Poet, Playwright, Workshop Facilitator
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Welcome to daily nature photo and creative writing blog, #NewThisDay

Welcome to my daily nature photo blog

Writing from My Photo Stream ~ Kelly DuMar

 

#NewThisDay Writing From My Photo Stream

Feather in the morning meadow

Feather in the morning meadow

. . . How strangely like a churchyard skull
The thing that's there amongst the leaves! . .

~ Padraic Colum, excerpt from “Hornets

https://environment.arlingtonva.us/2016/09/bald-faced-hornets/

https://environment.arlingtonva.us/2016/09/bald-faced-hornets/

You can easily spot the papery, piñata like nests hanging high in the leafless trees in November. This one hangs by the wetlands of the Charles where the herons fish. We walked early under the dull sky and found a host of feathers in the meadow grass; a bird lost to its prey. I have wondered about the nests. Today, I looked them up. They have their role in the ecosystem, they’re built of belonging and a role to play. They hunt other insects, some pests. And they are pollinators too. I walked for over an hour, feeling fine today. Excited for the holiday. Sailed through a few hours of work. The youngest came home and we did errands and chatted happily. I brought our Thanksgiving peels and leftovers to the pigs at Unity Farm. I meant to walk, again, with my daughter, but napped instead, in the dusky time of late afternoon, and I felt the cozy feeling of holiday time and the excitement of our journey tomorrow. I was glad for the nap. But my daughter and the dogs got a fun visit with the beaver that I missed. Oh! and I almost forgot! How lucky I was, first thing this morning, to see from my landing on the Charles across the slim river to the other bank, not one, not two, but three deer slip into the ripples and swim across to my bank, and bounce away with their white tails flashing into the wetland woods. They must sleep in the bed of dried grass of the other bank. I love the ferns, in every season. The beaver and the deer, who undoubtedly will find their hungry way to my evergreen shrubs, and the hornets in their homes like “churchyard skulls.”

Bald-faced Hornets
September 15, 2016
By Alonso Abugattas

Bald-faced Hornets (Dolichovespula maculata) have a mostly undeserved reputation for being vicious, pests and safety hazards. They are actually fairly beneficial insects with a role in the environment. Sometimes called White-faced Hornets, Bull Wasps, or Blackjackets, these wasps are actually not true hornets, but large aerial yellowjackets.

They mostly go unnoticed and cause no issues until suddenly someone becomes aware of their large paper nests and get scared. Now these insects, which have been living in that same place throughout the earlier part of the spring and summer causing no trouble, are seen as a danger and something to be feared and destroyed.
— https://environment.arlingtonva.us/2016/09/bald-faced-hornets/
Kelly DuMarComment