15 August 2021
Health Valley Trail, Waterloo, ON
There is a local trail called the Health Valley Trail (not quite sure how it got its name) that runs for about 4.5 km between Waterloo and St. Jacobs. We had not entered from the Waterloo side for a couple of years so we decided to give it a try.
There seemed to be a bit of a congregation of Turkey Vultures (Cathartes aura) and when they gather like this there is likely carrion in the area.
Who knows what might have been on the menu? Rotting guts of White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) perhaps.
Common Tansy (Tanacetum vulgare) is both prolific and beautiful and seems to be at its peak right now.
It found great favour with many insects, including this Common Eastern Bumblebee (Bombus impatiens).
Alfalfa Plant Bug (Adelphocoris lineolatus) made the point that it is not always confined to alfalfa.
Common Green Bottle (Lucilia sericata) is a very handsome species, but is at times implicated in the spread of disease.
We spotted Wild Cucumber (Echinocystis lobata) quite frequently and will look forward to seeing the fruit a little later in the year.
We were very happy to see this moth alight for enough time to have its picture taken. It was a new species for us, Two-banded Petrophila (Petrophila bifascialis).
It is rarely that an Eastern Tailed Blue (Cupido comyntas) perches with wings outspread and we were delighted to be able to capture a picture.
Cabbage White (Pieris rapae) was ubiquitous, but flitting hither and thither and rarely landing. Finally a male cooperated.
There were many Common Water Striders (Aquarius remigis) zig zagging on the surface of a small pond, and it is really interesting to see the form of the shadow they create.
If you look carefully in the picture above you can see one of the insects near a white spot in the bottom right quadrant.
An American Toad (Anaxyrus americanus) seemed far less interested than we were.
A Groundselbush Beetle (Trirhabda bacharidis) is very attractive.
There were many birds, but the vegetation was dense and obtaining photographs was not at all easy. The following image of a female Rose-breasted Grosbeak (Pheucticus ludovicianus) will show you what I mean.
19 August 2021
Our backyard, Waterloo, ON
An Eastern Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa virginica) found the phlox in the backyard exactly to its liking.
19 August 2021
Milverton Sewage Lagoons, Milverton, ON
A dedicated birder seeking shorebirds can think of no odour more pleasant than a little eau de sewer on a hot day in late August. "To follow your nose" never had a more apt meaning.
With migratory shorebirds in mind we went to Milverton in anticipation of a bonanza. What did we find - nada, rien, nichts, nothing, zilch, zippo! A wasteland, or a waste water might be more appropriate, both literally and figuratively.
When we first arrived in fact, there was not a single bird of any description on the water. When you can't even find a Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) in Canada one wonders what cataclysmic event might have occurred!
There were Cedar Waxwings (Bombycilla cedrorum) in a tree, however, so all was not lost.
A Least Skipper (Ancyloxypha numitor) no doubt sensing our angst came and perched conveniently close to us.
Then the show began! I am not sure how many Halloween Pennants (Celithemis eponina) there were but I don't think that over a hundred would be an exaggeration.
As pennants are known to do they showed tremendous tenacity in clinging to an elevated perch, even in strong wind, and even if they left it for a brief interlude, they quickly returned.
A Broad-leaved Sweet Pea ( Lathyrus latifolius) might well have been named Broad-smiled Sweet Pea for us!
I am not sure what to make of this Widow Skimmer (Libellula luctuosa) with its exuvia. It has clearly past the teneral stage and acquired adult colouration, but remains in place and appears to have an injured left forewing. Might a bird have attacked it? If so, why would the bird not finish the job and eat the dragonfly or carry it back to its young?
A Twelve-spotted Skimmer (Libellula pulchela) is a very handsome dragonfly.
Now what was it we first came for? Shorebirds, you say? Well, it seems to me that we didn't have a bad day without them
19 August 2021
In our house, Waterloo, ON
Is a fly in a house a House Fly? I think not, but I can't get anywhere with the ID of this one.