Results tagged “nature_study” from Mrs. Happy Housewife

Gold and Amber

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Marigold lover

 

This garden visitor seems to like my new Marigolds as much as I do. The Marigolds were my Mother's Day present and I think our guest is an Eastern Amberwing. This species dragonfly is a wasp mimic and is also one of the smallest dragonflies in North America. According to my readings, this is a female. The males have completely amber wings and the females have clear areas on their wings.

A different view, and quite lovely photo, of a female Eastern Amberwing is shown at the Botany Garden of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Their website also provides a photo of a male

More on my garden later.

Rain Lilies

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100species.jpg

I am still working on the 100 Species Challenge (looks like Melissa Wiley is also). Now that everything is growing and blooming again, I'm hoping to work much more on the challenge. For those who have forgotten, the goal is to identify 100 species of plant life in your area.

Number three on my list are Rain Lilies

Rain Lily 4

 

I've already counted this species, but I can't help showing these new photos. Last Friday, the children and I dug up scores of bulbs around our yard to plant in pots. When wild plants show up in the yard, I try to rescue them from the lawnmower.

Closed Rain Lily

 

Digging up the bulbs was very educational because we got a chance to see how large bulbs would form bulbous growths that, with time, would separate from the mother bulbs to form bulblets.

Rain Lily 3

 

I am hoping to plant these bulbs in a flower bed next spring. As for now, they have been saved from the mower and the weedkiller spray as my husband and I do not agree on what constitutes a "weed".

Rain Lily 1

 

I do not think anything this lovely could ever be called a weed. I am trying to help my husband understand that there is a difference betwixt a plant blessing and a plant nuisance.

Rain Lily 2

 

I think he must be coming around to my way of thinking because he kindly spared mowing a Rain Lily in the front yard which I had overlooked. Or perhaps he did that just because he is so indulgent of my gardening fancies. 

Every Day is Earth Day

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For a Christian, every day is Earth Day because God made the Earth and everything in it and set it under the stewardship of man.

For a bit of "earthy" scripture (courtesy of my Twitterfeed today):

  • My own Earth Day: "The grass withereth, the flower fadeth: but the word of our God shall stand for ever."
  • "Before the mountains were brought forth,or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world,even from everlasting 2 everlasting,thou art God.
  • "Let the heaven and earth praise him, the seas, and every thing that moveth therein."
  • "For God is the King of all the earth: sing ye praises with understanding."
  • "Be still, and know that I am God: I will be exalted among the heathen, I will be exalted in the earth."
  • "Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea."
  • "Let all the earth fear the LORD: let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him."
  • "O LORD, our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth! who hast set thy glory above the heavens."
  • "Who teacheth us more than the beasts of the earth, and maketh us wiser than the fowls of heaven?"
  • "For we are but of yesterday, and know nothing, because our days upon earth are a shadow."
  • "Then shall the trees of the wood sing out at the presence of the LORD, because he cometh to judge the earth."
  • "Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice: and let men say among the nations, The LORD reigneth."
  • "Sing unto the LORD, all the earth; shew forth from day to day his salvation."  
  • "Know therefore this day,& consider it in thine heart, that the LORD he is God in heaven above,& upon the earth beneath:there is none else."  
  • "For what God is there in heaven or in earth, that can do according to thy works, and according to thy might?" 
  • "But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord."  
  • "The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof; the world and they that dwell therein." 
  • Muscovy Rain Party

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    It rained for twenty-four hours at my house and some local ducks decided to throw a little party on my back fence.

    Muscovy rain party

     
    Are you familiar with this duck species? They're Muscovy and are found all over my town, though they are not natives. Yes, in Florida, even the ducks are from some other locale.
     
    Sadly, many Muscovy ducks have died recently in our area. It appears some horrible people have been poisoning the ducks because they are not natives. It is ironic, though, because the poisoners are likely non-native Floridians also.
     
    Rain on the Muscovies
     
    Look closely above this Muscovy and you can see the rain.

    In other news, our Mango tree bit the dust recently. A frost weakened it and then it caught a blight of some sort. I finally decided it had to go last Friday and my children kindly did the honors. With their bare hands, they ripped the stump from the ground. Here is photographic evidence that my kids are mighty strong:

    Son the stump-puller

     

    Would anyone like to suggest a replacement fruit tree species?

    Spring Fever

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    It is very sad when a blogger must be reminded by her son to post. It's not really that I forgot, though; I've just been so occupied lately.

    Spring fever has hit me and I keep thinking all the time about planting and growing.

    Also, I've been terribly busy outfitting my rapidly-growing children. But I only enjoy shopping in theory, so let's return to the topic of planting.

    Amaryllis

    I have this wonderful husband who actually buys me dirt. Buying dirt is an activity my children still find perplexing, but it is impossible to do anything much with all the sand we have lurking beneath the surface in this neighborhood.

