pauraque: bird flying (Default)
pauraque ([personal profile] pauraque) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-17 09:27 am

Dogwood Leaf Beetle

off-white beetle with dark markings resembling calligraphy

Getting into my car after a walk, I found this elegantly decorated beetle on my shirt. It has the very appropriate scientific name of Calligrapha philadelphica, also known as the Dogwood Leaf Beetle.

When it opened its wings to fly, I was surprised to see its inner wings were red. I guess that could be the wax seal on the parchment. :)

photo showing the red wings )
yourlibrarian: Impala Desert Drive (SPN-ImpalaDesertDrive-fueschgast)
yourlibrarian ([personal profile] yourlibrarian) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-16 01:21 pm

International Rose Test Garden



We were only in Portland for a day but we had enough time for a few hours in the International Rose Test Garden. In fact we didn't even spend that long because it was smaller than expected and some bushes hadn't even bloomed yet (despite what the website said as mid-May being an ideal viewing time). We took about half the time we were there trying to park. It was also the most overcast morning of the trip -- we had amazing weather the rest of the time.

Nonetheless what was in bloom was lovely. Read more... )
blackcatofmisery: Snoopy from Peanuts by Charles Schul (Snoopy heart)
Amanda ([personal profile] blackcatofmisery) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-15 11:57 am

Knock Out Honey Bees

My mom's garden has a vigorous knock out rosebush just beside it, and various bees adore it. Although I'm severely allergic to bites and stings, I will still follow honey and bumble bees; they're too busy to care about me.

Fun fact about me: I cannot smell typical roses. Knockouts are the only roses I can smell.

Photos beneath the cut. )
lizardjay: a friendly cartoon duck (duck)
lizardjay ([personal profile] lizardjay) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-14 08:28 pm

say hello to Indiana

At the end of last month I visited Indiana for a week, and in that time went on FOUR hikes. There are too many pictures to put here so I'm posting a link to my ~150 picture album: My sister and I are both very into taking pictures so the hikes were very slow :D but I think it really helps in remembering that there's something interesting to see in pretty much every square inch of the outdoors. There is always a bug, or a fungal disease on a leaf, or a shiny drop of water.

The Album

We visited, in order:
  • Ritchie Woods Nature Preserve
  • Summit Lake State Park
  • Shades State Park/Pine Hills Nature Preserve
  • Southwestway Park

The pictures feature:
  • many, many insects
  • a stately gentleman frog, who very kindly let me get within an inch of him
  • snails
  • two snakes
  • cool looking plants/fungi
  • general landscapes

For the most part the locations are broken up by a couple non-nature photos, except for Southwestway Park (which begins at the photo of the yellow spider in the web). Once you get to the art museum pictures there's no more nature, unless you count the clouds outside the plane window.
cmcmck: (Default)
cmcmck ([personal profile] cmcmck) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-14 10:00 am

Conwy

We spent a few days in Conwy in north Wales recently and had wonderful weather for it.

A view across  Afon Conwy (the River Conwy) with Conwy castle as a bonus.



See more: )
full_metal_ox: A National Geographic cover mock-up, with three marigolds in an analogous orange-yellow color harmony. (Nature)
full_metal_ox ([personal profile] full_metal_ox) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-13 09:23 pm

A future fossil, and a moment of strange beauty in embotherance.

Content advisory: the following images portray animal decomposition and a messy (though not scatological) plumbing mishap, respectively.

This is the very first photo I took in the process of exploring my new surroundings in Florida. I was recovering from a lengthy illness and a lengthy road trip, and coming to terms with a discombobulating succession of life upheavals; accordingly, I began with a local animal in no condition to evade me.

This roughly crow-sized bird (species and cause of death unknown) lay in an oddly heraldic position suggesting a necromancer’s coat of arms, on the disheveled curb strip of a business that was both recovering from Hurricane Ian and changing hands—likewise in a state of transition. The red spot at heart level is a dried wild fruit of some sort.

Taken on 4 June 2023 at 19:48 U.S. Eastern Daylight Savings Time:

Fined_be_ye_who_move_my_bones. )

Some while later, I suffered a clog of mysterious blue-gray residue in my bathroom sink (don’t worry; it’s long since been dealt with, although not conclusively explained)—and was fascinated by the delicate poinsettia-like radial pattern created when the water finally receded.

Taken on 20 July 2023 at 14:16 U.S. Eastern Daylight Savings Time:

Mystery_plumbing_sludge. )
pilottttt: (Default)
pilottttt ([personal profile] pilottttt) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-13 01:19 pm
Entry tags:

And now about the spiders

This big and scarysmall and not scary at all spider was discovered on our ceiling. It was my macro lens that made it big and scary ;)

See the big and scary spider )

pilottttt: (Default)
pilottttt ([personal profile] pilottttt) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-12 12:36 pm

Chicks of the laughing dove

It was their first day out of the nest, which they spent on a branch just opposite our window.

Read more... )

For more information (in Russian), see here.

yourlibrarian: Archie is Sweet-crymeariver_ (HORN-ArchieSweet-crymeariver_)
yourlibrarian ([personal profile] yourlibrarian) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-08 01:38 pm

Crown Point Vista House



Just returned from a road trip through Oregon and part of Northern California. On leaving Portland we followed the route of a tourist trolley and started out at Crown Point Vista House. The views of the Colombia River were indeed impressive and well worth the twisty drive up to its height. The structure itself with its stone and stained glass was also interesting to see. The bathrooms on the basement level were all marbled -- not the usual for tourist stops!

Above is the overall view east. Read more... )