The plot thickens
A different hopper
The new and improved weevil
Didn't turn out, like it anyway
This one didn't turn out perfectly, either
Egg watch, third morning
A garden friend
Today's hopper
Underside of hopper
Little woodpile spider
Woodland butterfly
Baby fungus
Tiny assassin bug dines on microscopic beetle
Red velvet mites enjoy a leafhopper
Spiny spider
Yup, it's a wasp
By the bite of the silvery bug
A Scolops sulcipes
Lovehoppers
A beetle grub
Same beetle's pupa
Collect the entire set!
The underside of a horned passalus
A better view of the fly on the eggs
Rack 'em
Golden tortoise beetle
Strangest leafhopper I've ever seen
Cottony leafhopper, different view
Hoverfly hygiene
What would be evening . . .
Big, loud, spiny fly
Nature is violent
The lone purple flower . . .
And a different fly
Very small elongated beetles
Quick green insect
Fast butterfly
Considering supper
Unknown small fly
Robber fly
Hoverfly's breakfast
Spiny little spider
Carpenter ant
A more poetic, whiskey-bottle pose
Cartoonist's delight
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Next morning, still there


The little winged thing is tiny -- bear in mind that the eggs themselves are about 1/16-inch tall,. I would guess it's a parasitic wasp, but it looks a lot more like a fly, particularly its antennae. And I can find nothing in the literature about little parasitic flies that go after insect eggs. So for now it is a mystery.
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