Mostrando postagens com marcador monarch. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador monarch. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 6 de junho de 2018

IN SEARCH OF A MONARCH


A morning, from early seven to noon.


Alone in the field, searching for monarchs, 


and finding instead, early tiny skipper butterflies that measure at least half an inch. 




Waiting quietly for a blue dragonfly to perch again, on the same blade of light green native grass, (on any blade of grass, for clear view)






for a pileated woodpecker to feed a baby, once again, way up on a barren tree. 


Waiting for a young deer to finish grazing the roadside before moving on, and even then, stopping by his side, for a photo of no fear. 



A loud noise and a jump in the forest.

Enchanted with an apparition, reflection of pink red-purple above a common pond.








In spite of Cartesian ID fevers, 
endless competitions in naming games,
mosquitoes, flies
& doubt, 


At the end of the road, a monarch, in a barren land of salty trail stone.








Nothing much in this world is better than the solitude of this morning.


sábado, 4 de novembro de 2017

sábado, 13 de dezembro de 2014

ASCLEPIAS AND MONARCH BUTTERFLIES

Dilemas do norte e do sul
Milkweed in winter, Maryland, USA

Seeds by the wind

Preparations
 
Milkweed (Asclepias sp.) – the only plant where monarch butterflies lay their eggs, and so, essential for the Monarch’s survival. Seeds are wind-pollinated, pods are silky smooth inside, rough and edgy on the outside. Destruction of habitat where the plant grows, threatens the butterfly in North America.
Monarch in Brasil

Monarch in hometown

The only monarch of the South American summer
In Brasil, algodaozinho do campo (asclepias currasavica) is used as a medicinal plant. This fact, combined with habitat destruction, also threatens the survival of the Monarch butterfly there.
Compositions

Futures

Aliens