Snake-headed Flatworm (Rhynchodemus sylvaticus), taken March 21, 2025, in Georgia, US
Takes your worm on a string and makes it SLIMY and BALD!!!!
Look at him. I love him. I showed him to my friend and was told he is pathetic, but that is just not the case. This is the ideal life form. With this, "would you love me if I was a worm" takes on a whole new meaning. Of course I would love you if you became this. With your stupid long nose and little light-sensing eyes. Perfect!!
Nosy Pill Woodlice (Armadillidium nasatum), taken February 26, 2025, in Georgia, US
A nice pill bug family of four, living the life underneath a log I flipped. They didn't do much, but I suppose I too would be stiff with terror if a giant flipped my dark, unmoving house over and exposed me to the elements! I put them back after I was done, and they probably went right back to whatever conversation they were having before I interrupted them, so no harm no foul!
Garden Ghost Spider (Hibana gracilis), taken April 4, 2025, in Georgia, US
A sleepy spider resting on a blade of grass. This lady didn't move at all while I was photographing her, and paid no mind to me crunching away in the leaves around her. While dozens of wolf spiders fled for their lives beneath me, she was living her best life, having a rejuvenating nap. I wish all spiders were this unbothered—they're so hard to photograph when they run away!
Red-winged Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus), males & juvenile male (2), taken February 25, 2025, in Georgia, US
More blackbirds!! Migrating flocks are still passing through all day, so there are plenty of opportunities to get pictures. The video is of one of them shuffling around on their preferred perch, participating in the cacophony of calls. They're so much louder in person...
He hath returned...
He visited again twice today. Not sure what he's doing, but during this visit he borbed it up on a branch in the sun and then looked at things on the ground for a couple minutes before flying off. It's possible he's just weathering the winter in the area, but it'd be nice if he was thinking about spending his first nesting season here :)
Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus), taken February 18, 2025, in Georgia, US
My feeder had a very large visitor this morning! Despite how close to the house it is, we get hawks perching on the feeder much more often than you would think. This guy spent over 20 minutes soaking in the late-morning sun and getting screamed at by hundreds of birds before he finally decided it was too loud. At one point a bluejay perched a few feet away in the nearby japanese maple and used up his entire arsenal of calls yelling at the hawk lol! It was extremely loud...
After a few minutes of him sunning, the smaller birds said fuck it and started eating again, and I got some decent video of him watching them flit around that I'll probably post later. I also got a video of him taking off, which I'll definitely post, but I have to figure out how to export the videos from my camera first! I've never taken video on this one before. So enjoy only photos for now!
White-throated Sparrows (Zonotrichia albicollis), taken January 10, 2025, in Georgia, US
Georgia got its first decent snow in years, so I sat outside in the freezing weather for hours yesterday and took pictures of the birds. Some of my favorites are of White-throated Sparrows—they're surprisingly photogenic for a bird their size!
White-jawed Jumping Spider (Hentzia mitrata), juvenile male, taken March 9, 2025, in Georgia, US
I love this small baby man with his bald patch on his head... It's a little too early for it to be jumping spider season, but I'm still occasionally seeing juveniles out and about. As April comes in, the magnolia greens will begin reaching adulthood and breeding! Mitrata waits until a little later in the year, but that just means I get to see the awkward teens for longer!
I've gotten some decent quality pics of cuckoo wasps with my clip-on macro lens, but I've never had the opportunity to try with my actual camera, so I have no idea if I'd have the same issue as you guys lol. I both love tiny bugs because they're usually surprisingly beautiful but also hate them because they're so small you need an $800 lens to get good pictures of them...
Here is the cuckoo I've gotten w/ my clip-on lens. They're honestly way darker green up close—it must be how the sun hits them!
i am photographing hymenopterans that are smaller and more indistinguishable than you could possibly imagine
Brave Squirrel...
Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristata), taken May 27, 2024, in Georgia, US
Nature's police, fittingly blue-colored! Sometimes the jays will sound the alarm to get everyone to leave the feeders so they get VIP access to all the seeds. Sometimes the jay alarm call is actually a starling, and all of the birds get double-tricked!
Tube-tailed Thrip (Genus Neurothrips), taken January 30, 2025, in Georgia, US
What a cool tiny beast!! I can't get over the fact that he wagged his little tail at me... So cute! In reality this guy is about 2 1/2mm long, so he's not very ferocious—unless you're a fungus! Most thrips, like this one, feed on fungus, but some are known to cause some damage to crops in large groups. I suspect this individual is N. magnafemoralis, but I don't know enough about thrips to be certain. The genus is certainly distinctive, however! Little boneless dinosaurs!
Wildlife photography of all kinds in no particular chronological order... call me North!All photos posted are taken by me, and everything that appears here is documented on iNaturalist as well.
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