Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Dragonfly - Flame Skimmer

 I see several different types of butterflies in the garden, but because of their pattern of flight, I rarely get a picture of one.  I rarely see dragonflies, but today I saw this Flame Skimmer dragonfly sitting on the edge of a pine branch!  It sat still long enough for me to get a few pictures.  

Flame Skimmer Dragonfly

Flame Skimmer Dragonfly

I've seen this type of dragonfly before at a friends house who happens to live about a mile and a half due east.  They have a swimming pool and creek on their property and Flame skimmer dragonflies are there each summer.  They like hanging out near water and I'm not sure what attracted this one to hang out here.  Since they eat an assortment of soft-bodied insects, including mosquitoes, mayflies, termites and flies, they are always welcome!

Flame Skimmer Dragonfly



Monday, July 29, 2024

Aristolochia fimbriata AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe

 

Aristolochia fimbriata  AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe

Mike is growing this Aristolochia fimbriata, AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe in his greenhouse and I think it has a really cool bloom.

Aristolochia fimbriata  AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe

Aristolochia fimbriata  AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe

I did some searching and found the following from Cambridge University Botanic Garden.

The solitary flowers arise from the leaf axils and each lasts only 24 hours.  The inflated perianth tube is chalky white with pale green veining and it bends right back so that the enlarged lobe, instead of being a hood as in most other species, is in fact a downward pointing, embossed heart-shape in a maroon and green seersucker, edged all around with fine skinny tentacles each dipped in blue ink.

Aristolochias exhibit fascinating pollination mechanisms: the stench attracts insects into the inflated perianth tube which is lined with downward pointing hairs that form an impenetrable forest. The insect is prevented from escaping until the whole flower has collapsed. The insect then emerges covered in pollen to get duped once again and trapped in another flower and effect pollination.

Many Aristolochia species are a food source for pipevine swallowtail butterflies – ingesting the noxious plant tissue confers the disgusting taste to the butterfly, thereby making them less palatable to predators.

I'm going to keep my eye out for pipevine swallowtail butterflies!

Look closely and you can see the downward pointing hairs.

Aristolochia fimbriata  AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe

My thumb for scale.


A future bloom

Possible seed pod

Aristolochia fimbriata  AKA white-veined Dutchman’s pipe


Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Drimia Maritima Bloom!

 This was a big surprise!  This Drimia Maritima floral spike is four feet tall.  The tuber is about seven inches in diameter and there is a second smaller tuber in the same pot.  I'll keep an eye out for a second bloom.

Drimia maritima

Drimia maritima


Sunday, July 14, 2024

The Peruvian Matucana Madisoniorum Blooms!

I like watching the matucana madisoniorum bloom.  The cactus has a rough texture with unusual spines, and the blooms look like a cluster of fanfare trumpets!

Matucana madisoniorum

Matucana madisoniorum


Friday, July 5, 2024

Cactus Blooms

 I do have some cactus other than the Flying Saucer Cactus that have been blooming.