The twig hanging over the water is a favorite perch for birds.
This Ruby-throated Hummingbird sits on the twig to rest on her way to the Lonicera blooming nearby.
The twig hanging over the water is a favorite perch for birds.
This Ruby-throated Hummingbird sits on the twig to rest on her way to the Lonicera blooming nearby.
This summer has been very scant on rainfall so far. The pond water level is currently low, and there is plenty of algae floating. But the rocks are always good places for sharing the sunshine. Female Mallard and Hooded Merganser have raised their young broods here, and shared the big rock today.
Royal Catchfly Silene regia makes its bright red flowers stand out among the white and purple wildflowers now blooming.
This family of plants was named 'catchfly' because it has a sticky seed pod behind the flower. Little flies, gnats, and other tiny insects get stuck on the sticky pod or stem.
Butterflies also pollinate this wildflower.
Barn Swallows hunt over the pond, where they catch flying insects mid-air. To do this efficiently, they fly with their wide beaks open.
This pair found a good amount of food here, and decided to make their nest nearby. They gathered mud from the shore to paste pieces of grasses to a vertical surface in a barn, outbuilding, or nearby structure.
When their eggs hatch, the pond area will be a resource for mosquitoes and other flying insects to feed to their chicks.
Sitting near the pond, one can gaze out at flowering plants among the green grasses, rushes, and reeds. Mountain Mint, Swamp Milkweed, and Queen Anne's Lace are among the ones blooming now.
Small yellow wildflowers, brightening the green grasses and rushes around the pond now, are River Loosestrife Lysimachia hybrida, or Lowland Yellow Loosestrife. This plant bloomed last year, and came back stronger with more stems this season. Lysmachias produce floral oil rather than nectar. These plants are also pollen hosts for Macropis bees; the bees specialize in using a mixture of pollen and floral oil to produce offspring. read more at U of MN Extension
Mallard female has been hiding her second clutch of eggs near the pond among grasses. Today she led all 6 hatched ducklings to the pond, where they paddled around and started to feed. They can eat seeds, stems, and roots of many different plants; also aquatic invertebrates such as worms, beetles, dragonflies, or insect larvae.
This dragonfly male 'Widow Skimmer' Libellula luctuosa shows off his handsome transparent wings with black and white structural coloration -- the production of color by microscopically structured surfaces fine enough to interfere with visible light.
The grass seedhead on the left is close to the camera and in front of the wing. But the rush stem behind the wing is showing clearly through the transparent wing while the skimmer rests, clasping that stem.
He is probably looking for prey -- other insects such as mosquitoes. To catch prey he will use his legs, and bring prey into his mouth with fangs.