Summer’s Cast of Characters

This past weekend ushered in the first cool weather of the approaching Fall season. The temperatures brought 75 degree days and 55 degree nights, which means that Autumn is definitely on its way. How exciting! Ms. Jeannie just loves this time of year between September and Christmas.

In an effort, not to rush the season, nor lose sight of any end of summer magic, Ms. Jeannie has been compiling a little nature journal for you, of all the creatures she’s encountered in these past few weeks. They have all made her summer so memorable!

The goldfinches have been hard at work collecting seeds from the coneflowers in the garden…

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It’s precarious business – getting all the seeds while still keeping your balance!

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Boy-O is still looking for just the right nanny job.  This is still his favorite way to spend the day…

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Tomorrow morning he goes in for a little “procedure” so he doesn’t populate the world with his own little nursery full of kittens.  As cute as those little legacies would have been, Ms. Jeannie explained to him that all of tomorrow’s events were really for the best.  He seemed pretty thoughtful about the whole thing during the conversation…

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And then went right back to napping. “Piece of cake, Ms. Jeannie,” he meowed as he closed his eyes.

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The little fig that Boy-O was looking after, unfortunately has not faired so well. It got caught up in a dramatic bird rescue (see hummer story below), which cost it it’s two little leaves. So we are back again, watering and waiting!

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A hummingbird got caught in a spider web inside Ms. Jeannie’s screened in porch last week. Luckily, with the help of a step ladder and an umbrella he was freed before he really started to panic.  This incident really caught Ms. Jeannie off-guard – imagine how fragile a creature these hummers really are, and how strong spider webs are. This was just a regular web – nothing gigantic about it.  And webs are everywhere in nature. Could they really be such a peril to light little birds?

After some research, Ms. Jeannie learned that hummingbirds actually use cobwebs as a binder when making their nests, so eventually this little bird would most likely have worked himself free. But Ms. Jeannie was thankful anyway for Mr. Jeannie’s quick abilities in rescuing this little flyer…

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Billy Bob and Betty Boop have moved onto greener pastures. Apparently, Ms. Jeannie’s neighborhood didn’t really take too well to all of Billy Bob’s antics. He was constantly getting his head stuck in the fence, head butting just about everything, and  climbing all over the feed bucket at dinner time.  Ms. Jeannie thought these were supposed to be the fun things about having goats – their comical personalities and theatrical displays – but Ms. Jeannie’s neighbor was looking for less dramatics.

The day before they left for their new home, Ms. Jeannie filled them full of Saltine crackers – their most favorite snack.

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Billy Bob most appreciated it!

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Due to all of our rain this summer, giant mushrooms are growing out of the trees down by the creek, which really has turned it into a magical forest. Ms. Jeannie is half expecting to see little gnomes or fairies pop out from behind those umbrellas!

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They really are quite pretty when you look at them up close!

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Right on schedule and just in time for fall, a new zig-zag spider, also  has built a web in a bush along the driveway.

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She’s about as big as an egg from leg to leg. Hopefully those hummers will stay clear of her area!

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The resident red-tailed hawks have been on the hunt a lot lately.

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One of them landed in the yard just as Ms. Jeannie was pulling in the driveway. Oh how she wished she had her camera with her on that day!  The hawk was about 2′ tall and just stood in the yard for a few minutes watching Ms. Jeannie watch him. It was a marvelous moment.

A blue tailed lizard, also known as a skink, emerges every evening now from its home underneath the porch steps and hangs out on the brick window ledge for a few hours.

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If you’ve never seen of these guys before – they are really colorful. Their tails are a bright, bright blue and their bodies are black with yellow stripes. Interesting enough – if under attack from a predator, they can voluntarily pop-off their own tails, which will still wiggle about and deter whatever it was that was chasing them so that they can get away and hide. Eventually their tales will grow back – although their new tails will no longer be blue but instead match the color of their body.  The ones with blue tails are the babies of the bunch.

These little guys have been jumping around the garden for weeks now. They are also the dinnertime band when Mr. & Mrs. Jeannie eat outside on the patio. In this picture, they are rehearsing in Ms. Jeannie’s wax bean garden.  It’s good to know Ms. Jeannie’s twig supports are coming in handy for other activities too!

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The scuppernong grapes are just starting to ripen on the vines. A few more days of warm sunshine and Ms. Jeannie will be inundated!

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Which is exciting, because it turned out to be a dud year for the figs.  With all the rain and humidity, 90% of the figs just molded in all the moisture.  Most of them wound up looking like this…

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Which of course was a little disappointing because Mr. Jeannie really hoped to perfect his fig barbeque sauce this year. But Ms. Jeannie’s holding out hope – there is a second batch of figs which, now that our sunshine to rainfall ratio has balanced out, might just turn out a good batch of figs yet. Here’s the ones that are still growing…

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Of course, the construction site hasn’t been affected by the weather whatsoever. Those bald-faced hornets keep going and going and going.  Now their nest has taken on the look of a pig snout when viewed from below and a horn of plenty (no pun intended!) when viewed from the side. Maybe they are getting into the Thanksgiving mood:)

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As you can tell in this picture below – they have completely sandwiched themselves against the gutter now. It will be interesting to see in which direction they go next!

