- Nov 27, 2000
- 10,754
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Six-spotted orbweaver. I would have liked to have gotten its back with the six spots in the picture, but it was a little hyper and this was the best I could do.
Another tiny orbweaver. It's sitting on a petal of one of those little yellow oxalis flowers that grow in the grass. It was only about four or five millimeters long.
Ladybug larvae. I'm pretty sure these are still first instar. They are eating some kind of eggs, possibly the eggs they hatched from, but it could be anything. Ladybugs might look cute but they are fierce predators from birth.
I think it's a tiger moth, but it could be an owlet moth. Found this tonight. Its wingspan was about an inch. I need a better moth reference.
A tiny grasshopper sitting in a daisy. The body was about a centimeter long. The antennae are actually longer than its whole body.
I would write more, but I'm kind of tired. If you want to know more about equpiment I wrote about it and posted some pictures of it for Sketcher here.
Let me know what you think.
Another tiny orbweaver. It's sitting on a petal of one of those little yellow oxalis flowers that grow in the grass. It was only about four or five millimeters long.
Ladybug larvae. I'm pretty sure these are still first instar. They are eating some kind of eggs, possibly the eggs they hatched from, but it could be anything. Ladybugs might look cute but they are fierce predators from birth.
I think it's a tiger moth, but it could be an owlet moth. Found this tonight. Its wingspan was about an inch. I need a better moth reference.
A tiny grasshopper sitting in a daisy. The body was about a centimeter long. The antennae are actually longer than its whole body.
I would write more, but I'm kind of tired. If you want to know more about equpiment I wrote about it and posted some pictures of it for Sketcher here.
Let me know what you think.
