Dandelion Life
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The plant rises from the seed.
The flower from the plant.
The seed from the flower.
The wind takes the seed.
The seed goes to earth.
In rain and shine.
Light and dark.
All is fine.
In sense.
© Mark Berkery … Click on those pictures for a closer look … and click again.
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A Few Flowers …
… and their lovers.

Big bad leopard beetle loving the strawflower early in the morning. No sign of trouble. … Hmm, pollen of gods.
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Some kind of wasp loving the sunflower. … Somewhere to wait out the wind, grab a bite and survey the landscape.

Shield bug loving the butterfly bush flowers, sitting in the sun, bouncing in the breeze. … Not a worry in the world.
Flowers need a bit of loving.
Love the flowers … or else.
Or else they’ll die.
© Mark Berkery … Click on those pictures for a closer look … and click again.
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Cold Bee
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There’s a cold wind off the sea that reaches inland and chills the garden.
The small creatures feel it, especially when the sun goes in.
But then the sun comes out again.
What a life …
© Mark Berkery … Click on those pictures for a closer look … and click again.
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Lemony Life

The more common kind of weevil visiting the decaying lemon. A female I believe, sitting unusually tall but with thin front legs.
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I often observe her with her rear end touching the lemon’s surface. Depositing eggs I think. The lemon serves a multitude it seems.

That would make sense. Also, a weighty rear end is economically supported on the ground, and keeps the head up and alert.

Here she’s grazing. Then she makes the perfect subject, too absorbed to notice any disturbance I make in her landscape.

Then there’s mating, and those long male legs come in handy to maintain position and balance on an otherwise precarious lemony world.

An other kind of weevil, or babies frolicking on a young lemony world. It’s hard to say without interfering …

Where the lemon attached to the tree a fungus grows from within, and he loves it. … Notice his long legs now, broad at front, apparently oversized.
When the lemons in the house start turning I put them to use in the garden.
Staked on bamboo or otherwise, they age in the sun and rain and eventually attract these tiny weevils.
They graze on the cracking skin and any fungus or mold that grows on it, absorbed in the business of survival.
When they stop still it’s usually for a time, time enough to observe and for a few shots anyway.
But once they are on the move there is no hope, fast and agile as any fly in the garden.
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It’s in the nature of form to move. Trick is to be still enough to catch it before it’s gone.
Though it’s essence never really leaves, nature returns anew, is never the same again.
When seen with a steady focus, to be imbued with the creative spark of life.
Click – Life On A Lemon – for the original.
© Mark Berkery … Click on those pictures for a closer look … and click again.
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Ancestral
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Such a lovely coloured flower … will give pollen to fortify and nectar to speed you on your way. … Spider’s gotta eat too.

A magnificent beast … free of any impatience, or willfulness … simply waiting with a sense of being, hungry or to reproduce …

And every now and then she gets up and wanders around her home in the mauve flowering. Being what she is, seeing what she sees.

Always with a touch to her early warning system, trip threads. … A flower, wonderful little home for a crab spider.
This crab spider has family all over this land, little clones of each other, appearing to my un-spider eyes.
After the struggle to survive the summer they are now mature at this time of year and take advantage of the native flowering.
Also called flower spiders, because they make great bases from which to attract a mate and feed, sitting waiting for an unlucky bee.
Ambush preying is a way of life for these little forms of life, they can’t help it, it’s their nature, instinctively.
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We do it too, prey, ambush, for some personal advantage perceived. Calculated … Instinctive nature made self conscious.
We people are lucky though, you could say, having potential to see beyond the instinctive.
Through the self made conscious. To the divine … or to divine purpose.
But purpose is not for the herd, an other instinctive manifestation.
© Mark Berkery … Click on those pictures for a closer look … and click again.
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