Posted by James on June 25, 2011, 11:22 am
Billy, me thinks you best take your medicine now.....
-------------------------------------------------
You bored, David? You country types get so lonely you'll even talk to
Jehovah Witnesses. Enough of the "consciously challenged" arrive at our
shores without you trying to talk them up out of the surf. The locals
here still rue the day that they let the weirdoes up past the high water
mark.
Or, were you going to entice it in, and then club the little beastie,
and be done with it?
Shall I put on some water to heat?
Fertilizer in a box? Quel imbécile!
"To forget how to dig the earth and to tend the soil is to forget
ourselves."
- Mahatma Gandhi
--
- Billy
Posted by Billy on June 25, 2011, 2:12 pm
> Billy, me thinks you best take your medicine now.....
Ay, lad, I need all my strength for the hard day's work I have in front
of me, but I can't find the fookin' bottle opener. How can a man become
bellicose without his pint? It frees the body from the tyranny of the
mind, don'cha know.
Methinks that you may wish the boon yourself, after your orthographical
faux pas with the word "methinks". Not from around here? Don't beat
yourself up too much about it. I understood what you meant;O)
Today I'm off after butterfly plants, but I'll take my sack and club
with me, just in case I, perchance, come upon a beastie.
---
The female butterfly searches for specific larval food plants on which
she must lay her eggs. Some butterflies, like the Monarch, will lay a
single egg on the leaf while others may lay clusters of eggs together.
Here are the larval plants of some common California butterflies:
Aristolochia californica - Pipevine Swallowtail
Asclepias species - Monarch
Ceanothus - Pale Tiger Swallowtail, California Hairstreak, California
Tortoiseshell
Eriogonum ŒGrande Rubescens' - Acmon Blue
Lavatera & Mallow sp. - Painted Lady, West Coast Lady and Common
Checkered Skipper
Mimulus sp. & Penstemon heterophyllus - Common Buckeye
Quercus - California Sister, Gray Hairstreak & Mournful Duskywing
Salix sp. - Mourning Cloak, Lorquin's Admiral & Western Tiger Swallowtail
Sidalcea malviflora - West Coast Lady
Spiraea sp. - Spring Azur
Common Nectar Plants for Adult Butterflies
The following plants provide a food source to a variety of adult
butterflies year-round. Providing nectar plants in early spring is
important for the early emerging Pipevine Swallowtail, while the Monarch
and Skippers benefit from the late season bloomers. Many larval plants
perform double duty as great nectar plants for adults.
Achillea sp. (Yarrow) - Spring/Summer/ Fall
Aster sp. (Aster) - Summer/Fall
Bidens sp. (Bur-Marigold) - Spring/Summer/Fall
Buddleia sp. (Butterfly Bush) - Summer
Ceratostigma sp. (Plumbago) - Summer/Fall
Convolvulus sabatius (Ground Morning Glory) - Summer
Erigeron glaucus (Seaside Daisy) - Spring/Summer
Lantana sp. (Lantana) - Spring/Summer/Fall
Lavandula sp. (Lavender) - Spring/Summer
Leucanthemum maximum (Shasta Daisy) - Summer/Fall
Limonium sp. (Statice) - Spring/Summer/Fall
Origanum sp. (Oregano) - Summer
Salvia sp. (Sage) - Spring/Summer/Fall
Scabiosa sp. (Pincushion Flower) - Spring/Summer/Fall
Sedum ŒAutumn Joy' (Stonecrop) - Summer/Fall
Solidago rugosa ŒFireworks' (Goldenrod) - Summer/Fall
Verbena bonariensis, V. rigida (Verbena) - Spring/Summer/Fall
--
Be a good lad, and put a tinnie in the esky for me, won't you?
Tag
>
> -------------------------------------------------
>
> You bored, David? You country types get so lonely you'll even talk to
> Jehovah Witnesses. Enough of the "consciously challenged" arrive at our
> shores without you trying to talk them up out of the surf. The locals
> here still rue the day that they let the weirdoes up past the high water
> mark.
