Chippewa Valley Butterfly Effect: Eau Claire home filled with bu - WQOW TV: Eau Claire, WI NEWS18 News, Weather, and Sports
Once again, Jim has done a wonderful job explaining the native butterflies of Wisconsin! Love the footage, too! It documented the Butterfly House to a *T*! Enjoy! --LKR
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Chippewa Valley Butterfly Effect: Eau Claire home filled with bu - WQOW TV: Eau Claire, WI NEWS18 News, Weather, and Sports
Labels:
Beaver Creek Reserve,
butterflies,
butterfly,
butterfly gardens,
caterpillar,
caterpillars,
flowers,
garden,
larvae,
monarch,
summer,
swallowtail,
video,
woodlands,
woods
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Think Spring!!! Greenhouse Escape
Today may be the first day of spring..., but it sure doesn't look or feel like it! Here's a clip that will give us all hope that springlike weather really is in the foresable future. Enjoy! --LKR
WQOW TV: Eau Claire, WI NEWS18 News, Weather, and Sports
Greenhouse Escape: Emily Valerio takes us on a short trip to a local greenhouse prepping for the planting season.
WQOW TV: Eau Claire, WI NEWS18 News, Weather, and Sports
Greenhouse Escape: Emily Valerio takes us on a short trip to a local greenhouse prepping for the planting season.
Labels:
Eau Claire,
flowers,
greenhouse,
plants,
spring,
Think Spring,
weather,
WI,
Wisconsin
Monday, April 9, 2012
Saturday, March 24, 2012
The Beauty of Flowers
These are of things to come very soon! Enjoy!!! --LKR
The Beauty of Flowers (Красота цветов) from VOROBYOFF PRODUCTION on Vimeo.
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Early Illinois Flora
These were some of the early blooming flowers--and greenery--that we saw in Illinois at Starved Rock State Park. They'll be coming to your area, soon, if they haven't already started blooming in your area! Enjoy! --LKR
Bloodroot
Rue Anemone
Skunk Cabbage
A bee pollinating Dutchman’s Breeches
Moss
Budding Toothwort
Rock, fern, and moss
Budding Virginia Bluebells
Labels:
fern,
flowers,
IL,
Illinois,
moss,
skunk cabbage,
Starved Rock State Park
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Hummers, Orioles, Heading North!
The hummers are early, this year!!! According to Journey North ruby-throated hummingbirds have been spotted as far north as Williamsburg, VA, on the east coast, and East Ridge, TN more inland!!!
Rufous Hummers have blanketed the west coast with their presence, as well, so spring is well on its way!
If you put your feeders out, early, they will be grateful. They are on the move with few, if any, flowers to feast from, though they will also eat bugs. Your choice--invite pesky bugs to your yard, or put out your feeders without dely!!!
Don't forget those lovely orange and black birds who also will come looking to dine at your hummingbird feeders! Orioles are also on the move and farther north in their journey. They've already been reported in Raleigh, ND, and Edina, MN. Orioles will also indulge in grape jelly, orange slices, berries, and of course insects!
I can't wait to have these beautiful birds back at my feeders! --LKR
Rufous Hummers have blanketed the west coast with their presence, as well, so spring is well on its way!
If you put your feeders out, early, they will be grateful. They are on the move with few, if any, flowers to feast from, though they will also eat bugs. Your choice--invite pesky bugs to your yard, or put out your feeders without dely!!!
Don't forget those lovely orange and black birds who also will come looking to dine at your hummingbird feeders! Orioles are also on the move and farther north in their journey. They've already been reported in Raleigh, ND, and Edina, MN. Orioles will also indulge in grape jelly, orange slices, berries, and of course insects!
I can't wait to have these beautiful birds back at my feeders! --LKR
Labels:
bugs,
feeders,
flowers,
hummers,
hummingbird,
oriole,
ruby-throated hummingbird
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Early Mornings, Once Again!
It's that time of the year, once again. Back to (very early) mornings! I'm not a morning person, so this can be quite an ordeal. Fortunately, the sun is up by the time the bus arrives at the beginning (and end) of the school year. Not true for the rest of the year!
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Mom's Virág (Flowers)
Cabbage White with Cleome
When I think of flowers, my earliest memories are of my Grandmother, aunts, and cousins' colorful gardens. Like Hungarian needlepoint, vibrant colors were essential. I learned gardening through both of my parents when we moved to Chatham, New Jersey from a New York apartment and was taught how to put rose slips down. Some of those rose bushes still grow in my mother's yard and are nearly 40 years old!