    My husband also bought me seed packets: True Lavender, Yarrow, Snow-in-Summer, Blue FlaxMammoth Sunflower, and Black-Eyed-Susans. It is one of my life goals to grow my own sunflowers. It's another life goal to eat sunflower seeds I've grown. Kissing the Blarney Stone is yet another goal, but that's a tale for some other day.

    In addition to all these seeds, I planted my Grand-MIL's amaryllis bulbs. Now, she said they were amaryllis, but it seems many bulbs of the Amaryllis family are erroneously called "Amaryllis". All I really know is that these bulbs grow lovely flowers.

    Amaryllis blooms

    The Amaryllis plant

    This is what the flowers looked like when the plants bloomed back in April of 2006.

    So, it's not that I've forgotten y'all. I'm just busy at the moment cleaning the dirt from underneath my fingernails. 

    Extreme Makeover: Birdfeeder Edition

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    Cardinal

    The backyard birdfeeder has been in desperate need of a makeover for quite some time - a makeover being much less expensive than buying a new birdfeeder. I finally could not stand it any more and took a few minutes this weekend to slap a bit of paint on it.

    We chose the paint from amongst the half-used gallons in our garage. It's "Olympia" by Valspar.

    For three days, we have waited with bated breath to see what bird would be first to visit our painted birdfeeder.

    Yellow birdfeeder

     

    As you can see here, our first visitor had a bushy tail and was not a bird.

    Oh, well. I suppose the birds haven't yet gotten the memo that we have a buffet ready for them.

    Great Backyard Bird Count 2010 Review

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    Monday we participated in the GBBC 2010 and enjoyed ourselves much. This was the most I have exerted myself since my brain surgery in November, so I was very tired afterwards. We stayed in our own neighborhood and didn't travel the local trail, as we usually do. Because of this, we didn't spot as many birds as in past years, but I think we still did well.

    Here's our tally:

    See? Not too bad. As you can see, we found many water birds - thanks to the three ponds in our tiny neighborhood.

    The best part of the bird count was that we got a chance to see a newly laid clutch of Muscovy eggs.

    Thirteen

     

    A few photos from the bird count:

    Common Moorhen
    Common Moorhen
     
    Stork
     Wood Stork
     
    Five in a row
     White Ibis
     
    More of my photos are at Flickr.
    Photos by S here.
    Photos by D here.

    New Year, New Bird Count

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    GBBC.jpgIt's almost time for another Great Backyard Bird Count. Seven more days, to be exact. This year's count will begin on Friday, February 12 and end on Monday, February 15. There will be prizes for the photo contest and a general prize drawing among all the participants. How nice! All of the prizes look great and would be helpful teaching aids in our homeschool; however, we love to participate in the count each year, regardless of potential prizes. It is great fun to look for birds and to contribute our collected data.

    To participate in the Great Backyard Bird Count, print a tally sheet for your area. Next, you will need to spend at least 15 minutes counting the birds in your area. You can observe in your own backyard or at the park down the street. Just make sure to keep a separate tally sheet for each location and for each day you participate. After you count your local birds, enter your tally at the Great Backyard Bird Count website.

    After the bird count, scientists will use the data collected to answer many questions. That's why the bird count is so important.

    Teachers and homeschoolers might like the free classroom materials available.

    Here are the rules for the photo contest. Here are the galleries of photos from previous years.

    If you don't have a bird guide book to help you with identification, you can look online for help. I often use eNature.com for identification. I take the closest photo possible and use it as a reference when I return home. In fact, I identify most flora and fauna in this manner.

    I hope you all will join the Great Backyard Bird Count this year. Remember: it begins in only one week. 

    Afire With God

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    Earth's crammed with heaven,
    And every common bush afire with God:
    But only he who sees, takes off his shoes,
    The rest sit round it, and pluck blackberries...

    Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh - Book VII

     

    I can't say that Elizabeth Barrett Browning is a hero of mine, but long before my own body fell to ruin I admired her ability to learn, live, and grow despite illness and pain. The quotation above, taken from her nine book blank verse novel, is certainly a gem of truth.

    Even a common blackberry bush is as full of God as Moses' burning bush. Some recognize this and honor the Lord; others can see nothing beyond a bush of blackberries.

    I find it difficult to understand atheists. How can anyone observe the natural world and not acknowledge the Creator? Every living thing around us is born from the breath of God and possesses a touch of His majesty.

    The whole world is afire with God. Let us behold His works and stand on holy ground.

    Shelter From the Cold

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    Tree frog in the house

    H discovered this tree frog on a window in the house yesterday. There was much debate on what to do with the wee jumper. No one had the heart to throw him outside. There are iguanas dropping from trees in our state, you know. S put him on this pineapple plant we had moved inside to avoid the frost. I suspect this guy, or gal, came in when we brought the pineapple plant or the orchid inside.

