Andrew Trundlewagon's photos
gdn cabbage white DSC 1466
fishing spider DSC 1166
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Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. This large fishing spider (Dolomedes scriptus) was guarding her babies, which were clustered in a tight ball nearby. Fishing spiders can walk on water and dive to capture small fish, although they more often feed on insects.
gdn bee oregano
goldenrod spider DSC 0514
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A yellow and red-striped goldenrod crab spider (Misumena vatia, Araignée crabe) with its meal. She was hiding, well camouflaged, beneath the petals of a black eyed Susan. It was obviously a very clean strike, between the head and the thorax, and probably happened so fast the fly would not have a seen it coming.
monarch butterfly DSC 0338
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A monarch butterfly (Monarque, Danaus plexippus) feeding on echinacea flowers.
st bruno mourning cloak DSC 1998
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A mourning cloak butterfly (le morio, Nymphalis antiopa), resting, wings closed.
gdn bumble bee DSC 2229
The kiss.
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Heart to heart.
"And therewithal sweetly did me kiss,
And softly said 'dear heart, how like you this'?"
(T. Wyatt).
St Bruno button bush DSC 1994
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Flowers of a buttonbush (cephalanthus-occidentalis) in the woods- a native shrub from Eastern N. America. They look like golf balls (or, more sinisterly, like virus particles with protruding spikes). The bees love them. So do I, and if I had a bigger garden they would go straight in.
humming bird moth x CSC 1662
yellow DSC 1257
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A small, low plant, growing in an opening in the woods, the sundrop (Sundrop à petites fleurs; Oenethera perennis). A relative of the evening primrose.
st bruno lily DSC 0860
st bruno cohosh DSC 0902
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Black Cohosh, (also called Actaea racemosa, black bugbane, black snakeroot, or fairy candle) grows in the woods. It is particularly attractive to bees. The stem reaches about 2 metres tall (6 feet) with the flowers forming towers about 40-50 cm long.
mourning cloak DSC 0702
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Not the most "glamorous" pose spread-wing in the dirt; a Mourning Cloak (or Camberwell Beauty, Nymphalis antiopa. le morio) butterfly. They hibernate through the winter and are the first large butterflies on the wing in Spring.
mystery rose CSC 0455
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CSC 0454
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Monarda, is a wildflower of North America, although this is a garden cultivar. It is supposed to be pollenated by hummingbirds but we have grown it for years and I have yet to see a humming bird go near it, although it is popular with bumble bees. Its common names include bee balm, horsemint, Oswego tea, and bergamot, due to the fragrance of the leaves, which is reminiscent of bergamot orange. It was used as medicinal plant by the indigenous North Americans (Wikipedia). It is also the favorite food for caterpillars of the Raspberry Pyrausta, a small, vividly pink moth.
white meadowsweet st bruno spirea alba DSC 0259
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Growing at a wooded lakeside, Piraea alba, white meadowsweet, narrowleaf meadowsweet, pale bridewort or pipestem is a native plant of Eastern North America.
frogs st bruno pond DSC 0235
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