• Monarch Butterfly Hiding in the Mugwort Weeds (17-May-2025)

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    Backyard Springtime Nature in New Jersey.

    My first sighting of a Monarch Butterfly this year. Of course, I didn’t have the right camera or lens when I saw it but took the shot anyways. With a camera having a 100-megapixel sensor, you have a lot of leeway to crop in. All most as if you have a longer telephoto lens. I do have lots of Milkweed plants growing in the wildflower meadow. I hope to have images of Monarch Butterflies feeding when more flowers start blooming.

    Uncropped Image (11656 x 8742) of a Monarch Butterfly Hiding in the Mugwort Weeds. Image taken with a Hasselblad X2d camera and 75 mm f/3.4 lens (ISO 800, f/8, 1/250 sec).
    Cropped Image (2403 x 1802) of a Monarch Butterfly Hiding in the Mugwort Weeds. Image taken with a Hasselblad X2d camera and 75 mm f/3.4 lens (ISO 800, f/8, 1/250 sec).
    Cropped Image (900 x 675) of a Monarch Butterfly Hiding in the Mugwort Weeds. Image taken with a Hasselblad X2d camera and 75 mm f/3.4 lens (ISO 800, f/8, 1/250 sec).

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  • Mating Pair of False Milkweed Bugs on a False Sunflower Leaf (15-May-2025)

    Backyard Springtime Nature in New Jersey.

    Even before it was officially spring, I’ve been seeing lots of what I thought were Milkweed Bugs. It didn’t really make any sense since the Milkweed hadn’t even started growing yet. Today, I took a macro image of a mating pair of the bugs and did a visual search on Bing. The search pointed me to Lygaeus turcicus, the False Milkweed Bug. The False Milkweed Bug feeds on seeds of the False Sunflower. Last year I had a large patch of False Sunflower plants next to the house. The False Sunflower plants apparently do a good job of self-seeding, since there are even more of the plants this year and they are already 3 feet high. It is a section that for several years I had a hard time of growing anything being under a Sycamore tree. The Sycamore tree died (anthracnose) so the section now does get more sun. This pair of False Milkweed Bugs are mating on a False Sunflower leaf.

    False Milkweed Bug (Lygaeus turcicus). Image taken with a Hasselblad X2d camera and 38 mm f/2.5 lens with a 9 mm macro extension tube (ISO 3200, f/11, 1/160 sec).

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