Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts

Thursday, August 21, 2014

The Dragonfly and the Frog

This story starts with mosquitoes. In late spring, our yard was full of them. I think I went through a whole can of Deep Woods Off in one week. Then, much to my delight, I woke up one morning in early summer to find the yard full of dragonfly. I really mean full. They were everywhere. I couldn't move without a cloud of them moving in front of me. We can sit at the fire today and watch clouds of them fly above us. The mosquitoes mostly stopped being a problem.

A couple weeks later, a massive amount of frogs showed up in the yard. They too, were everywhere. Hiding in the garden, the lawn and even in the gravel of the sideyard and drive. One day I stood in one spot and was able to turn around in a circle and take pictures of 9 different frogs around me and frogs are good at hiding! They are entertaining and come in at least 4 colour patterns that I have seen. Some are small, some are huge. All of them panic when people or dogs are on the move. After a day or two, the dogs knew we did not want them to hunt the frogs and most of them were resisting the urge.

I was as delighted with the frogs as I was with the dragonfly. Until last week. I was standing at the raspberry patch, eating berries when a frog came summersaulting out of the nursery and landed on his feet in the drive right at my feet. My firtst thought was, WOW, that little guy can jump high! Then I looked down and saw the dragonfly sticking out of his mouth. Not very much of the dragonfly either. Not sure why I didn't make the connection before I saw it but I have it now.

It is officially open season on frogs in our yard. I have released the 4-legged frog hunters, who are not normally allowed to hunt in the garden, in hope of giving the dragonfly a fighting chance. And so I don't see the mosquito population double overnight.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Got bugs?

I wouldn't be able to call myself a gardener if I didn't have a few conversations about bugs every season. Linda and I actually spend more time talking about bugs than I like. I am sure she feels the same.

I am lucky. I don't have the variety of bugs in my garden that Linda has. And I have bush that the bugs prefer to live in so many never show up in my garden. Although I still get my share!

More often than not, we are talking about the bad side of bugs. This perfect little hive start is the good side of bugs. I love finding this kind of thing. Nests, hives and any other little bits they leave around for us. I am not sure what caused them to abandon this before completion or how it ended up on our firepit patio (might have had something to do with the lawn mower!) but I am glad I found it before it got squished. It is tiny, light, delicate, paper thin and perfect. It will make an excellent decorative addition to any of my plant pots... provided a dog doesn't snap it up.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Beneficial Bugs

The addition of Dahlia seems to have brought with it an abundance of bees in my garden this year and I love bees. Bees are the reason I have so many different cross pollinated Delphinium in the Nursery that brought all of the hummingbirds this year. I also love hummingbirds and for years we have fed them in the Bird Sanctuary but this year we didn't have to. The Delphinium patch was bringing them in droves all season without any help from the feeders. We had bald-faced hornets show up and nest as well. Once I looked them up and found out they ate aphids and were not aggressive, we let them stay and my roses were aphid free this year. I don't think they eat thrips though but that is for another post... on not so beneficial bugs. I think if I had to pick the three most beneficial bugs in my garden this year, it would be the bees, the hornets and the earthworms. With all of the compost I added last year, this year, there were more of all three.