> Or, were you going to entice it in, and then club the little beastie,
> and be done with it?
> Shall I put on some water to heat?
>
> Fertilizer in a box? Quel imbécile!
>
> "To forget how to dig the earth and to tend the soil is to forget
> ourselves."
> - Mahatma Gandhi
--
- Billy
Mad dog Republicans to the right. Democratic spider webs to the left. True
conservatives, and liberals not to be found anywhere in the phantasmagoria
of the American political landscape.
America is not broke. The country is awash in wealth and cash.
It's just that it's not in your hands. It has been transferred, in the
greatest heist in history, from the workers and consumers to the banks
and the portfolios of the uber-rich.
<http://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/statements/2011/mar/10/michael-moore
/michael-moore-says-400-americans-have-more-wealth-/>
Posted by Mysterious Traveler on June 29, 2011, 1:52 pm
On 06/25/2011 01:12 PM, Billy wrote:
>> Billy, me thinks you best take your medicine now.....
> Ay, lad, I need all my strength for the hard day's work I have in front
> of me, but I can't find the fookin' bottle opener. How can a man become
> bellicose without his pint? It frees the body from the tyranny of the
> mind, don'cha know.
> Methinks that you may wish the boon yourself, after your orthographical
> faux pas with the word "methinks". Not from around here? Don't beat
> yourself up too much about it. I understood what you meant;O)
> Today I'm off after butterfly plants, but I'll take my sack and club
> with me, just in case I, perchance, come upon a beastie.
> ---
> The female butterfly searches for specific larval food plants on which
> she must lay her eggs. Some butterflies, like the Monarch, will lay a
> single egg on the leaf while others may lay clusters of eggs together.
> Here are the larval plants of some common California butterflies:
> Aristolochia californica - Pipevine Swallowtail
> Asclepias species - Monarch
> Ceanothus - Pale Tiger Swallowtail, California Hairstreak, California
> Tortoiseshell
> Eriogonum ŒGrande Rubescens' - Acmon Blue
> Lavatera& Mallow sp. - Painted Lady, West Coast Lady and Common
> Checkered Skipper
> Mimulus sp.& Penstemon heterophyllus - Common Buckeye
> Quercus - California Sister, Gray Hairstreak& Mournful Duskywing
> Salix sp. - Mourning Cloak, Lorquin's Admiral& Western Tiger Swallowtail
> Sidalcea malviflora - West Coast Lady
> Spiraea sp. - Spring Azur
> Common Nectar Plants for Adult Butterflies
> The following plants provide a food source to a variety of adult
> butterflies year-round. Providing nectar plants in early spring is
> important for the early emerging Pipevine Swallowtail, while the Monarch
> and Skippers benefit from the late season bloomers. Many larval plants
> perform double duty as great nectar plants for adults.
> Achillea sp. (Yarrow) - Spring/Summer/ Fall
> Aster sp. (Aster) - Summer/Fall
> Bidens sp. (Bur-Marigold) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Buddleia sp. (Butterfly Bush) - Summer
> Ceratostigma sp. (Plumbago) - Summer/Fall
> Convolvulus sabatius (Ground Morning Glory) - Summer
> Erigeron glaucus (Seaside Daisy) - Spring/Summer
> Lantana sp. (Lantana) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Lavandula sp. (Lavender) - Spring/Summer
> Leucanthemum maximum (Shasta Daisy) - Summer/Fall
> Limonium sp. (Statice) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Origanum sp. (Oregano) - Summer
> Salvia sp. (Sage) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Scabiosa sp. (Pincushion Flower) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Sedum ŒAutumn Joy' (Stonecrop) - Summer/Fall
> Solidago rugosa ŒFireworks' (Goldenrod) - Summer/Fall
> Verbena bonariensis, V. rigida (Verbena) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> --
With this drought I doubt there will be many butterflies or their
offspring this year. The southern, southeastern and southwestern
United States and even Northern Mexico is dried out so bad hardly
any new growth is available for any type of living creature to
thrive on. No insects for the Mexican Free-tailed Bat can crash
their populations. Dear, Bear and Mountain Lion are invading cities
and towns looking for food.
