Saturday, August 1, 2015

Heat Wave

Male skink communing with a dreaded biting fly
We are inundated with heat, the kind that makes each breath an acrid undertaking. Whatever happened to the days of yore when the hot days of summer came with the blessing of a refreshing, dew-drenched dawn? However, the garden is full of life. Humidity is high enough to supply spiders with prey. Lovely, diaphonous webs ornament the garden trees and empty spaces.
The skinks managed to reproduce in style: the garden is filled with neon blue flashes from the tails of the newly hatched. The only adults I see from day to day are male, but a female must be around somewhere. The newly hatched are the second batch. I missed the first batch entirely, though I was on the look-out for them. Evidence of a spring hatching is seen in the traces of iridescence in a young adult male's tail.
The persimmon tree is dropping most of its young fruit in the heat. But the ginko nut tree still holds its promise of a decent harvest come fall.
Swallowtails in three colors visit the garden: black and white striped, yellow and white striped, and black. The newest denizens are a pair of gliders who like to cool their wings on the magnolia trees.
While cicadas drop songless from the trees in the afternoon heat, and sparsely scattered earthworms struggle to make a comeback, we see other steadfast beings ready to fill the niche.

ginko nuts getting ready

welcome flash of blue

full exposure

glider surveying its kingdom

Nephila maculata's horizontal orb

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Kaleidoscope of Spring 2015

Nice front leg relaxation technique in a male skink.

This year's spring has been stretching and compressing like a mad coil. Early typhoons and sudden storms presaged by opaque blue skies; despite the rain we have a drought: strong rain runs off to the sewers and the rivers and leaves the earth below the topsoil as dry as an old cake. Spiders who depend on moisture to nurture flying insects are on the wane.
There are no earthworms in the garden this year. They appeared very late last year, so I will keep watching for them.
Male skinks squabble over territory. The garden is full of their reptile antics, yet I haven't seen a single female this year. I will keep watching.
Trees which have never deigned to flower before are laden with blooms: miniature mandarin orange and some kind of boxwood. Wild poppies flourish: they like the dry soil.
Sunlight has its variable moods and I love the way iris petals seem to be lit from within at the end of the day. I stand under Venus and Jupiter as they appear in evening sky, and hope I am lit from within, too.

Japanese frilled iris in the morning sun with dewdrops.

A swarm of tadpoles in the fountain at the park

Visit the Japanese garden at the park and take a picture of the sky

Strange armored insect at the temple

Iris in the evening

These too

Can't forget the onion flowers