| Stuart's Signal Hill Trail head |
| goldenrod |
| sweet everlasting |
| switch grass flowers pale yellow |
| purple gerardia |
| sunflowers |
| look closely for the gray "deer foot" moss between the blades of grass |
| the edge of the woods the last field before the trail to Lewis house. |
| field seen from the edge of woods where the Lewis house stead was. |
| back into the woods |
| lichen on the rocks and bark in the woods |
| in bright sun the great lobelia's blue flowers by the creek |
| by the creek blue flowers of great lobelia, lower right side |
| blue flower great lobelia at the edge of creek |
| closer view of the great lobelia |
| remarkable grass going to seed |
| Stuart's hill today |
| brown and orange butterflies are called Pearl Crescents (Phyciodes tharos) in the grass field on white asters |
| two of these pearl crescent butterflies were the size of a quarter or smaller |
| "red velvet ant" that raced along the trail running from my camera is actually a female wasp |
| this wasp lays eggs on bumble bee larvae and have a sting that hurts so much it's also called a Cow Killer wasp. |
| Keith marching along beside me on the trail through the field |
| Proof I had company |
| there he is the little frog or toad that jumped on the trail |


1 comment:
https://insects.tamu.edu/fieldguide/cimg344.html
Red Velvet Ant is a wingless wasp which can sting and cause a pain so painful it is said it could kill a cow!
Glad we didn't try to pick her up today.
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