Category Archives: Nature Photos

The unseen – Part 1

There comes a time when the world ends.
Sucked inside a speck of dust.
And it stays like that for untellable time.
— Bhikkhu Sujato

Umbels of spotted water hemlock (a.k.a. spotted parsley or spotted cowbane; Cicuta maculata) in full bloom (20080629_08473_ab)

They no longer fool either of us, the gratuitous leaves of your platitudes, but instead they fall at my feet, more autumnal detritus to be swept away by the winds of change.

“Come,” you say, “let our intellects wrestle.”  Now the truth.

We stumble along boulevards of ideas, the two of us directed only by your wanton greed.  So much passes unnoticed.  Not by me, of course, for the silken pleasures and the heartfelt aches are mine.  Yet they matter not in the world you create for us, the world over which you rule.

Your rapt gaze falls elsewhere, toward the irrelevancies of others.  Their smallest dawns are your brightest sunrises, their every whisper a profound ringing in your ears.  And I walk alone in the shadow you cast, a puppy begging scraps dropped to keep me there.

How am I?  The question rings hollow now, finally, at last.  Its rhetoric stands as clear as glass, though it was not always so.  But then that remains true of much between us.  I needed time to see, to open my eyes wide so they might consume what is as opposed to what might be.  Emotional worth is a most potent intellectual blinder.

The sun setting behind a small strip of clouds (20081011_13814_ab)

This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
— T. S. Eliot

They long to take flight

Summer’s back lay broken, snapped asunder by the abrupt coolness of autumnal change.  The dreaded heat crumbled.  I stood before dawn this morning and realized I could see my breath wisp through morning’s shadow.

Close-up of a female common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dead leaf (2009_10_03_030415)

An early walk along the drip line of riparian woods revealed dragons too cold to fly, giant predators yearning for the day’s heat to warm them.  Common green darners (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging on every thicket, every bramble, every dead and dying leaf.  How quickly things change.

A male common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dying leaf (2009_10_03_030302)

‘Twas merely a few days ago when morning lows equaled today’s high, when these stunning creatures filled the still dark air before sunrise.  But no more.

Close-up of a male common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dying leaf (2009_10_03_030311)

They watch carefully, sluggishly, and fall easily when trying to escape the prying eyes of morning onlookers.

Close-up of a male common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dead leaf (2009_10_03_030434)

Though now is there season, they must kneel at the sun’s altar before their day begins.  Recharging as it were, drawing energy until their bodies can sustain activity.

Close-up of a female common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dead leaf (2009_10_03_030440)

They watch me, these dragons, and they long to take flight as I approach.

A male common green darner (a.k.a. green darner or dragon fly; Anax junius) hanging from a dead leaf (2009_10_03_030305)

I feel the warmth of the sun against my bare neck.  It feels good contrasted with the coolness of the morning.  As I turn and walk away, I know dragons will soon take to the sky.

The sting

For someone with a deadly allergy to wasp stings, I spend far too much time mingling with the local population of eastern cicada killer wasps (Sphecius speciosus).  Truth be told, there’s no other insect on the planet that fascinates me so much, perhaps because of my allergy or perhaps in spite of it.

A male eastern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) perched on my hand (20080622_07469_c)

Honestly I feel like a pyromaniac with burn scars who can’t help but light that next fire.

A male eastern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) perched on my fingertips (20080622_07455_c)

Anyway…

A huge colony of them lives around my home.  A cloud of them buzzes around my front door in summertime.  But they’re docile giants.

Close quarters and agreeable personalities mean I get plenty of opportunities to photograph them.  We hang out, you know, and they’re amiable to photo sessions.  Yet two scenes have eluded me these many years: (1) a female returning to her nest with a cicada in tow and (2) a female capturing a cicada.

A male eastern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) perched on a leaf (2009_07_05_026003)

You’d think the first of those would be easy.  I could just stand outside my front door until an opportunity presents itself.  Still, I got nothing.

As for the second, that’s a difficult proposition indeed.  How do you know where a female is hunting?  How do you know which cicada she’s going after?  Do you just stand and watch a cicada with the hope of scoring?

It boils down to being in the right place at the right time.

