Too few notice

I stand outside at work….

A mourning dove calls from a short distance away before flitting to a position closer, landing on the ground and searching for what I do not know.

I am the only one who looks.

A bird of equal size and superior agility flies in and chases the dove away, manhandles soil and flora and everything else in its quest for something unknown to me.  I don’t recognize the beast and stare wonderingly.

I am the only one who looks.

A northern cardinal’s telltale call beckons from nearby, perhaps in a tree or atop the building.  I hear it but do not see it.

I am the only one who looks.

A fox squirrel belovedly called Bob prances across the dirt and grass, coming within arm’s reach of those who walk by, and I watch with utter fascination.

I am the only one who looks.

A large katydid hangs just below the security keypad, a brilliantly green creature larger than any of my fingers.  It sits quietly, unobtrusively.

I am the only one who looks.

A bedazzling butterfly leisurely floats around, colors so brilliant that words cannot do justice, a fantastic example of nature’s artwork in play.

I am the only one who looks.

I stand on my patio…

A cooper’s hawk sweeps in over the earth as a myriad of birds scatter in its wake.  Several people scurry about doing this and that.

I am the only one who looks.

I drive on the road…

An armadillo skitters across the drive, dashing between careless drivers careening in the dark toward whatever senseless destination keeps them blind to the world around them.  Only I pause, brake, stop to let the marvelous creature pass before me.

I am the only one who looks.

I stand at the lake…

A red-eared slider perches in absolute stillness upon a log, its stripes and colors so magnificent in sunshine as to be blinding.

I am the only one who looks.

I stand in my garage…

A baby European starling hops about the roadway, seeking shelter beneath parked cars and against embankments, and all the while people come and go in automobiles and on foot.  A domestic cat follows the nestling with intent.

I am the only one who looks.

I go through life…

A lizard here, an insect there, an arthropod between them; a bird overhead, a marsupial underfoot, a flower separating them; a spectacular cloud floating through the sky, a winged predator casting its shadow upon me, a seedling quietly growing nearby; and a tree dressing the bones of the world for summer, a nest hidden amongst its limbs with new life calling out, leaves and lungs breathing in that way which only the living can know.

I am the only one who looks.

Irony

Despite living on the edge of White Rock Lake, I also happen to live directly behind a hospital.

Just now as I stood in the garage watching landscapers butcher shrubbery that once hid a rather ugly fence, I noticed some large birds circling above the hospital.

They were vultures.

I’m not sure of the species given the contrast between a cloudy sky and dark plumage, but I know for certain they were vultures.

Several of them.

Circling above the hospital.

Peekaboo, green anole style

Remember the first game of peekaboo I played with a green anole (Anolis carolinensis) almost two years ago?  Since then, I’ve found these reptiles to be a delightful bunch of lizards who constantly peek at me from around corners, through cracks and crevices, from behind the fence or leaves or branches, and from just about anywhere I look.  So many of them live on and around my patio that, at least when it’s warm, I find it difficult not to see one or more careening about.

So on April 12 of this year when the weather grew warm and the sun shone brightly, a large female of the species engaged in yet another game of peekaboo with me.  Unlike the first time when that female sat upon the patio wall, this most recent encounter took place with her clinging to the outside of the patio fence.  The first image from that experience was posted at xenogere unseen.  Here are a few more.

A female green anole (Anolis carolinensis) peeking at me over the patio fence (20080412_03231)
A female green anole (Anolis carolinensis) clinging to the outside of the patio fence (20080412_03225)
A female green anole (Anolis carolinensis) peeking at me through the patio fence (20080412_03220)

[I really wish that first photo had turned out better, but I picked up too much contrast from the sunlight on either side of her head; otherwise, it would have been a fantastic shot of her peeking at me over the top of the fence]

Green bee

A soldier fly (Odontomyia cincta) on a greenthread (Thelesperma filifolium) flower (20080422_04495)

That’s what you see, isn’t it?  A green bee?

It’s actually a soldier fly (Odontomyia cincta).  It certainly does a good job of looking like a bee, doesn’t it?

A soldier fly (Odontomyia cincta) on a greenthread (Thelesperma filifolium) flower (20080422_04496)

I had been focused on a field of wildflowers, specifically the greenthread (Thelesperma filifolium) you see in these photos, when this little critter zoomed onto the scene.  I scarcely had time to realize it was there before it dashed off across a sea of color in search of better blooms (these weren’t in particularly good shape at the time, somewhat used and bedraggled).

Those two images represent the whole of our encounter, and even they are crops from larger images since I wasn’t even focused on the insect—or close-ups.