    By the way, we're growing this pineapple plant from the leftover top of a whole pineapple we bought at the grocery store. H's great-aunt & uncle have a pineapple plant grown this way and it's bearing fruit. I think the process is very cool, but it looks weird to see a pineapple when it is growing. 

    After this photo, our guest burrowed into the leaves and soil. I hope he survives his visit in our house. I always hate to find a dead lizard who snuck inside, became trapped, and died.

    As for the humans of the house, we're crossing our frosty fingers that the expected fair weather forcasted starting this Thursday lasts awhile.

    Stupid Floridian Fun

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    For days...and days...and days, H has had a glass of water outside at night in a desperate quest to see it solidify. Yes, Floridians are silly and a bit odd.

    After repeat failure, I told H to move the glass away from the heat of the house and last night he finally obtained his goal.

    Ice on a plate

    Naturally, we were all very excited this morning. I mean, really, how often does one see a glass of ice?

    And to all Floridians who got sleet, flurries, or snow yesterday: I only hate you a little bit and am sure my envy will fade. Eventually.

    Jack Frost Comes to Florida

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    I know the rest of the country is colder than we are, but Floridians are just not used to Jack Frost nipping at our toes.

    Iced yard

    This is my backyard this morning. That's ice you're seeing. My poor son thought it might be snow. We're just not too familiar with the actual season of Winter.

    Ice crystals

    Our many wildflowers (or weeds, as H calls them) are covered in ice crystals and many are dead. 

    Painted Cranesbill

    I don't like to see the poor dead plants, but this Cranesbill looks lovely. It's as though I sprayed a mist of faux snow over it.

    Try, Try Again

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    Okay, I'm heading to the hospital tomorrow to try this surgery thing again. Once again, I beg your kind thoughts and prayers. 

    I leave you with a photo of the lovely sunflowers my Mother-in-Law picked for me from her friend's house:

    Sunflowers

    Can you believe such beauty was growing wild? Amazing!

    Our Own Weather Station

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    Weather Station front

    Without knowing that we are studying weather in Nature Study this term, my husband managed to purchase a very inexpensive weather station for our backyard - one that also happens to match my home decor. Double kudos to him.

    The weather station measures rain fall, temperature, wind speed, wind direction, and has a wind chill chart on the back side.

    Weather Station back

    We like it a lot. Now we've added weather readings to our nature journals and compare the information to readings from our local news station's meteorology department.

    Now I have something green in my garden that I will not have to worry about keeping alive.

    By the way, those are clouds reflected on the weather station. Purely an accident when I took the photograph, but they make me smile.

    In the Gloaming

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    There is a palm tree across the street from my house and two parrots live in its dead fronds.

    Parrot in old palm fronds

    They are Black-hooded Parakeets, also called Nanday Parakeets or Nanday Conures. In Latin, they are Nandayus nenday. Every evening as the sun sets, the two of them fly around by my house and call loudly to each other: "kree-ah, kree-ah".

    Hello

     They hide in the dead palm fronds of their home tree or perch on their palm's green fronds above.

    On a limb

    Often they stay together on the nearest lamppost, basking in the last rays of twilight.

    Looking at each other

    These feathered neighbors are not natives to my town; they come from the Pantanal of South America, which is the world's largest wetlands.  Though the Pantanal is not as famous as its neighbor, the Amazon Rainforest, it is just as important for its amazing wildlife and it is this far away region that has given my neighborhood these lovely birds.

    Black-faced Parakeet

    The din only lasts for a few minutes. After the gloaming, all is quite again. The parakeets are silent for another day.

    More photos at Flickr.

    Gulf Fritillary

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    Gulf Fritillary

    The son snapped this photo last weekend in our backyard. Yes, I actually let someone touch my precious camera. Shocking. And either incredibly forgiving or rather stupid, considering this child broke our last camera. Anyway, it turns out that this lovely thing is a Gulf Fritillary, Agraulis vanillae. The Butterflies and Moths website has a great close-up photo.

    Here is a time lapse video of a Gulf Fritillary transforming from caterpillar to butterfly:



    The Cloud

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    Impressionism Clouds 7

    The Cloud by Percy Bysshe Shelley

    I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers,
    From the seas and the streams;
    I bear light shade for the leaves when laid
    In their noonday dreams.
    From my wings are shaken the dews that waken
    The sweet buds every one,
    When rocked to rest on their mother's breast,
    As she dances about the sun.
    I wield the flail of the lashing hail,
    And whiten the green plains under,
    And then again I dissolve it in rain,
    And laugh as I pass in thunder.

