Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

10.25.2013

Monarch Butterflies


Me being a gardener, I had to develop some type of friendship with insects. 
I like to take care of plants for their beautiful flowers. And at the plants is where a lot of insects live. 
Even wasps! There is no way I will leave my garden just because 
Mr. Wasp decides to make his home at one of my plants! 
And no, I never got stung by a wasp... yet


But this post is not about those types of insects, This post is about the beautiful Monarch butterfly. 
Monarch butterflies are insects, but not just any ordinary insects. 
First of all,  Monarch butterflies are the only insects that migrate. 
These beautiful and delicate butterflies fly 3000 miles south for migration. 
If they were born on the west side of the Rocky Mountains, they go to California.  
If they are born in the East side of the Rocky mountains. they go to Mexico.


Pretty cool, right? And it gets even better. 
Monarch Butterflies go through 4 life stages, and 4 generations.  
I know it sounds confusing, so let me explain:

FOUR STAGES

1.- Egg  2.-Caterpillar 3.-Cocoon 4.-Butterfly


After spending the winter in the warm at California or Mexico. 
They return to the north around February and March.
 Then on March and April they lay eggs on a milkweed plant. 
Monarchs depend on  this plant. Their larvae eats Milkweed almost exclusively!


FOUR GENERATIONS

First generation butterflies eggs are hatched, they become baby caterpillars
 and do nothing but eat, and eat! 
Then they'll find a place to hang on to, and become a chrysalis or as I like to call it, a cocoon. 
10 days later, after going trough the process called metamorphosis, butterflies emerge. 
They only live for 2-6 weeks and then they die, after laying eggs for the second generation.


Second generation butterflies are born some time in May or June. 
This generation will do the same as the first generation and will die after laying eggs for the third generation.


Third generation butterflies are born sometime on July or August. 
They will become beautiful butterflies, lay eggs, and die.


Third generation butterflies are born sometime on July or August. 
They will become beautiful butterflies, lay eggs, and die.


And then finally comes the part that fascinates me the most about these amazing insects!

Fourth generation butterflies are born some time on September and October. 
But this generation will not die 2-6 weeks after its born! This generations lives 6-8 months. 
And the reason why the live that long is because they have to migrate back to Mexico or California.  
Then they will fly back in the exact same route their ancestors took! Who told them that? 
Also Sometimes, they travel  back to the very same tree that their ancestors 
came from in February and March!  



These pictures were taken at a parking lot across my apartment complex. 
A couple of weeks ago, there were butterflies all over Omaha!


One more thing, Monarchs that return from Mexico don't stop at the Immigration Office, because they were born in the US and that makes them, US citizens!

I have other posts if you like to see more of my pictures on butterflies
  here is a Mariposa, here are some pictures of interacial relationships on butterflies,
 here is the black-swallowtail butterfly and my first post on butterflies, zebra-swallowtail butterfly.

Also, I found a lots of info about this beauties here. check them out!
They have some really cool videos of about these butterflies!

1.30.2013

Chromodynamics

I'm so excited about the new additions to the kitchen of my Nebraska apartment!  

The additions are these towels, the little ones to clean and the larger ones to dry hands and dishes.


I took this picture by the window that faces the back of the apartments. The birch trees give me a great view.  Most  of Nebraska has a grey color, but I get this beautiful warm view from a couple of birch trees in the back of the apartments. I'm so grateful for it!

I also got some other tools. My kids stopped using bottle long ago! But I have been using tall glass jars when I make kefir and this bottle brush comes really handy at the time of cleaning them. 
I thought this blind cleaner was neat to have, instead of cleaning one by one, I will clean two at the time.


I'm currently reading a really neat book called The Photographic Garden
If you know me, you probably have seen my garden pictures, and maybe noticed that I like to take pictures in the morning or in the evening.
I seldom take pictures in the middle of the day.

Here is a picture of my garden sometime in the spring of 2012.


I'm not a photographer, but wish to be one, a good one.
I feel like I have a long way to go, to be comfortable of taking pictures with the blasting midday sun.

 But this guy is a photographer, and for what I have read, so far, he also takes pictures early with the morning light or late with the evening light. For me, that's comforting to know!

But we are talking about kitchen stuff.
And going back to it, I will quote some lines from The Photographic Garden  that got me inspired to put some color around this apartment:

"...The colors of morning and early evening are mainly in the red spectrum, and include values of red, orange, and yellow.
These warm colors act almost universally on the visual and we perceive them as comforting, stimulating, and energizing...
Shooting in the red spectrum holds psychological sway over us, and the garden image, bathe in the warm light of daybreak, will always beckon and stimulate.  It will pull us in.
Your image need t be an invitation, an evocation of paradise..."

This is what I want to feel when I see my kitchen. And colors do the job, they brighten the pile of dirty dishes and pull me in to get going with the cooking.

Here is one of the pictures of how Nebraska looks like in the winter.
A little yellow, but not enough. And all that grey makes me want to be under the covers all day long!
I have no problem with it, but kids get hungry.
I need do the chromodynamics.


But I will not blame  all my winter chaser-color behavior to this beautiful view.
  I go through this hunting for color situation every winter!
  Here is what I did some winters ago when I used to live in Virginia.