Filed under Macrophotography

Rosy Maple Moth

 A bit of a cool down has brought out all kinds of interesting creatures! I found this gorgeous girl clinging to the front door screen for a couple of hours yesterday evening. She’s a Rosy Maple Moth – and true to their name, they love maple trees. I’m hoping that she’s here to lay some pink eggs on the underside of the maples in our front yard. I’m normally not a big fan of moths but I wouldn’t mind a few of these hanging around… gorgeous!

In other news, prolonged house-cleaning suddenly results in crippling pelvic pain! I bought a small, tan washcloth at the store which I plan to sew into a pouch and fill with rice. Zap a rice pillow in the microwave for about 3 minutes and bam, instant-pain relief! :)

Porch Garden, Pre Pallet Placement!

Happy April, everyone!

I wanted to share my pallet garden progress and in the process, stumbled upon the blue-tailed skink who has been living under our porch. This time, I caught him camera-in-hand and managed to snap this shot of him! He’s been keeping my plants company while they await their new home – a pallet garden that my husband and I will be planting soon!

At Rural King this weekend, I purchased the following herbs and veggie plants:

  • lemon balm
  • flat italian parsley
  • rosemary
  • catnip
  • cilantro
  • cinnamon basil
  • sweet basil
  • Early Girl tomato plant
  • Lemon Boy tomato plant
  • Cherokee Purple tomato plant
  • Super Sweet tomato plant
  • Carrot seeds
  • Cucumber seeds
  • Lettuce seeds

A little overboard? Maybe. But hopefully, they all survive until I can get them pallet-planted and firmly rooted and my backyard will be full of fresh herbs and veggies this year!

For the last 2 weeks, we’ve been experienced unseasonably warm weather here in Southern Illinois. Our end of March averages were all in the 60′s and 70′s and the the few days have been solidly in the 80′s! Sounds like prime planting weather to me. Soon Brad will be bringing home a new pallet and some more potting soil and we’ll be crossing our fingers that a late frost won’t zap all my little plants.

Here are some shots of my herbs pre-pallet!

And of course, my tomato plants, too!

Check back soon for the final pallet garden photo, as well as an array of new photos showing how our front yard landscaping (ALMOST FINISHED!) turned out! :)

11.10.11 – Hedge apples

On my walk yesterday, I stumbled upon two giant tennis balls in the middle of the road. As I approached, and their details came into focus, I realized that they were rather two large, perfectly intact green brains. I wish I could have seen the look on my face as I approached the brains – it’s not every day that one comes upon something so strange. I turned one over and saw a stem protruding from one side which made me realize that these were some sort of strange fruit! They left a familiar thin film on my hands after I touched them that smelled faintly like an orange peel.

I was in love!

I looked around – surely they must have fallen out of someone’s grocery bag. How could such lovely fruits be just lying in the middle of the road? Thankfully, I had my smartphone with me and I quickly googled “green brain fruit” which produced an immediate answer: hedge apples. The wikipedia article describes them as being a fibrous, fragrant fruit from a type of bush that once doubled as fencing for cattle. This explained why in the mountains of Northern Idaho I had never encountered such a plant, but out here in the Midwest, these were commonplace.

Wiki goes on to say that they are nontoxic, so you could eat them if you wanted to, but supposedly they taste awful so no one does. Except for cows – who often get them stuck in their throats. Although, with the size of these things, I don’t see how! There is also an old wive’s tale about the fruit repelling insects and fleas – whether it’s true or not, I’m in! My dining room now smells a little bit like oranges and they do make the most lovely centerpieces for my table!

Hubby just shrugged when I held up my treasures when he returned home from work. “Yeah, hedge apples. So what?”

So for all of you who, like me, have never encountered these before, I wanted to share my fascination and newfound love for these gorgeous little fruits.

Beautiful!

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11.1.11 – Fall Foliage Photos

 

The last two weeks have been a veritable avalanche of graphic design work flooding in. On one hand, I feel incredibly lucky be able to be at home, doing what I love (creating digital graphics), and feeling a daily sense of fulfillment and accomplishment.

On the other hand, I know that it is only through hard work and dedication that someone finds this kind of luck – and that the hard work is far from over! I’ve only just begun my business pursuit – Rikki Rogers Graphic Design is exactly one year old – and the last year has been a roller coaster of emotion, finances, and projects.

If you feel so inclined, you can click here to visit my portfolio site to see some of the newest design work that I’ve created.

Despite the many downs amidst the fantastic ups of freelancing, I can’t help but feel that I might never be able to go back to a run-of-the-mill 9 to 5… this is all simply too much fun!

So far, it’s been a lovely ride and I cannot contain my excitement when I realize that this is just the beginning.

Sunday, I forced myself to step away from my computer. I picked up my camera and walked outside into a windy but room-temperature fall day.

These fall images are the result of my weekend of (admittedly oxymoronic) forced relaxation. ;)

Enjoy!

 

 

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10.26.11 – Fall Photo Share

 

 

 

 I found these spikey little guys growing wild in our pasture, just wanted to share them with you! I thought that they made for a wonderfully textured photograph and were just bursting with fall colors. :)

The sunset made for the perfect lighting, as well, kind of dim and yellow-orange.

Also, there is a tree in the field across from our house whose leaves are (I’m not kidding) a bright pinkish kind of red. Amazing!

Happy Fall, everyone!

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9.8.11 – Macro Butterfly

Just wanted to share this image with everyone – a little burst of color on this super white page.

There’s no doubting that fall is on its way and the butterflies are out en masse here in Southern Illinois.
I’ve identified this one as a female Eastern Black Swallowtail – and man, these things are everywhere.

Many of them that I’ve seen on my daily walks have been quite ragged-looking, and this female is no exception.
I’m not sure if that’s just what happens at the end of the summer or if perhaps she’d been in a fight or narrowly escaped becoming something’s meal
but despite her injuries, she could fly fine. She landed quite close to me and stayed long enough for me to snap several great closeups of her.