Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Middle of summer


Midsummer harvest season is here, with sun’s strong rays taking on a subtle golden tint. Cicadas emerge from the ground and climb into the trees. Their song removes the harsher edges from reality, and gives us momentary peace. Newly hatched skinks brighten the landscape with their neon blue tails. Temporarily stalled in an attempt to swallow a ground spider whole, one little skink stayed in the same place long enough for me to take a blurry shot before it whisked its prey away and finished the meal elsewhere. Documented also is a juvenile joro spider, Nephila clavata, whose web graced the garden for too short a time. The joro spiders have become rare in this area, perhaps because of climate change, and this little female was not able to catch enough food to sustain her energy. However, nectar-filled flowers abound, and butterflies are caught mingling with light and twilight in mysterious ways. Shade plants often keep their secrets to themselves, except when they produce edible delicacies such as Zingiber mioga flower buds with their invigorating gingery flavor, giving us an appetite despite the sultry heat.
cabbage butterfly

Papilio protenor (Spangle) doing abstract art

underside of Pale Grass Blue wings (Pseudozizeeria maha)

Young skink trying to swallow a burrowing spider

Zinziber mioga, Japanese ginger buds

Papilio xuthus (regular swallowtail) at rest for the night

Juvenile Nephila clavata, evanescent

glimpse of the topside of a Pale Grass Blue