Sawfly larva / Trichiocampus viminalis
Shield Bug
Insect casing
Hopper on Broadleaf Gumweed / Grindelia squarrosa
Aphrodite Fritillary / Speyeria aphrodite
Enormous Bumblebee
Marbled Orbweaver / Araneus marmoreus
Stunning little beauty (Aculepeira)
Is this a Shield Bug?
Little blue spider
Stink Bug
Spider's tunnel web
Not just a pretty seedpod
Face to face
Transformation
Subarctic Darner female and nymph casing
Police Car Moth
Seven-spotted Ladybug
Lacewing / Chrysopidae sp.
Ladybug, ladybug, fly away home ...
Dragonfly
Little moth of the forest
Hoverfly on Coneflower
Milbert's Tortoise Shell / Aglais milberti
Hanging
It's all about the bug
Tarnished Plant Bug / Lygus lineolaris
Ladybug on Goat's-beard
Maybe an Edith's Checkerspot
Sawfly larva
Tiger Beetle
Beetle on Lupine
Tiny treasures
Lacewing
Happy Stampeding!
Old World Swallowtail
Moth on orange
The work of ants
Unidentified
Crawling in the light
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Underwing Moth


No, of course this gorgeous moth wouldn't land on a large, plain green leaf, LOL! Pretty good camouflage, though, on the gravel parking lot at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park. Saw it flying around, the moment I got out of my car a couple of days ago. Wondered at first if it might be a Red Admiral when I saw the bright splash of colour in the distance, but was happy when I saw that it was an Underwing Moth - only ever seen one of these once before, down in Weaselhead. A lovely treat, made even more so after I searched for fungi and found practically nothing : ) Looks like the mushroom season is well and truly over .... sigh. Time to see if there is a local branch of MA ( Mushrooms Anonymous), LOL.
Usually, the Underwing Moth's distinctive colors are only displayed during flight and usually most Underwing Moths are active at night, spending the day resting upside down with their wings open against the bark of trees or stumps.
Usually, the Underwing Moth's distinctive colors are only displayed during flight and usually most Underwing Moths are active at night, spending the day resting upside down with their wings open against the bark of trees or stumps.
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