03 August, 2025
This park is a mere five minutes from our front door, so we often visit for an hour or two. It is a long narrow park, sandwiched between houses on both sides, but is home to a variety of creatures and vegetation.
Yellow Archangel (Lamium galeobdolon) covered a lot of ground; the leaves are especially attractive.
The common name "flesh fly" derives from several abundant members of the family that develop in cadavers and carrion.
Eastern Cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus) is common and appealing, an opinion tempered somewhat by gardeners!
Cross Orbweaver (Araneus diadematus) is easily found with a minimum of searching.
Lesser Burdock (Arctium minus) is not a plant that receives a lot of affection, but it is undeniably beautiful.
Anyone who has brushed up against it knows the tenacious manner in which the burs stick to clothing - or pets. So effective is it, the plant served as the inspiration for Velcro.
A Common Eastern Bumblebee (Bombus impatiens) evidently found a source of nectar and was quick to exploit it.
Masked Bees (genus Hylaeus) lack external pollen-carrying structures; instead they transport both nectar and pollen in the crop.
Common House Fly possibly originated in the Middle East and accompanied humans around the world as a commensal. It is known to spread many diseases; cleanliness is the best defence against them. Stephen Marshall says, ".....is now one of the most widespread and dangerous of all insects because of its association with humans and their associated filth."
We are our own worst enemy, aren't we?
Addendum
Recently I led a couple of nature walks for children, and one exceptionally bright and curious participant asked a couple of probing questions about "what makes an insect an insect?" It occurs to me that others might be interested to - so here are the facts!
Insects share eight of the ten body systems we have - nervous, respiratory, digestive, circulatory, excretory, muscular, endocrine, and reproductive. Our remaining two systems, our skeleton and our skin, are replaced in the insect by an exoskeleton, and an open circulatory system that moves hemolymph (the insect equivalent of blood) throughout the body.
This is a brief summary, but gives you the essentials. There you have it!
Aegopodium podagraria - a perfect screen saver!
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ReplyDeleteHi David,
It sounds like a great park, and you are lucky to live so close to it. It is amazing that there are so many plants there. It looks like there are many different insects there too. Insects are important in the ecosystem.
Hugs and kisses, Marit
It's great to have a nice park so close to your house. It looks like a lovely place to walk. I haven't seen a rabbit around my house in years. Too many bobcats and coyotes I guess. It's nice you get to see them. This morning I had a deer in the yard munching away on my gardens (again). Good thing it's so late in the season, but I'm sure the deer was enjoying more of my phlox. Grin. Have a super week ahead. hugs-Erika
ReplyDeleteA lovely park for daily walk! And fries? Nay...I can't function properly with them around..
ReplyDeleteFlies are pretty much everywhere, Angie - even in your kitchen.
DeleteHari Om
ReplyDeletePesky, no doubt about them, but every bit as important to the ecological cycle as any other insect. The flies that do my head in a bit are the fruit flies that proliferate in summer... YAM xx
And no doubt you remember the bush flies in Australia.
DeleteGoutweed is a weed I struggle with in my garden, David. It's amazing how you know all the flies "by sight"! Red cardinals are my favorite birds, although they don't live here.
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