The Sky Was Falling

Foggy mornings are quiet like a new fallen snow to me. The dew dripped off everything making it a special morning.

Spiders webs catch the dew.
Sun was trying its best to shine.

The Little Bluestem’s dew reminded me of an ice storm’s ice on the grass.

Two webs; on the left an Orbweaver and on the right on the old Partridge Pea a Meshweaver!

An Orbweaver caught a juicy Variegated Meadowhawk!

A jeweled One-seeded Croton!
As I looked in the distance through our woods at the neighbor’s pasture it was covered with fog. Where we normally see the green vegetation we instead saw the fog. Then I turned to Jim and said, I think the sky has fallen. 😉

Study Reveals Bird-Migration Mystery

Rare Jaw Fossils Discovered in Texas Shed Light on a 20-Foot-Long Mosasaur

Heat Waves Can Make Bumblebees Lose Their Sense of Smell, Study Finds. Here’s Why That’s a Problem

Keep looking!

The more you know, the more you see and the more you see, the more you know

5 Comments

  1. Cute! We had a heavy fog yesterday morning here and in minutes it went from visibility of about 50 yards to completely clear. Didn’t get to enjoy the dew drops so loved seeing your spider webs.
    My notices of your blog were not coming in since Friday but tonight it finally started again. None in our spam filter, just didn’t arrive.

  2. I enjoyed your photos and article links as always, especially the one on bird migration. Since I left Seattle, Anna’s hummers have moved up the coast from California and many are now overwintering in the Seattle area, where people leave feeders out for them all year.

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