Monday, June 18, 2007

Young But Older

I feel so old being 20 but yet I'm still so very young and I have a whole life ahead of me still waiting to be discovered and explored. Some days I'll feel like not doing a thing while on other days I feel like I can do anything. Maybe it's because I just realize everyday that is slowly going by without a trace but yet it's going by so fast. A contradiction that never seeks to stall itself. Time is a strange thing, yet if you think about it time doesn't truly exist. Without a 24 hour day period, without night or day, and without the turning of our planet, it doesn't exist but, neither would a lot of other things of course, but however, time does exist. This manifestation of the human mind grows longer and longer but yet again it's so shortly lived once it has passed us by. It's just weird to think that in 30 years I'll be 50 and when I was young time seemed much longer and slower but now that I realize the true workings of a year it seems to be going by even faster now that I grew up. Maybe it was just youth that made me perceive this slowing down of time and as I gradually grew time just slipped away because I didn't pay attention. The thing that is most strange to me is how the first twenty years took so long to obtain but now I realize how quickly these years are flying by for me anymore. I truly can't believe I'll be 21 in less than six months. These years, they don't feel like full years to me anymore like they used to for some strange reason but, it's just what it is and I accept it.

You can learn a lot from time when you look back upon history and see how everything has changed over the years, even in 3 years a lot changes. Even in six months the way you live today will change.....

Friday, June 15, 2007

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Ladybird

Convergent Ladybird
I just had to write about these little critters. I love going outside and finding them all over the place, up high in the trees or in the bushes. Also I just read some valuable information on these insects. Supposedly there are 350 different species of ladybugs just in America alone and all species are beneficial, throughout the world the amount of species hits the mark of 3,500 and only grow to a size of 1/16 of an inch big but sometimes a little bigger depending on location. ladybugs live and can be found almost anywhere in the world, they are very widespread there's no general place that they live in and they can come in a varity of colors.

Ladybugs scientific order name is Coleoptera and family name Coccinellidae. The name ladybird originates from the time of the Middle-Ages when these insects were bestowed upon a virgin girl which henced the name Ladybird or Ladybug.

Both Ladybirds and even their young are very beneficial insects for gardens or growing vegetables. Feeding on aphids, spider mites, small flies, and scale insects that can do serious harm to plant and tree life. In Califronia back in the 1980's where these pest roamed the land, were causing serious damage to the citrus trees. The Cottony-Cushion Scale bug from Australia began to spread throughout California's orange groves. When the orange industry became threatened they looked for a solution, an Australian ladybird which feeds only on these scale insects was imported to California and within a few years the scales were completely eaten and under control. I read in my new entomology book, to release 1,500 ladybugs per every 1000 square feet of garden. Do the math, half is 750 beetles per 500 square feet, a quarter is 375 beetles per 250 square feet, and since 375 is an odd number I have to round for an eighth which is 188 beetles per 125 square feet, you can get more intricate than that if you'd like but that's the basics for smaller gardens that I could think of at the moment.

A female will lay 200 to 1,000 eggs over a three-month period. Females will lays their eggs on plants that are infested with aphids or scales. The eggs are round, tiny, and yellow and in clusters of 10 to 30. Once hatched, the larvae will travel as far as 40 feet in search for prey over a twenty-day period. A ladybird larvae looks like a tiny six legged alligator with short spines on each segment, but the skin is rippled and saturated in colors of black and orange. When ready to turn from a larva to beetle a ladybird larva will find a place to metamorph into a cacoon like pupa which is a week long process or shorter. For ladybugs to thrive and reproduce they need beneficial nectar and pollen from flowers as a food source.

Eggs









Larva
The life cycle of a ladybug is very similar to a butterfly's life cycle.
The eggs hatch into a caterpillar( larva), then metamorphsis takes place in a cacoon( pupa), then turns into a butterfly, just in this case a ladybug.
Pupa










Once an adult, a ladybug can live from several weeks to a few months old. If adults are late bloomers or happen to survive longer than expected, they will hibernate over the winter with hundreds to thousands of ladybugs in tree trunks. A ladybugs habitat consists of hegdes, trees, gardens, flowers, tall grass, fields, and anywhere else containing vegetation and a food source.

Though the common ladybird species are generally similar in appearance they differ in the number of spots and in color. Ladybirds have been known to have as many spots ranging from 2 to 22 spots on the backs of their wings. Though the way you can tell if a ladybird is a ladybird is not only by their appearance but also by their shortness of their legs. Every ladybug has the same short legged bodies while other garden beetles will vary in leg length.

When a ladybug becomes threatened from a predator it will release a yellow liquid, that liquid is a defense mechanism, whenever a bird or lizard eats a ladybird, the ladybug will release the liquid while being eaten inside the mouth, thus delivering a nasty taste forcing the predator to not eat them.

I have a trick if you want to catch one, hold the palm of your hand underneath one and take your other hand and touch it, grab it, or whatever just make them fall. The ladybug should play dead and fall right into your hand and then you get to enjoy spectating them until it flys away, if you let it fly away.If you want to attract ladybirds, artificial food can made by diluting a little honey with a small amount of water and mixing in a tiny bit of brewer's yeast or bee pollen. After making the solution smear small amounts onto pieces of waxpaper and fasten them to plants in your garden. Replace the food every 5 to 6 days or whenever moldy. Keep any extra food refrigerated between feeds. Discontinue use when your ladybug population becomes established.

Here's a few species I took some photos of and if you happen to notice they're all on the same tree, ladybugs love Huisache trees.


Asian Harmonia Ladybird


Twice Stabbed Ladybird


Ashgrey Ladybird


Monday, June 4, 2007

Non-native



No this sunflower is not native to Texas instead this flower came from the seeds we eat. My David's sunflower bag happened to spill some seeds and this was the result from it. The rest were eaten by the birds but this one seed happened to survive and sprout this beautifully gorgeous sunflower. Sadly, this picture was taken two weeks ago and now the sunflower is decaying of age but is dropping new seedlings for a garden of sunflowers soon to come.....

Sunday, June 3, 2007

NBA Finals: Spurs vs. Cavaliers



So here we are once again in the NBA Finals going up against Cleveland. This is going to be an interesting series since the Cavaliers head coach Mike Brown worked under our head coach Gregg Popovich as an assistant coach with the Spurs. On top of that the Cavs are a fantastic team but let's see what the finals have to offer. I believe the Spurs are going to pull a fourth championship for San Antonio. I can't wait for the finals to start, the Spurs have a long journey with many difficult obstacles ahead of them, time to begin the show.





If you'd like to read some information about what has been going on in the 2007 playoffs, finals, or about the two teams, click on the link below.




Bill Russell's Blog




Finals Schedule

Game 1: Thursday, June 7, Spurs 85, Cavaliers 76

Game 2: Sunday, June 10, Spurs 103, Cavaliers 92

Game 3: Tuesday, June 12, Spurs 75, Cavaliers 72

Game 4: Thursday, June 14, Spurs 83, Cavaliers 82

SPURS WON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YYYYYYAAAYYYYY!!!!!

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Wildflowers

I'm back from the lake and full of photos, click on any to enlarge.


Mealy Sage Salvia


Wild Oleander




Long-headed Coneflower


Wild Onion


Prairie Verbena


Texas Thistle


Texas Lantana