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And last, but not least, a little concrete flower greeted Ms. Jeannie this morning when she went she out to water. This was a marvelous surprise, especially because Ms. Jeannie did not plant any impatiens this year – only last year.  And yet, here this little beauty is – growing out of a crack in the concrete right under the garden hose. Imagine such a feat!  This little seed must have overwintered and waited all summer to grow, grow, grow.  She is like a little last gift of summer before the Autumn settles in.

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Ms. Jeannie can hardly wait to see what the next season has in store in the nature department!

The Invaders

While we are all waiting, waiting, waiting for the royal baby to be born, Ms. Jeannie has been anticipating her own little bundle of joy…

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The first ripe tomato of the season! Ms. Jeannie marked this occasion on Friday when she plucked the little darling in anticipation of including it in Friday night’s dinner.

Only she had one slight problem. It looked so pretty on the vine, but when she pulled it, the other side looked like somebody kicked it in the gut. Ms. Jeannie forgot to take a picture before she cut it open to see what was going on inside, but imagine a blister-like opening puncture type wound about the size of a dime.  Not exactly the look she was hoping for!

At first Ms. Jeannie thought it might have been caused by rubbing due to the high wind and rainstorms this past weekend. But then on the underside of the green tomato above it she saw one of these…

The dreaded stink bug. Photo courtesy of nopests.com
A stink bug! Photo courtesy of nopests.com

Stink bugs are nutrient suckers and affect a wide variety of agricultural plants. Native to Japan and Korea, they were first introduced into the US via Pennsylvania in the late 1990’s. They are considered a pest because they are immune to a lot of insecticides and pesticides.

Being a natural/organic gardener, there is not much Ms. Jeannie can do about them, except pick off the ones she sees and hope that there aren’t a mass of them. Birds are one predator to the stink bug though, which she has plenty of in her garden, so she hopes they’ll find these little guys delectable.

Pill bugs are also taking up residence at the base of Ms. Jeannie’s Gerber daisies which is also the same pot shared by her herb garden.  At first glance – everything is growing right along – the dill is getting tall, the basil is filling out, the chives are fattening up and the daisies add a sunny bit of color.

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But on closer look in the daisy leaves, there’s a whole city full of these guys…

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Pillbugs! They feed on dead and decaying plant matter, so they aren’t really a big threat. But Ms. Jeannie really wished they fed on slugs who also love the Gerber daisies, and unfortunately, are starting to discover her basil leaves.  After careful checking today, she thinks she’s removed all the slugs but more rain is scheduled for this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow so we’ll see if more are coming.

If you’ve been keeping up with Ms. Jeannie on twitter, you’ll recognize this other bug sighting that she discovered last week in the flooding of the creek. At the base of some rotting log stumps she saw these extraordinary things…

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Ms. Jeannie thought at first glance that they were old porcelain doorknobs buried in the dirt, which would not be all that uncommon a find here in Ms. Jeannie’s area (more on dirt discoveries another day!). But in actuality, they are giant Eastern Hercules beetle larvae.  And giant they definitely are! Each one of these guys here was about the size of a large shrimp. Eventually they will look like this…

Female Hercules beetle
Female Hercules beetle
Male Hecules beetle. Photo courtesy of fcps.edu
Male Hecules beetle. Photo courtesy of fcps.edu

These are the largest beetles found in the US and are just a slightly smaller version of the Hercules beetle native to central and South America, which can grow to be 6 inches long. These beetles prefer rain-forest type conditions – and since it has been so rainy here – Ms. Jeannie can understand why they like her yard!

They feed off the forest floor eating, rotten wood and the like, so they are good groundskeepers, if not intimidating:) They are also considered the strongest animal in the world – with the ability to lift 850 times their own body weight. Amazing!

And last but not least, down in Hercules land, the creek is also now aflight and flutter with hundreds of damselflies.

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Damselflies are similar to dragonflies, which are one of the oldest insects known to man. Both damselflies and dragonflies prefer wet environments where they can lay eggs in water.  Love is definitely in there air at Ms. Jeannie’s. Did you know that when two damselflies mate their bodies form the shape of a heart? See for yourself…

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Ms. Jeannie just loves that about nature. Just when you think you can’t stand one more monotonous day of dark, gloomy, wet weather – just when you think you’ve seen all the same rain drops day after day – Mother Nature surprises you with a few new interesting sights.  It keeps you captivated instead of going crazy, which Ms. Jeannie fully appreciates. And now, as the rain clouds roll in, yet again, Ms. Jeannie wonders what Mother Nature just might have up her sleeve next.  Stay tuned here on the blog and also on twitter for more discoveries…