Are you getting hungry yet with that title? Today’s post is all about the lovely grass Purpletop grass, Greasegrass or some may call it Greasy-grass (Tridens flavus). Greasy-grass is what I learned to call it.
Keep looking!
The more you know, the more you see and the more you see, the more you know.
6 Comments
Did you take the egg photos with your camera on macro and trim the photo to get it so close up or did you use your microscope?
Gary was really intrigued by these. He kept asking questions then I would scroll to your answer. Like what are those. How big are they. Is that the side view or do they hang on the underside and you turned it. Like right on cue for me to show him your comments.
I LOVE Purpletop. I try to sell it at our sales but noone shows interest in it. They are best if you have a group or colony of them. I brought them from Celina but now also have it here down in the woods by the river.
In my yard it dries up before it gets pretty so I have to water it. Our sand really drains.
So yes when I have a chance i will go looking for the Purpletop sun Moth.
Those egg cases are amazing and beautiful! Yep jello cups.
Kathy, All the photos with the black background was done with my macro lens. The one close up of the cat with the white background was with the dissecting scope and all the other background with my phone. So glad I answered Gary’s questions 🙂 Purpletop is such a pretty grass. I do think the bunch of early leaves are nice if they are thick. You are right of course it would be a hard sell unless you have a stand of them. Then they are awesome!
Judy, Yes, you can see them without a loupe, BUT to really see you need the loupe. In fact, when I noticed them at first I thought they were going to be a caterpillar.
Did you take the egg photos with your camera on macro and trim the photo to get it so close up or did you use your microscope?
Gary was really intrigued by these. He kept asking questions then I would scroll to your answer. Like what are those. How big are they. Is that the side view or do they hang on the underside and you turned it. Like right on cue for me to show him your comments.
I LOVE Purpletop. I try to sell it at our sales but noone shows interest in it. They are best if you have a group or colony of them. I brought them from Celina but now also have it here down in the woods by the river.
In my yard it dries up before it gets pretty so I have to water it. Our sand really drains.
So yes when I have a chance i will go looking for the Purpletop sun Moth.
Those egg cases are amazing and beautiful! Yep jello cups.
Kathy, All the photos with the black background was done with my macro lens. The one close up of the cat with the white background was with the dissecting scope and all the other background with my phone. So glad I answered Gary’s questions 🙂 Purpletop is such a pretty grass. I do think the bunch of early leaves are nice if they are thick. You are right of course it would be a hard sell unless you have a stand of them. Then they are awesome!
Whoa those eggs are weird!!!!!!
I love the name sun moth!
Never seen anything like those eggs. Soooo cool. Can you see well without loupe?
Judy, Yes, you can see them without a loupe, BUT to really see you need the loupe. In fact, when I noticed them at first I thought they were going to be a caterpillar.