Sangria Ingredients

There are many ways to make sangria, which is basically fruit soaked in wine. One recipe from Fine Cooking included dry riesling, pineapple, oranges and guava juice. For good measure a fluffy black cat blessed the ingredients, adding a touch of brujaria to the sangria.

The air was much warmer tonight, and it’s just now starting to cool off after 11:00 pm. The moon hasn’t come up, so it’s very dark outside the canopy. I  can see a few stars twinkling in the eastern sky, and the blinking lights of jets as they pass by on their way to the airport. It’s surprisingly quite for a Saturday night, which has made sitting outside really nice.

I got a photo of a golden dragonfly this morning, and added it to the series of dragonfly photos. This one let me get fairly close to it. The other photos include a backlit weed, a window in B&W, and a B&W panorama of the big tree on Coronado Road between Corrales Road and La Entrada.

Bee Assassin Bug’s Creed

“I be a bee assassin bug. A true bug. I kill bees and suck their vital life fluids. I be a bee assassin bug. A true bug. I kill and suck the vital life fluids out of anything I can catch. I be a bee assassin bug. A true bug. A beneficial bug. A bee assassin bug I be.”

I had seen bee assassin bugs around, but I didn’t know what they were or pay much attention to them until this afternoon when I found this one sucking the vital life fluids out of a honey bee. When I looked it up on the Internet, I discovered the obvious. Its full name is Reduviidae Bee Assassin Bug.

Damselflies are nice subjects because they don’t seem to mind the camera. Actually, I think they might be able to see their reflections in the lens because they posture and flutter their wings when I put the lens in their faces.  Most of the dragonflies are a different story — the black and blue winged dragonfly in the last photo kept buzzing me, but it would not land anywhere near me. The photo was taken with a 100 mm macro lens from 15 to 20 feet away, so I had to really crop the image to make the dragonfly fill the frame.

Red Green in B&W

 

If you were expecting chiles, the frost on May 28th zapped them. The corn and grapes sustained damage, which makes interesting tones and textures in B&W, and they are recovering. We were feeling frosty last night as the air that settled in felt really cold. While we were sitting out on the deck, I had a sweatshirt on, and Laurie had a light jacket plus a cat magnet blanket wrapped around her. The temperature felt like 40 degrees, but when I checked the thermometers they all read 60 degrees. A few weeks ago 60 degrees was comfortable when the highs were not much over 70, but now that the highs are up around 90 degrees, 60 feels cold.

 

 

Transit of Venus

 

The eleven photos tonight cover the Transit of Venus from when I got my camera setup on our front porch at 5:23 PM to 7:45 PM when the sun fell behind trees and the fence on the west side of the property. I had to move a couple of times, and as the sun got lower in the sky and filtered through trees and clouds it became more yellow/orange. You can see how Venus was slowly moving down the right side of the sun, and it got about half-way down before I lost the sun behind the trees and the fence. As the sun gets lower and more yellow/orange other spots become visible.  At first I thought the other spots might be dust on the lens or sensor, but since they seem consistently placed on the sun, but I placed almost every shot in a different location in the frame of the un-cropped photos to cover the reflection between the lens and filter, I believe they may actually be sun spots.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Ho Silver

A Trojan Horse was parked on Silver behind the office this morning. Bruce thought it would have been an even better photo op if it had been parked in front of Ms. Zachary’s Castle just a half a block away on the corner of 2nd and Lead (you can take a photo tour of “The Castle on Skid Row” at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703909904576051950137854170.html#slide/1).

I walked out of the office at 1:30 this afternoon to discover a beautiful, stormy sky that eventually delivered a little rain. I took the final photo at 3:00 am Sunday morning when I went out to turn in water to irrigate.

The transit of Venus will occur tomorrow afternoon when Venus will crawl across the face of the sun between 5:00 to 7:00 pm. I plan on photographing it if the sky is clear.

A Spider’s Den

When I first saw this spider waiting in its den, it was much farther out in the opening, in full view, but when I shook the bush trying to get my camera into position, it retreated into it’s tunnel, out of sight of my lens. I stood patiently in the same spot, and after some time it slowly crept forward, showing one leg, then another leg until in finally peaked around the corner of its web, settled in, and just looked at me.  After snapping a few shots of our stand-off of sorts, I snuck around to the other side of the bush where I could see the spider’s profile from the low sun lighting up the inside of its web from behind the spider.

Flowers in B&W

I spread mulch around the vegetable beds and the areas that Laurie (mostly) and I have been weeding for the past few weeks. I decimated two large piles of mulch in the process. There was a very black dragonfly flitting around this morning landing in the bamboo, but it would not let me get close enough to photograph it. This dragonfly, which may be the one Laurie photographed the other day, is much less skittish and allowed me to get really close to it.

A Sparrow’s Tale in 6 minutes

4:13:28 PM — A baby sparrow awaits its mama, perched outside our bay window.

4:14:39 PM — Mama shows up, and junior flutters his wings asking mama to give him the tasty bug she has in her beak.

4:14:42 PM — Mama feeds junior the insect.

4:14:43 PM — Junior asks for more food.

4:14:48 PM — Mama lectures junior about being an unappreciative, demanding, gluttonous little bird brat — junior hangs his head in shame.

4:14:49 to 4:16:06 PM — Mama hops around from branch to branch, with junior following and continuing to beg.

4:16:07 PM — Mama takes a break from branch hopping and starts lecturing junior again. He just closes his eyes and waits for her to go find him more food.

4:16:40 PM — Junior waits patiently, looking for mama to return with more food.

4:19:46 PMv — Mama returns and feeds junior another insect. Papa observes from a distance.

4:19:48 PM — Junior asks for more food. Papa ducks in anticipation of mama’s response.

Two-Tailed Swallowtail

A Two-Tailed Swallowtail butterfly got so involved with the flowers on the deck that it didn’t seem to notice Laurie had my camera. I’ve seen these butterflies flitting around, but they are normally skittish and usually don’t let you get near them with a camera.  Snails, on the other hand, are not the quickest critters around, therefore, other than hanging out in dark, wet, slimy places, they are easy to photograph.