The Monarch Butterfly has to travel right through the worst part of
the drought and barely any will survive if conditions don't change
for the better soon. There is a prediction of rain coming from the
Gulf Coast around the end of the month, but I'll believe it when
I see it.
Desert West Texas
--
Posted by Mysterious Traveler on June 29, 2011, 1:52 pm
On 06/25/2011 01:12 PM, Billy wrote:
>> Billy, me thinks you best take your medicine now.....
> Ay, lad, I need all my strength for the hard day's work I have in front
> of me, but I can't find the fookin' bottle opener. How can a man become
> bellicose without his pint? It frees the body from the tyranny of the
> mind, don'cha know.
> Methinks that you may wish the boon yourself, after your orthographical
> faux pas with the word "methinks". Not from around here? Don't beat
> yourself up too much about it. I understood what you meant;O)
> Today I'm off after butterfly plants, but I'll take my sack and club
> with me, just in case I, perchance, come upon a beastie.
> ---
> The female butterfly searches for specific larval food plants on which
> she must lay her eggs. Some butterflies, like the Monarch, will lay a
> single egg on the leaf while others may lay clusters of eggs together.
> Here are the larval plants of some common California butterflies:
> Aristolochia californica - Pipevine Swallowtail
> Asclepias species - Monarch
> Ceanothus - Pale Tiger Swallowtail, California Hairstreak, California
> Tortoiseshell
> Eriogonum ŒGrande Rubescens' - Acmon Blue
> Lavatera& Mallow sp. - Painted Lady, West Coast Lady and Common
> Checkered Skipper
> Mimulus sp.& Penstemon heterophyllus - Common Buckeye
> Quercus - California Sister, Gray Hairstreak& Mournful Duskywing
> Salix sp. - Mourning Cloak, Lorquin's Admiral& Western Tiger Swallowtail
> Sidalcea malviflora - West Coast Lady
> Spiraea sp. - Spring Azur
> Common Nectar Plants for Adult Butterflies
> The following plants provide a food source to a variety of adult
> butterflies year-round. Providing nectar plants in early spring is
> important for the early emerging Pipevine Swallowtail, while the Monarch
> and Skippers benefit from the late season bloomers. Many larval plants
> perform double duty as great nectar plants for adults.
> Achillea sp. (Yarrow) - Spring/Summer/ Fall
> Aster sp. (Aster) - Summer/Fall
> Bidens sp. (Bur-Marigold) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Buddleia sp. (Butterfly Bush) - Summer
> Ceratostigma sp. (Plumbago) - Summer/Fall
> Convolvulus sabatius (Ground Morning Glory) - Summer
> Erigeron glaucus (Seaside Daisy) - Spring/Summer
> Lantana sp. (Lantana) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Lavandula sp. (Lavender) - Spring/Summer
> Leucanthemum maximum (Shasta Daisy) - Summer/Fall
> Limonium sp. (Statice) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Origanum sp. (Oregano) - Summer
> Salvia sp. (Sage) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Scabiosa sp. (Pincushion Flower) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> Sedum ŒAutumn Joy' (Stonecrop) - Summer/Fall
> Solidago rugosa ŒFireworks' (Goldenrod) - Summer/Fall
> Verbena bonariensis, V. rigida (Verbena) - Spring/Summer/Fall
> --
With this drought I doubt there will be many butterflies or their
offspring this year. The southern, southeastern and southwestern
United States and even Northern Mexico is dried out so bad hardly
any new growth is available for any type of living creature to
thrive on. No insects for the Mexican Free-tailed Bat can crash
their populations. Dear, Bear and Mountain Lion are invading cities
and towns looking for food.
The Monarch Butterfly has to travel right through the worst part of
the drought and barely any will survive if conditions don't change
for the better soon. There is a prediction of rain coming from the
Gulf Coast around the end of the month, but I'll believe it when
I see it.
Desert West Texas
--