Because we didn't stay with my Mom, there was not much time to explore her gardens which are magnets for hummingbirds and butterflies. And shortly after these pictures were taken, it began to rain, thus ending the photo shoot! --LKR
Labels:
butterflies,
butterfly,
Chatham NJ,
embroidery,
flowers,
New Jersey
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Please, Won't You Be My Neighbor?
Okay, so has this picture of my back yard made you very glad I'm not your neighbor? Well, I'll have you know that my yard is incredibly popular with the insect population! Various bees, butterflies, and ants are flocking on over for a feast. Yup, so that means these dandelions will be pollinated and their seeds viable. ...Um, a note to my neighbors: I will make every effort to get these flowers picked before they go to seed!!! --LKR
Labels:
ants,
bees,
butterflies,
dandelions,
flowers,
neighbor,
seeds,
yard
Saturday, October 4, 2008
A Sunny Outlook
One thing for sure, I am grateful to be a soccer mom. Soccer mom's are "forced" to sit out in the sun, breathe in fresh air, and watch their kids play and have fun. We get to meet new people, so we get to socialize. Our children also get to hear us yell positive, encouraging words to them, their teammates, and even for the opposing team members that we have come to know over the years.
Sure, there are those days when it is raining, or cold and damp, but thank goodness for the vehicles we drive in over to the fields. They are relatively warm and dry, and in most cases, we can still watch our children's game, depending how close we parked to their field. And, when we can't, we can read a book, talk on our cell phones, or take an uninterrupted, well-deserved nap.
This afternoon, I was thrilled to be outdoors on such a sunny, warm fall day. We had frost, this morning, which annihilated my gardens, once full of cheerfully attired flowers. To say I needed a pick-me-up was an understatement. But basking in the sun under a beautifully blue sky while watching my son's game was just the thing to perk me up. Who cares if they lost? They had fun, and so did I! --LKR
Sure, there are those days when it is raining, or cold and damp, but thank goodness for the vehicles we drive in over to the fields. They are relatively warm and dry, and in most cases, we can still watch our children's game, depending how close we parked to their field. And, when we can't, we can read a book, talk on our cell phones, or take an uninterrupted, well-deserved nap.
This afternoon, I was thrilled to be outdoors on such a sunny, warm fall day. We had frost, this morning, which annihilated my gardens, once full of cheerfully attired flowers. To say I needed a pick-me-up was an understatement. But basking in the sun under a beautifully blue sky while watching my son's game was just the thing to perk me up. Who cares if they lost? They had fun, and so did I! --LKR
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
It's Alive!
I've found it quite difficult to spend much time in our gardens, this year. To remedy this, I resolved to eat lunch being entertained by flora and fauna in one of our butterfly and hummingbird gardens.
Sounds good, huh? The problem with this is I can't sit still long enough to just enjoy watching. I'll spot a weed, and just have to pull it (along with the others that suddenly come into view). Or I'll find an interesting insect and observe it. One of my butterflies will inevitably come into sight, flitting from flower to flower, and I'll grab my camera and start shooting! --Oy!!!
Here are some shots I got, today.
Sounds good, huh? The problem with this is I can't sit still long enough to just enjoy watching. I'll spot a weed, and just have to pull it (along with the others that suddenly come into view). Or I'll find an interesting insect and observe it. One of my butterflies will inevitably come into sight, flitting from flower to flower, and I'll grab my camera and start shooting! --Oy!!!
Here are some shots I got, today.
This is a Silver-Spotted Skipper butterfly nectaring at Purple Bee Balm. These skippers are larger than most in their family. They have a long proboscis (straw-like tongue) which enable them to draw nectar from deeper-throated flowers.
--LKR
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Saturday, September 8, 2007
A Few of Our Hummers...
Here are a few images of our ruby-throated hummingbirds. The male is the one with the red neck on the top left. The female is in the picture directly below. The drabber coloring enables her to blend in with the nest while she's incubating her eggs.
In the bottom photo, a monarch made a cameo appearance. I didn't even see it 'til I viewed the image on the computer!!! The female hummer is to the right of the pink phlox, and the butterfly is directly below.
Hummers and butterflies like pretty much the same flowers, so if your trying to attract one to your garden, you'll also be luring the other by cultivating the same plants. A two-for-one, sweet deal that's well worth the effort! --LKR
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