The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20110701144451/http://blogs.salon.com:80/0003248/

Worms of Endearment
Part book tour diary, part earthworm love story

From Amy Stewart, author of
The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms


Click the calendar to read past entries:

July 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Jun   Aug

Home

Garden Blogs and Worm Links:


Subscribe to this blog in Radio:
Subscribe to "Worms of Endearment" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

E-mail this blog's author, Amy Stewart:
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
 

Thursday, July 01, 2004

GASP!  It's a posting from me!  I'm afraid that very mundane earning-a-living tasks have taken me away from this blog.  I'll probably be pretty sporadic for a while now.

Meanwhile, here's an interesting article on worms & agriculture in India.


1:03:03 PM    comment []

Sunday, June 13, 2004

Butterfly Rescue

I've been intensely focused on attracting butterflies to my garden this year.  Many larval plants--the plants where adult butterflies lay eggs--are impractical for my small space.  For instance, this Western Tiger Swallowtail likes willows and sycamores, both of which are much too large.  I have put in some milkweed, the preferred food of Monarch caterpillars, but I almost never see a Monarch in my garden.

It's much easier to plant nectar sources for adult butterflies--butterfly bush, pincushion flower, tall verbena, etc.  Anything with small flowers and a flat landing space is likely to attract a butterfly.  Still, the swallowtails drift through my garden but rarely stop to eat, in spite of the buffet I've put out for them. 

This swallowtail landed on a hydrangea bush yesterday. It seemed to hang from a flower, suspended by its proboscis--the long, narrow tube butterflies use to drink.  Its wings were wide open, and they did not flutter--the creature was utterly still except when a breeze moved it.  I inched close and realized that it was not drinking--the proboscis seemed to be stuck to an outer petal and not even inserted into the center of the flower, where I was not sure it would find much nectar anyway.  Was the butterfly stuck, trapped, tired, resting?  I didn't know.  I thought about rescuing it, urging it off the flower so it would fly away.  But I'd spent so much time wishing more butterflies would visit my garden that it seemed silly to shoo this one off.

It sure did look pretty against that light blue hydrangea, though, so I ran inside and got my camera, and also summonded Scott.  Fortunately, Scott does not find it at all unusual that I would be so concerned about the fate of one individual butterfly, so he followed me downstairs without hesitation.

When we got there, the butterfly was gone.  After a few minutes we noticed it on the ground, which is where I took this picture. Something was wrong.  We knew not to touch its wings, which are covered with fine, feathery scales that brush off easily.  Instead, we tried to use a stick to get it off the ground in hopes that it would still be able to fly.  It fluttered around a little but didn't move much.  Finally Scott came outside with a magazine, which I scooted underneath the creature.  That seemed to give it enough purchase to get it back into the air.  It flew to the top of the hydrangea, waited a minute, and then flew away.

This is, I think, my fourth weekend of Soil Soup brewing.  More on that soon.


10:21:33 AM    comment []

Sunday, May 30, 2004

It's almost impossible to take a good photograph of a garden in sunlight.  There's just too much white light bouncing around.  Even though I know this, the side garden was so beautiful today when the sun hit it that I ran for my camera.  I had a polarizing filter, which I thought would help, but as you can see, my serene and lovely garden looks like chaos in this picture.  Well, take my word for it, it really did look great.

Made another batch of Soil Soup.  This time I applied it only to the plants that needed the most help--roses, berries, new transplants.  I have noticed new blooms on several plants this week, including the roses, but to be perfectly fair and balanced I must also say that we had a good deep rain followed by days of warm sunshine, and that probably helped, too.


6:44:20 PM    comment []



© Copyright 2004 Amy Stewart. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Last update: 7/1/2004; 1:03:34 PM.
Powered by