Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The life of a butterfly

We are lucky enough to have some beautiful butterflies in the yard which have "allowed" us to photograph them. One monarch even let us watch her lay her eggs on our milkweed plant. Here are some pictures that were taken of a few different kinds of butterflies we have and the stages of their lives (minus the cocoons because we can't seem to find any!).

Monarch butterfly:
This is one of the eggs on a milkweed plant.






Part 2: the caterpillar



This is the mamma butterfly.



Gulf fritillary (passion flower butterfly):
Egg




Caterpillar



Ken took this one...maybe this pic should have come first! ;-)
 We're not sure what kind of butterfly this is. It only stayed in our yard for a few minutes.







Saturday, July 9, 2011

The beauty of nature

All of the food we grow either starts or ends as a flower. Some are beautiful, some are plain, but they're all amazing in their own way.

Bananas

Dill

Onions

Cilantro

Lettuce

Broccoli

String beans

Cherry tomatoes

Potatoes

Cucumber (notice the baby cucumber to the left)

First harvests

Ken and I have been playing around with "farming" in our small backyard. We have managed to get a pretty substantial amount of food out of it.

These are some random shots of our first fruits and veggies from April until about a week or so ago.

Purple potatoes

One of many, many, MANY cucumbers

Cherry tomatoes

String beans

Edamame, string beans, eggplant and strawberries




A birthday gift

My friend, Laura, sent seeds for my birthday this past year. Here is the result....

Purple basil

We have already made yummy caprese salads, added it as a topping on pizza and included it in tomato sauce.

Morning glory bush

Our first watermelon

This is our first watermelon "baby" sitting on a bed of dry leaves.


This is a second watermelon about a month later. Notice the leaf in the upper left corner...it's still pretty tiny!


Our baby is all grown up....

Our $10 find

While at the hardware store, we found this wonderful plant called a Fuschia. The flowers start out in little Chinese lantern-looking balls...


...and then spiral open into these beautiful flowers.....


Unfortunately it didn't survive the drought (otherwise known as our four-day trip that resulted in no watering for our plants).

The life cycle of cotton

When we moved to St. Petersburg, Ken promptly planted some cotton seeds he had obtained. Being from New York and then South Florida, I had never had an opportunity to see cotton grow. The life cycle of the plant is incredible and beautiful.

It dawned on me one day that if I had never seen a cotton plant, surely none of my friends and plenty of city dwellers had never seen it either.

With that in mind, I bring you cotton.....

This is what I will call the cotton pod. It's the first thing to appear.


Then, you get this beautiful flower.


Which eventually turns this wonderful pink color.


From that, the first signs of cotton emerge.


The cotton seeds sit at the base of and among the cotton.