The cost of photographing these fleshy folks was five yellow jacket stingers. More from Pig Trail…
nature
Beaten Paths
Chan Chan is an archeological site near Trujillo, Peru that predates the Incas. See more beaten paths, from Santa Barbara to Namibia…
Viridescent Carnivore
The pitcher plant is making the most of recent afternoon thunderstorms. Discover how…
New (Mantidae) Neighbors
Introduction to the mantid neighbors is the same as last year’s. More…
Perfect Anomalies
Gifts From the Garden
Capsicum under tender Piperaceae skin dries slowly so Gemini, Leo, and Cancer friends and family get lasting garden gifts. Keep reading and see the finalized gift…
The Orbs
Back from a week surfing, the honeydew now commandeer back door steps and hand rails. More orbs…
Trumpet Creeper Tsunami Hits Wrightsville Antique Shop
Trailing Ice Plant Flower, Delosperma cooperi
Dune Daisy Alien Spotted on New Smyrna Beach
Arboreal Revival
Winterville is a sleepy Georgia railroad town known for its spring Marigold Festival. The six miles between Winterville and Athens act as a buffer against ethnic diversity similar to Watkinsville, a host of Clarke County’s mass exodus during recent white flight.
As the housing bubble swelled, overzealous developers sharpened their aggregate blades, then sliced dendritic swaths throughout the forest dreaming of upper middle class homes adorned with large vehicles and requisite familial stick figures flaunting bloated carbon footprints. Oops.
Today, abandoned homeless subdivisions kneel before an arboreal revival. Sans traffic, the rolling hills are perfect for longboarding, stone stacking, or foraging.
While cruising down the hill, patches of red and black in the periphery become incredibly dense in some spots. This lonely bush benefitting from an economic downturn grows through an old hay bale originally intended to stem runoff. The land’s history reveals itself slowly.
Summer School Veggies
The okra is delicious, but after three inches it becomes woody and loses that unmistakable viscosity. Take a photo walk around the bed…
Flowers in the Hood
This afternoon I walked to school to check on our class vegetable bed and take some photos along the way. During the school year, the morning walk takes between ten and fifteen minutes. Avian neighbors’ songs become familiar, as do annual changes in foliage, and the comfortable smells of breakfast. Continue the tour…
Honeydew Melon, Cucumis melo
This is the Trellis Summer. Sun gold tomatoes at home and in our classroom bed find bambooed support culled from an invasion in the school’s wildlife habitat fit for a family of pandas. Ladders of hemp twine scale vertical bamboo cuts, which (so far) supply enough structure for the bite-sized alkaline orbs. But it’s the honeydew I’m worried about. More about my first go at honeydew…
Mimosa Sprout, Albizia julibrissin
This little sprout pokes through a sandy footprint on an island in the Oconee River. See more of this secluded spot…
Bartram’s Scrub-Hairstreak, Strymon acis
Egyptian Wandering Onion Sprouts, Allium cepa
To see more photos of this plant taken a year ago, click here.





















Summer on the porch offers a variety of delicacies.