The sun up above does feel like the ball of fire it is, today when the thermometer stands at 100 degrees. Summer caught up with itself and arrived with stored up (solar) energy!
It was too late to take a walk, on a day like this, but I did it. Maybe it was the heat that made the phrase “ball of fire” come to my mind as I watched a spider mite racing around on a blackberry flower, never stopping. What can a mite accomplish if it never pauses? It’s the little smudge appearing in a different spot in each of the shots below.
I also looked at the bees and flowers. I saw a syrphid fly and had to learn all over again when I got home that it was not a bee. In the process I learned that in the United States alone there are 4,000 species of bees. Here is another insect I don’t know… Is it a wasp or a fly? At least, I know it’s not a bee. [A year later, my Seek app thinks it’s a Western Paper Wasp.] (below)
I also can’t remember what this shrub is that all three insects are posing on. [So fast! My first commenter reminded me that it is cotoneaster.] Maybe I never have known. But I didn’t really want to spend today doing insect or plant identification. I need to wash the dishes and strip the bathroom floor! So if any of you know about my insect or shrub perhaps you can tell me.

Most of the salsify have scattered their seeds, but some flowers are still opening.
Mustard plants eight feet tall are growing out of the drying-up creek, along with lots of thistles. What is that orange spot that catches the eye…? Not a piece of trash, surprisingly, but California poppies! I’ve never seen them down there before.
All of this life, in many colors, pushing forth. I wondered… if I focus my camera on one small part of the very ugliest thistle, might I see something pretty? I did:
Last night at church we had a thanksgiving service for a couple celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary. When the husband retired from being a professor and a full-time Orthodox priest in Michigan, they moved from Michigan to California to be near their children. The wife said it was as though she had died and gone to heaven. 🙂 Since then they have been part-time participants in three parishes, and from all three of them people came to congratulate and rejoice with them.
I had been to only one other Moleben of Thanksgiving ever before, which was prayed for my husband and me in thanks and praise for God’s faithfulness during our 40 years of marriage. That was already seven years ago! This service was a joy – I was so happy to be part of it and to pray with them.
I had mixed up the time and arrived an hour early, which was kind of nice because I got to chat with the husband and his son a bit. The son was getting the barbecue ready for the party that would happen after the service. We were enjoying the shade of this beautiful catalpa tree whose flowers smelled like the fancy dessert was baking in the oven nearby. But this picture shows what my daughter told me about iPhone cameras, that they distort the sides of the image. Do you see how the buildings on the sides are both leaning in? Okay, now go back and enjoy the tree.
Before I go to my housework, I will have a tall glass of water, and before that, I’ll give you a little lotus weed in warm summery tones. I’ll meet you back here on a slightly cooler day.
Is that Cotoneaster? For your insects I cannot give any suggestions. At about 10 pm tonight I think the air will be nice for a walk for me – well, maybe it will happen a little earlier. The Thanksgiving for 50 years sounds very sweet. May on-going thanksgiving be yours as well for all that your dear marriage brought forth.
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Yes, it IS cotoneaster! And I think you were the one who told me that the first time, lo these many years ago… I forget that it is not the only species of plant in my neighborhood with that name, which probably confuses me, too. Thank you again!
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There is a huge old catalpa tree that we walk past on our daily walks. Every year I look forward to when it blooms because of that glorious scent!
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The pic of your shadow is marvelous! It strongly brought back Stevenson’s “My Shadow” children’s poem to my mind and heart.
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Wow, I can’t imagine going for a walk in 100 degree heat! So many kinds of insects in the world. My son and I like looking things up as far as birds, insects and plants. God’s creativity is never ending. Stay safe in that heat! (It was in the 60’s here today. Nice walking weather!)
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Oh, I wouldn’t walk at 100 degrees. It was well below 80 when I set out, and 80 is my limit — but if I lived somewhere more humid, I wouldn’t walk at 80 either! Most of the day it stayed below 80 in the downstairs part of the house, 20 degrees or more cooler than outdoors.
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Could your insect be a yellow-jacket wasp?
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Yellow jackets are the most common wasp around here but they are more patterned…
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You write so beautifully. Sometimes, when I read your blog I have to wipe away tears.
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You are very kind to tell me that, Matt — I mean, that it moves you. Glory to God!
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