Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Early-Summer Flowers at the Farm

 Below are some of the flowers that are blooming now at our farm. 

Irix x germanica

Anemonastrum canadense

Some type of iris. 
It was gifted to me by someone who was getting rid of a lot of perennials.

Dame's rocket. 
Although it is an invasive, it also is one of the 
first food sources for bees and butterflies in the spring.

Irix x germanica

Purple wood sage

  
Bumble bee on Baptisia (Wild Indigo).

Southern Blue Flag.

Dahlia

Centaurea montana (cyanus montanus)

Honeysuckle

Rose

Weigela

Peony

Roses

Rose

Wax begonia with another flower that I don't know the name of

Wild columbine

I don't know the name of this flower


Oriental Lily

Rose

Rose

Dianthus

Maltese cross

One of the areas where I have peonies growing. 
This peony bed came with the house 
when we purchased it in 1995.

One of the types of peonies in the peony bed

Another type of peony in the peony bed

The third type of peony in the peony bed

Bleeding hearts

Alumroot

Columbine

Primrose

Great blanketflower

Lantana

Leucanthemum ("ditch daisies")

Sulphur cinquefoil

Common Yarrow

At the museum where I work, we have a restored prairie. Here are some of the native wildflowers that have been blooming during June:

Wild Lupine

Yarrow

Prairie Smoke

Some type of bush rose

Bleeding Heart

Black-eyed Susan

Foxglove Beardtongue


Thursday, June 1, 2023

Birds - At Home and at the Minnesota Zoo

For this swap on Swap-Bot, the focus is on birds and photographing three images of birds in the wild or in captivity. 

The first image is of a red-winged blackbird at one of our suet feeders. The red-winged blackbirds came back in mid-April this year and there was not a lot of food available for them. They flew from our pond to the backyard to eat seeds and suet. I always like seeing and hearing these birds because they are often the first signs of spring.


This is a Common Shelduck that is at the Minnesota Zoo. They are commonly seen in Europe, Asia, and the northern parts of Africa. Young shelducks are able to fly at only seven weeks old. 


These are Lesser Flamingos that commonly live in Africa, south of the Sahara Desert. Although they are the tallest birds at the Minnesota Zoo, they are the smallest ones among flamingos. In the wild, Lesser Flamingos travel at night in a V-formation - just like Canada Geese.


Back to yard photos. These aren't great photos, since they are taken from a distance on my phone. That being said, this one is of two orioles - a male (by the orange on the feeder) and a female (waiting on the top of the metal pole). I am so happy to have the Orioles back again this year. They have beautiful songs and are such colorful birds.


This is the Pileated Woodpecker. It is the largest woodpecker in Minnesota. Comparing this bird to the Red-Winged Blackbird in the first photo is a good way to see the size of these birds. 


These photos are not my best work in terms of photography. With working multiple jobs, I have not had the time to take my camera and spend time photographing the birds around our yard. Hopefully, with the school year ending, I'll have more time to take better photos.