Celestials!

Celestials!

More photos from the grasslands… Eastern Red Cedar with fungus where a limb had been cut off.   Closer view. Gnarly oak! Can you find the dragonfly? Closer…sometimes even when you know where it is, they can be hard to spot.  It is a female Common Whitetail. Greenbriar is starting to flower. This is a…

Rust!

Rust!

 Oh boy I finally got the Cedar Apple Rust (Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae). It has been on my list to see and photograph and today was its day at the grasslands.  “On juniper, galls appear about seven months after infection, and they form gelatinous masses of spores after 18 months. Golf ball-like depressions form on the gall…

Dangelmayr Prairie

Dangelmayr Prairie

 Oh my gosh, the Dangelmayr Prairie is so beautiful! Thank you so much to Denise and her daughters for showing us your special prairie! The Shooting Stars were amazing! The land has been in the family since 1893! These were really dark! And then there were a couple of white Shooting Stars. You don’t see…

Barnett Ranch

Barnett Ranch

 Today I went on a NPAT (Native Prairies Association of Texas) field trip to the historic Barnett Ranch. The Barnett family has operated the cattle ranch since around 1887. The Barnett Ranch is recognized as a Family Land Heritage Ranch.  Before we headed out to see the ranch, we saw his barn. Skip told us…

Festive!

Festive!

White Compass Plant  or White Rosinweed (Silphium albiflorum) was nibbled to a stub. The cows or maybe the deer must like it. We found multiple of the plants eaten. I don’t know what caterpillar this is on the Chittamwood, but it will completely defoliate the new leaves. Don’t worry, the tree will quickly get new…

Snail

Snail

I saw my FOS Yellow Flax (Linum rigidum) blooming today!   Yellow Flax (Linum rigidum) is so lovely, but don’t look at it wrong or the petals will fall off LOL. The following photos are from the grasslands on April 6th. Isn’t the White Honeysuckle beautiful?  Four nerved Daisy (Tetraneuris scaposa) and a bee. The daisies…

Spittlebugs!

Spittlebugs!

I saw my FOS towhee on the grasslands yesterday! I could not see which towhee species.  Tiny and FOS spiderwort! This looks to be where the hogs bellies rub as they step over the log. At least that is what we thought. Jeanne should know. She has too many at her house. I can see…

Hexapods and one spider!

Hexapods and one spider!

Hexapoda proper noun – six-legged arthropods; a taxonomic group (subphylum or superclass) comprising the insects as well as three smaller groups of wingless arthropods: Collembola (Springtails), Protura, and Diplura (Two-pronged Bristletails). Hexapod noun – a member of the Hexapoda. (Source: BugGuide.net)  Common Oblique Syrphid (Allograpta obliqua) on a thistle. This is a type of a hoverfly….

Dance!

Dance!

Redroot or Jersey Tea (Ceanothus herbaceus) is almost ready to bloom in our back field. A favorite of the butterflies. I found this beetle upside down. I turned him right side up but… It was determined to flip back. So I left it. Seven-spotted Lady Beetle (Coccinella septempunctata). Six spots on the sides and one…