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Anna's Hummingbird Stretching Her Wings in the Fuchsia Dell |
The rear brake cable on my bike snapped yesterday and I can't get it into the shop until late Monday, so I took my time on today's walk, staying out for almost five hours. I hadn't expected to be out that long, but the time passed quickly, in part because of all the interesting insects I encountered (only some of which I was able to photograph). Also, I'm trying to fully appreciate every moment before having to set aside my San Francisco nature walks for the next several months.
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A lesser goldfinch was eating the seeds of miner's lettuce. |
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Some of the tiny black seeds were sticking to his beak. |
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I was interested to see a hummingbird nectaring on white ramping fumitory, a very common San Francisco weed. |
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It was also partaking of some nearby sage blossoms. |
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I'm pretty sure this is the same hummingbird taking a break. |
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Here she is a split-second before launching off the branch. |
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This is Acanthus mollis, or bear's breeches, one of the very first plants I learned the scientific name for when I moved to Santa Barbara back in the early '80s. |
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Great Blue Heron Above Lily Lake |
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Anise Swallowtail at Lily Lake |
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The chestnut-backed chickadee on the right is a fledgeling, begging for food from its parent in the San Francisco Botanical Garden. |
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I've been seeing cabbage white butterflies for a couple of weeks or so, but this was the first one that actually landed on something so I could photograph it. |
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Red Admiral on Wood Chips |
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Water Lilies |
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A small bee feeds on a purple aster |
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A few Ichneumonid wasps were flying close to the ground in a patch of hummingbird sage. |
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The one in the background stayed in that little leaf cave for quite a while. I left to go check out the pipevine swallowtail caterpillars, and it was still there a few minutes later when I came back the same way. |
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I was wondering where they eventually pupate, but I couldn't find any sign of a chrysalis nearby. |
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One of the two milkweed species in the California Garden (the other being narrowleaf milkweed). I've looked for monarch caterpillars in this patch for years without ever seeing one. |
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Pipevine Swallowtail Butterfly on Pozo Blue Sage |
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The first time I found a single scarlet pimpernel that was blue, I thought I'd made a big discovery, only to learn they are not that rare (although I have rarely seen one since). Today I found a whole bunch of blue ones. |
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The original pipevine patch west of the California Garden is now teeming with caterpillars. |
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West Coast Lady Butterfly on Blackberry Flowers |
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Bumblebee in Wild Rose |
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A scrub jay sips nectar from the Monkey's Hand Tree. |
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Robins were also getting in on the bounty. |
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Robin Happy Hour |
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Prickly Pear (Opuntia ficus-indica) |
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Who am I? |
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Aha. California tortoiseshell butterfly. |
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Hairy Woodpecker in a Willow Thicket |
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I was looking for any red-legged frog tadpoles with legs, but nothing yet. |
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Alder and Willow Leaves |
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A male fledgeling hairy woodpecker is fed a morsel by his mom. |
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A hummingbird seemed to be making alarm calls, so I tried to find the hummer and whatever was disturbing it. Given the backlight and dense pine needles I couldn't see the hummer, and I was about to give up when I noticed the hairy woodpecker clinging motionless to this tall dead stump. |
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It was so still that I almost thought it was an ornament. I thought it would fly away as soon as I raised my camera, but he couldn't have cared less. He even let me shoot some video. |
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There were a few squirrels chasing each other around the monkey's hand tree, but this one was busy eating fruit from a different tree nearby. |
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Pipevine Swallowtail Warming in the Sun in the Redwood Grove |
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One of the redwoods recently lost its top, whacking the nurse log, a metal interpretive sign, and much of the garden patch below it. |
Pipevine Swallowtail Caterpillars and Hairy Woodpecker
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