This morning as the sun shone through Grandmother Tree it lit up different areas of the bear’s smudge marks on the window. With a telephoto lens I picked out interesting compositions as the light changed. I ended up making over 100 images. These are the first few. What fun. I posted these images on Facebook and asked people to guess what they were seeing. So far no one has guessed correctly.
For the first time all summer, on Friday evening, I left the windows slightly open downstairs to let in some cool night air. I did not leave them open very much in case a bear wanted to get in.
When I woke up Saturday morning, I discovered that a bear had pushed in a window screen and left muddy artwork on some of my windows. Thankfully, it did not try to rip the window open.
Western Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly. The lifespan of adults is only 6 to 14 days! Look at how the wings have deteriorated on this one! Yet she is still beautiful and amazing. But really – how do carbon atoms consistently make themselves into these delicate beings? Every year. And especially here in the mountains where only a few weeks ago there was still snow and ice everywhere. Females will lay green shiny eggs on the underside of leaves on host plants where the larvae (caterpillars) will emerge to feed on the leaves. They will then become brown colored chrysalides that look wood-like, slung on branches and tree trunks, and hibernate over-winter. Depending on the weather, they will emerge as butterflies sometime in the springtime. She was just one of many tiny miracles that I encountered as a walked along a wooded path yesterday.