    I sift the snow on the mountains below,
    And their great pines groan aghast;
    And all the night 'tis my pillow white,
    While I sleep in the arms of the blast.
    Sublime on the towers of my skiey bowers,
    Lightning, my pilot, sits;
    In a cavern under is fettered the thunder,
    It struggles and howls at fits;

    Over earth and ocean, with gentle motion,
    This pilot is guiding me,
    Lured by the love of the genii that move
    In the depths of the purple sea;
    Over the rills, and the crags, and the hills,
    Over the lakes and the plains,
    Wherever he dream, under mountain or stream,
    The Spirit he loves remains;
    And I all the while bask in Heaven's blue smile,
    Whilst he is dissolving in rains.

    The sanguine Sunrise, with his meteor eyes,
    And his burning plumes outspread,
    Leaps on the back of my sailing rack,
    When the morning star shines dead;
    As on the jag of a mountain crag,
    Which an earthquake rocks and swings,
    An eagle alit one moment may sit
    In the light of its golden wings.
    And when Sunset may breathe, from the lit sea beneath,
    Its ardors of rest and of love,

    And the crimson pall of eve may fall
    From the depth of Heaven above,
    With wings folded I rest, on mine aery nest,
    As still as a brooding dove.
    That orbed maiden with white fire laden,
    Whom mortals call the Moon,
    Glides glimmering o'er my fleece-like floor,
    By the midnight breezes strewn;
    And wherever the beat of her unseen feet,
    Which only the angels hear,
    May have broken the woof of my tent's thin roof,
    The stars peep behind her and peer;
    And I laugh to see them whirl and flee,
    Like a swarm of golden bees,
    When I widen the rent in my wind-built tent,
    Till the calm rivers, lakes, and seas,
    Like strips of the sky fallen through me on high,
    Are each paved with the moon and these.

    I bind the Sun's throne with a burning zone,
    And the Moon's with a girdle of pearl;
    The volcanoes are dim, and the stars reel and swim
    When the whirlwinds my banner unfurl.
    From cape to cape, with a bridge-like shape,
    Over a torrent sea,
    Sunbeam-proof, I hang like a roof,--
    The mountains its columns be.
    The triumphal arch through which I march
    With hurricane, fire, and snow,
    When the Powers of the air are chained to my chair,
    Is the million-colored bow;
    The sphere-fire above its soft colors wove,
    While the moist Earth was laughing below.

    I am the daughter of Earth and Water,
    And the nursling of the Sky;
    I pass through the pores of the ocean and shores;
    I change, but I cannot die.
    For after the rain when with never a stain
    The pavilion of Heaven is bare,
    And the winds and sunbeams with their convex gleams
    Build up the blue dome of air,
    I silently laugh at my own cenotaph,
    And out of the caverns of rain,
    Like a child from the womb, like a ghost from the tomb,
    I arise and unbuild it again.


    More of today's clouds at Flickr.

    A Polliwog Nursery

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    A large flower pot of seashells sits on the side of our house and recently filled with rainwater. I was going to dump the water to prevent mosquitoes, but found dozens of tadpoles, in various sizes.

      Tadpole

    There are three in this photo. One large tadpole is in the center. I'm sorry the photo is so poor. It was difficult to photograph the tadpoles because of the reflections in the water.

    A larger view is at Flickr.

    Information on raising tadpoles can be found here.

    We have raised tadpoles many times and it, along with watching caterpillars become moths, has been a favorite aspect of nature study at our house. We highly recommend it.

    Fine Feathered Guests

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    One great thing about living in Florida is that you can have beautiful visitors drop-in regularly.

    Our visitor today

    D spotted this recent visitor when he landed on our backyard wall. Isn't he lovely?

    Great White Heron
    Ardea Alba
    The Great Egret, Great White Egret, or Common Egret
    Formally known as the Great White Heron
    Famous as the symbol for the National Audubon Society

     He stayed for a little while, enjoyed a gentle breeze, and then he dashed off.

    Cup O' Frog

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    Cup o' Frog

    This big fellow has been living in the pots of dirt on my front porch. Here he is in an old coffee mug of baby Vincas I collected from the front yard. Now, he may be a toad because, frankly, I can't tell the difference. He's so large, though, that I'm declaring him to be a frog.

    Here are some links to information on Florida frogs and toads:
    Florida's Frogs and Toads
    Florida Frogs Coloring and Activity Book (pdf)
    Frogs & Toads of Florida

    Mrs. Happy Housewife

    About Mrs. Happy Housewife

    Married to my high school sweetheart. Mother of two. A housewife.

    I'm full of opinions and curiosity. I'm not an expert, but on a quest of self-improvement.

    Welcome to my life.

    Follow mrshappyhousewi on Twitter

    MrsHappyHousewife. Get yours at bighugelabs.com


    I Like Ike is my son's blog. Aside from pestering him regarding grammar, I have no input. Please be nice if you comment on his blog.


    The old site is slowly being transferred here.





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