Egg watch day 8: an experiment
Morning rebuild
Rainbow connection . . .
Ghostly countenance
Spider day continues
A Japanese beetle scrum
Looks like what a bird left behind
Egg watch, day 9: subtle changes
Egg watch, day 10: Hatchery?
Nervous red wasp on glass
Streamlined, flying grasshopper
Dangling from a hickory tree
Networking
Dinky fly and extraordinary luck
The kisser of the spider woman
Egg watch, day 13: more subtle changes
An unusual variation
Detail of purple Queen Anne's lace
Big spider, big web, big catch
Big spider, other side
And a pollinator visits the purple-edged Queen Ann…
Another pollinator
Five-lined skink steps out
Hooverfly
Why manual focus is better
Fly prefers the purple one
Oddly green pink-edged sulphur
Eggs, day 7
Friendly neighborhood cicada killer
An unremarkable fly
Crab spider on a web
Fly disguised as owl
What goes on here?
Playing around after a rainstorm
After a morning rain
Day 5: something new
Hopper to go, hold the flies
Red velvet mite vs. something
Marmorated stink bug
It's pretty clearly a wasp
Like cattle in a field
Leopardoptera
Hoveringfly
World in a web 7: Away with its prize
World in a web 6: The head is the delicacy
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The dreaded horsefly


No one is happy to hear the buzz of the nearby horsefly. They bite, and it hurts. I've been swimming in farm ponds where the instant you raise your head above water, a dozen or more land. They are not circumspect and instead bite instantly upon landing. Some species carry diseases and parasites.
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