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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Nectaring

There is such activity and “buzziness” in the midday sun. Countless bees are nectaring from the hollow-stemmed Joe Pye weed. Wasps and flower flies are attracted to the nectar of bronze fennel flowers and the swallowtail butterflies have discovered the butterfly weed. On the pale pink blossom of Joe Pye weed there are too many kinds of bee for me to identify. I can differentiate the bumblebees, the honeybees, carpenter bees and metallic green sweat bees, but there are many more visitors of all shapes and sizes. I am a little disturbed not to have seen any monarch butterflies visiting the garden this summer. But the leaves of the common milkweed plant have been nibbled upon. The butterfly weed has only just bloomed and the sight of the spicebush swallowtails and an eastern tiger swallowtail heartens me. The cheerful sound of goldfinches delights me. They sit on the coneflowers and tug at the seed singing all along. I creep to get a good close up photo, but the birds always dash away leaving flower stems bouncing.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Sue!

    Loved your latest entry and photos!

    I have been very worried about the bees. Have hardly seen any honey bees this summer - mostly bumblers and carpenters. I had thought things were improving last summer, but didn't seem to carry over to this summer. This morning I saw a lot of bees on my pink false dragon head flowers. At first, it was just the ones I mentioned, but when I came back a few minutes later, I saw a few honey bees. Their numbers definitely seem vastly diminished. It's so very sad.

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