The blackberries offering themselves to the bees
Skipper doing his Narcissus thing
Four-spot friend to all humankind
Chuckleypear fungus
Tricolored bumblebee
The unbidden
Yellow birds are all yellow-hammers
Not much wind
Underside of a miller
Tended
Bluet damselfly
Bloomed for her birthday
Just dropping behind a neighbour's house
Chickadee in the chuckleypears
Sunflower looking up
Fred's ashes back to the sea
Photo-bomber
Not my grandmother's plate
Some warbler
Next-door cat
Crowing "I ate a peanut"
Full Load
Yester-lily. Morrow-ant.
Dock
Third-quarter Noon Moon
The times, they are a-changin.
Maybe we were channeling some 1970s film
I'm a sucker for the moon
Surprise
Antares
Nearly first quarter
Pink
Cedar waxwing
Lemonade stand
Bernlaws, sternlaws and post-prandial fire
Not-wasp "wasp"
Hoisted
The apple swells
So, THAT is why. . .
Bluejay, nutted, unfazed by the dahlia
Rain ending
Day Moon over neighbours' trees
Freshly opened but facing away
A dahlia, I think
Young bird in the apple
1/640 • f/4.0 • 150.0 mm • ISO 250 •
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-M1
OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
EXIF - See more detailsSee also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
50 visits
King Billy butterfly


Apparently these are -- somewhere -- known as King Billy butterflies, arriving in those areas around King Billy's day, July 12th. Not so here -- I don't think I've seen them much earlier than now, almost two weeks after Billyday (although I *did* see one a couple of years ago a whole week before Billyday. . . .).
The connection to Billy is also through his, William's, royal House of Orange, the Billybug's main colour. Just the same, I grew up calling them the rather more standard name, Monarch butterflies.
I used to see them from time to time as a child. But as an adult I did not. And I started doubting my memories when I heard people say that we have no Monarchs on the island of Newfoundland. Well, we do.
This one complaisantly perched for a minute on a compost pile at the community garden I have a plot in. He showed me both sides of his wings and flew away.
I hope he found some milkweed.
The connection to Billy is also through his, William's, royal House of Orange, the Billybug's main colour. Just the same, I grew up calling them the rather more standard name, Monarch butterflies.
I used to see them from time to time as a child. But as an adult I did not. And I started doubting my memories when I heard people say that we have no Monarchs on the island of Newfoundland. Well, we do.
This one complaisantly perched for a minute on a compost pile at the community garden I have a plot in. He showed me both sides of his wings and flew away.
I hope he found some milkweed.
William (Bill) Armstrong has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.