Imagine my pleasant yet frustrated surprise while I was standing in the dense riparian woods along Dixon Branch.  Above me—directly above me—I heard a sudden commotion and a quick cicada buzz.  High in the canopy overhead a female cicada killer wasp was busy subduing a meal for her children.

Female astern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) sting a silver-bellied cicada (Tibicen pruinosus) (2009_09_06_028888)

Even using a 400mm lens didn’t get me close to the action.  They were too high in the tree.  What made matters worse was having one window through the foliage.  Each time I stepped in any direction, they vanished behind leaves and branches.

Female eastern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) stinging a silver-bellied cicada (Tibicen pruinosus) (2009_09_06_028886)

The silver-bellied cicada (Tibicen pruinosus) struggled a bit after the first sting, but the second sting stopped that right away.  Then she tried maneuvering her catch into a different position and almost lost it.

A female eastern cicada killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) holding a paralyzed silver-bellied cicada (Tibicen pruinosus) (2009_09_06_028885)

She quickly turned it around and slipped headlong into a dive toward the ground.  I lost her after that as she buzzed through the trees and vanished.

[it’s interesting to note the size of the male in the first two photos compared to the size of the female with the cicada; her prey is a typically large cicada and she’s about the same size: more than two inches/50 mm in length; for the average person with an average hand, the females are about the size of your thumb]

On the march

It begins with one, then two, then ten, then a hundred, and before you know it you come to appreciate that many thousands of caterpillars fill an area of grass half the size of a football field.  They’re everywhere!

Fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) on a dead leaf (2009_10_03_030370)

So off to the Texas crop reports and the news and the local nature blogs.  Yup, just what I thought.  Fall armyworms, the larvae of the fall armyworm moth (Spodoptera frugiperda), have invaded Texas.  OK, your mileage may vary since the state has four common armyworm species, but it seems a safe bet that the fall armyworm is the culprit given the time of year and the amount of damage.

Fall armyworms (Spodoptera frugiperda) on the ground (2009_10_03_030377)

And “invaded Texas” is perhaps deceptive.  We have at least one regional outbreak of armyworms every year.  This year they seemed to prefer most of the state, munching a wide swath of territory with only the far south and the far north left without occupying armyworm forces.

Fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) on a leaf (2009_10_03_030462)

The entertainment comes from the horror of DFW residents who don’t know how to respond to hordes of insects marching through their lawns and eating all the grass in sight.  Even news reports have shown once lush yards where St. Augustine now looks more massacred than manicured.  Oh the horror!  No, really, that’s what it sounds like.  Who knew scalped grass could be so traumatic?  Personally, I rather like the brown earthy tones that come out after the armyworms move on.

Fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) on the sidewalk (2009_10_03_030618)

Armyworms get their name from the same behavior that gives army ants their name: foraging in huge numbers and moving en masse.  Battalions of armyworms show up in your pretty yard, eat the grass down to dirt level, then they pack up and move in one large group—heading to your neighbor’s yard.

Sense of awe

She once had a name, one given her out of respect for her power then taken away when she was deemed unworthy.  That name meant messenger and earthly, but it also meant complete and universal.  Before she moved on, she would teach us that penury did not yet define her penchant for destruction.

Thunderstorm over Dallas (2008_12_27_003558)

They called her Hermine.  She imbibed from the chalice of seas and spat it upon the plains of the world.  In great torrents she drenched the earth and threatened to wash away the realm of the drylander.  She took life in great gulps, washed away sustenance and shelter, and in the end she sped away with nary a thought for that caught in her wake.

Thunderstorm over Dallas (2008_12_27_003552)

Yet even as the sun broke through her once impenetrable shield and touched the new ocean land, she proffered one last gift to remind us that taking her name did not take her power.  With great suddenness the skies darkened and the winds blew.  Then, just as the seers had warned, great writhing fingers of heaven began to fall in twisting and turning dances, each seeking to devour, to destroy.

Thunderstorm over Dallas (2008_12_27_003602)

And as suddenly as they had appeared, her tornadic minions vanished, each taking its fill and returning to the ether from which it came, each leaving behind a remembrance of the beast we once called Hermine.