wauw-Wauuuuw, I Am Tired of Being Up Here!!
Stick 'em Up, Podner ...
Low Tide at the Non-Commercial Pier
Fog Rolls Into the Harbor
What Horrors Have These Blue Eyes Seen?
Bass Harbor Head Lighthouse
Old Buildings at McCurdy Herring Smokehouse
Must Be Low Tide ...
Flashy Bike Lost in the Woods
Bright Pickets "Laying Down on the Job"
No GPS? Which Way Is North on This Paper Thing?
Chevrolet Pinstripes
Barnyard Goat
Highway Goat
(Sugar?) Maple
Golden Sassafras
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Plain and Classic
Not Enough Engine for a Corvette
Seat Cover
No Words Can Describe ...
Brown and Sere -- Harrington River Marshes
These Wings Beat How Fast per Second??
Laughing Man
Take A Stern View
Fritz Cove and Mendenhall Glacier
Pink Yarrow
Weed Seedpods in a Pumpkin Field
Maynes Farm, Pumpkins in Autumn
Centuries of Farming on Fertile Land
Autumn Harvest
It's Not What You Think !!
Wild Assateague Pony
Pouring Downhill
I See That You Are Too Close To My Nest !
Birch, Spruce, & Hemlock
West Hastings at Seymour (blue Spirit Bear)
Flying Hip-Bump
Not a Dirtpile or a Cliff -- Ferris Glacier
Margerie Glacier Calving #3
Margerie Glacier Calving #2
Morning Daylily
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Tuliptree Silkmoth


(Located in Central Maryland)
Paraphrased from Wikipedia: "The Tuliptree Silkmoth or Giant Silkmoth (Callosamia angulifera) is North American, found from Massachusetts west through southern Ontario and southern Michigan, and south to Mississippi and the Florida panhandle. The wingspan is 80–110 mm (3 1/8 - 4 5/16 inches). There is one generation from June to August in the north and two generations from March to August in the south. The larvae feed on Tulip Poplar/Yellow Poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera). Adults do not feed."
Paraphrased from Wikipedia: "The Tuliptree Silkmoth or Giant Silkmoth (Callosamia angulifera) is North American, found from Massachusetts west through southern Ontario and southern Michigan, and south to Mississippi and the Florida panhandle. The wingspan is 80–110 mm (3 1/8 - 4 5/16 inches). There is one generation from June to August in the north and two generations from March to August in the south. The larvae feed on Tulip Poplar/Yellow Poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera). Adults do not feed."
Berny, Jeff Farley, cammino have particularly liked this photo
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