63 favorites     33 comments    405 visits

1/160 f/8.0 100.0 mm ISO 640

Canon EOS 5D Mark III

EF100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM

EXIF - See more details

See also...

Pictures for Pam Pictures for Pam


The Photographer The Photographer


100 Percent Perfect 100 Percent Perfect


Tolerance Tolerance


Holy Macro! Holy Macro!


Ipernity Addicts Ipernity Addicts


Master and Muse Master and Muse


NATURE ❤ SANCTUARY NATURE ❤ SANCTUARY


TRAVELOGUE TRAVELOGUE


The World of Nature The World of Nature


Red Dominates Red Dominates


Nature and Us Nature and Us


Magical sunlight Magical sunlight


Your Shock Photos Your Shock Photos


La Nature La Nature


1st. Class Macro 1st. Class Macro


r e d r e d


MACRO WORLD MACRO WORLD


Square Format Square Format


magic moments magic moments


NATURE!! NATURE!!


Macro Macro


See more...

Keywords

honeysuckle
Lonicera involucrata
bearberry honeysuckle
Twinberry
Bullard's Beach State Park
red
berries
berry
translucence


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

405 visits


Look! A Black Twinberry Butterfly! :D Hello from Bullard's Beach State Park! (+2 insets)

Look! A Black Twinberry Butterfly! :D Hello from Bullard's Beach State Park! (+2 insets)
(+2 insets!) (Bigger is even better!) :)

I want to make sure I have time to post this so I'm just posting a quick note to go with my pictures today! We are about to leave our wonderful campground, Bullard's Beach State Park and we had a wonderful stay! We will be heading about an hour north for a three day-stay at our next campsite. Unfortunately, that was the longest we could get for the time slot, but after another four days at a different place, we'll be back for another four days. Heh, I know that's not the same thing as seven uninterrupted days but sometimes you don't have a choice in these things!

Today's Pictures
I had a very nice time creeping around with my macro lens and got bunches of really neat pictures. Along the way I found these marvelous bushes covered with red-cloaked, round black berries. I thought it was very interesting that the berries grew in pairs…and so when I discovered the name of this plant was Twinberry, I had to laugh! Perfect!

While I took photos, I couldn't help focusing on my favorite part--the beautifully shaped, red bracts surrounding the berries. Upon investigating online, I learned they are called involucre, and is part of the botany name of Black Twinberry, "Lonicera involucrata". (These plants also have a red version, naturally called Red Twinberry) I was also fascinated to learn that these berries are a kind of honeysuckle! The plant grows like a bush, which threw me off because I thought all honeysuckles are vines. However, when I learned it was in the honeysuckle family it all made sense do me. The honeysuckle that grows on our property has the very same berries, except that they are red. The leaves are the same too, and looking at pictures of the flowers, they are also quite similar. It's so fascinating to see the various species of a plant group, isn't it?

So, as I took pictures, I took turns concentrating on the berries and then the lovely red bracts. Then I saw a lovely red flash…and gasped in surprise! Would you just look at that? Bracts that appeared to be a lovely red butterfly with perfectly shaped berries to represent a thorax and head! Seriously, what are the odds?! :D This picture just HAD to be my main image today! I'm also including some other views of these pretty berries--a pair to admire and a folded-over bract that looks like a red bat! :) I hope you like them!

I wanted to give everyone hugs for all of the attention you've been giving my pictures, and for the lovely comments and stars. I appreciate you all so much. I was able to visit some of you finally and it was great to see what you've been sharing with us here on ipernity! Here's hoping everyone stays safe and healthy in these crazy days!

Here's more information about these berries that I found very interesting: Twinberry, also called bearberry honeysuckle, is in the honeysuckle family. Twinberries are very common in the Cape Lookout State Park at the base of Netarts Spit. Unlike their cousins, the climbing and pink honeysuckles which are twining vines and can occur in our area, the twinberry is an erect shrub that may grow to more than twelve feet high. Its paired yellow flowers each have a five-lobed, tubular corolla. The flowers are subtended by a pair of large, green bracts that turn red as the fruits mature into pairs of shiny black berries. These berries are bitter and considered inedible, but their juice has been used as a dye. Its leaves are opposite, they have petioles, and they are rather shiny on top. They drop off in the winter. There are two varieties of twinberries, the coastal Lonicera var. ledebourii, occurring in coastal Oregon and California, and the mountain Lonicera var. involucrata, found in all western and the lake states. From Netarts Bay Today

Explored on 7/14/20; highest placement #1.

Andrew Trundlewagon, Jean-louis Thiaudiere, William (Bill) Armstrong, appo-fam and 59 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (33)
 Marie-claire Gallet
Marie-claire Gallet
GLORIOUS capture, Janet **********************
3 years ago.
 Malik Raoulda
Malik Raoulda club
Vraiment fabuleuse... Elle sort carrement de l'écran ..!
3 years ago.
 Eunice Perkins
Eunice Perkins club
Especially lovely with the back light making it glow! This plant does not need to be edible. It has such beauty ,
3 years ago.
 Ernst Doro
Ernst Doro club
interessante Frucht und perfekt fotografiert,
3 years ago.
 Andrew Trundlewagon
Andrew Trundlewagon club
Love the colours.
3 years ago. Edited 3 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.