Some warbler
Next-door cat
Crowing "I ate a peanut"
Full Load
Yester-lily. Morrow-ant.
Party-time
The birds' gift
Grand Bank 2021
B with P's Nikon
Fly's eyes
Some scowl, some grin
Smilier now
How do they grow
Praying
Todaylily
Sharing
At the black currants
Some onion or other
Hops ripening
Top of today's pecking order
Post-hurricane window things
Came for the peanuts; stayed for the portrait
Day Moon
Photo-bomber
Fred's ashes back to the sea
Sunflower looking up
Chickadee in the chuckleypears
Just dropping behind a neighbour's house
Bloomed for her birthday
Bluet damselfly
Tended
Underside of a miller
Not much wind
Yellow birds are all yellow-hammers
The unbidden
Tricolored bumblebee
Chuckleypear fungus
Four-spot friend to all humankind
Skipper doing his Narcissus thing
The blackberries offering themselves to the bees
King Billy butterfly
Dock
Third-quarter Noon Moon
The times, they are a-changin.
Maybe we were channeling some 1970s film
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Not my grandmother's plate


I'm not especially receptive to old folkloric techniques, even despite having made my living as a folklorist for several decades.
I'm not that kind of folklorist.
But when, the other day, I saw an avalanche of first-hand reports on the efficacy of catching (and killing) fruit flies in one's kitchen by stretching clear plastic wrap over a partly filled glass of apple cider vinegar, and poking tiny holes in the wrap, I thought: "Okay, I'll try it."
Now I'm willing to provide another testimonial to its efficacy.
Here, for your interest is a photograph of nearly a dozen such flies, most of them dead, one still walking around the inside of the glass.
If they can get inside, some will find their way out, so not all are despatched. But it is far more efficient than my hand-clapping and cursing at them.
I put the glass on a white screen on my ipad to take this picture. The dust at the bottom, among the fly carcasses, is the precipitate from the vinegar.
The picture reminds me of plates my grandmother used to have.
I'm not that kind of folklorist.
But when, the other day, I saw an avalanche of first-hand reports on the efficacy of catching (and killing) fruit flies in one's kitchen by stretching clear plastic wrap over a partly filled glass of apple cider vinegar, and poking tiny holes in the wrap, I thought: "Okay, I'll try it."
Now I'm willing to provide another testimonial to its efficacy.
Here, for your interest is a photograph of nearly a dozen such flies, most of them dead, one still walking around the inside of the glass.
If they can get inside, some will find their way out, so not all are despatched. But it is far more efficient than my hand-clapping and cursing at them.
I put the glass on a white screen on my ipad to take this picture. The dust at the bottom, among the fly carcasses, is the precipitate from the vinegar.
The picture reminds me of plates my grandmother used to have.
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