The intensity of fall colors surround the pond, manifesting in the foliage, berries, and even the bugs.
Bittersweet is a favorite of mine, not just for its vivid red and yellow, but for the little drama that is expressed with the peeling away of the yellow shell.
Anyone who takes pictures of dragonflies appreciates that nearly all varieties of them sit still and pose for the shutter bug. However, more than a counter challenge to their cooperation, is managing to achieve an image that does justice to the intricate netting of all four wings while simultaneously holding the streamline body in focus. I chose the shot below (of a Half-banded Toper couple) from perhaps twenty-five, which I took from various vantage points in an attempt to minimize background distraction, maximize the focus of the body and all eight wings, and produce variety in the background color – blue against the water, green against the far shoreline of the pond. In the end, I preferred the blue. This mating couple held their pose as I, in yoga-like pose, worked intently at this shot. All that said, it’s just okay. I’ll keep working at my skill here. (Or, perhaps I’ll invest in the 400 lens.)
Now about the couple…they are really stuck on each other. They not only sit in pose like this, but fly in the same posture. I don’t like to wonder if the under-fly is actually alive. It doesn’t move a wing. It just hangs in frozen suspension. Hmmm… But see its little arms gripping? The couple zips around the pond going from plant to plant stopping, I presume, for leaf nibbling. But again I wonder, why does only the upright one get to eat?
In shape and color the little beauty below most resembles the Nine-spotted Ladybug Beetle. Watching it poke around the parameters of this leaf took me back to the wonder of my childhood.
In no way does the picture below reveal the action of the moment. This caterpillar may as well have been a pioneer crossing the Rockies for all the effort it mustered to cross a two foot stretch of lawn. Up, over, and around, up, over, and through – it hauled itself with great determination and dexterity.





