August Common Buckeye
This Common Buckeye (Junonia coenia) posed nicely for me yesterday. It looked a little tattered around the edges, and had lost some of the uniformity of its shades, but still held most of the vibrant colors of its species here in mid-August. They are such beautiful creatures, oh my… Scott Kruitbosch Conservation & Outreach Coordinator
Read MoreGnarly Sunset
I went outside to try to photograph some mammatus clouds a few days ago, with the evening sky revealing those dense pockets of descending cool air after a volatile day after severe thunderstorms and heavy rain showers. It did not go very well! The mammatus clouds to my east were a bit too spread out in distribution and too diffuse, not catching the light correctly for some reason. However, the light was funky to say the very least, with everything on the ground having these odd tones as the sun went below the horizon. This soon lit the cloudy skies to the west with fiery, gnarly tones which...
Read MoreCabbage White
Here we have the Cabbage White or Small White (Pieris rapae) butterfly feeding on a clover. While they are an introduced species and abundant, sometimes a pest to the crops they are named after, they still do have a beauty on a late spring day among the green and rapidly diversifying colors.
Read MoreSpiffy Surf Scoters
These Surf Scoters (Melanitta perspicillata) sure are looking spiffy! Their spring colors of sorts stand out on the gray and still cold water. Waterfowl migration is well underway now as species like the “skunk-headed coot” seen here are on the way out until next fall.
Read MoreDrake Mallard
Sometimes you have to stop and appreciate the “classics” – or more specifically, a bird like the very common Mallard duck. The drake has a stunning appearance, with its gorgeous plumage often being overlooked because people (like me) see so very many of them. Here’s to them! Scott Kruitbosch Conservation & Outreach Coordinator
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