View allAll Photos Tagged CRICKET
A pair of Steel-blue Cricket Hunter Wasps circled my yard for several days. The only place they would stop was on the orange flowers of the Butterfly Weed.
They strongly resemble Blue Mud Dauber Wasps, which have a longer pedicel (the "stalk" that connects their thorax to their abdomen).
Butterfly Weed is a native plant species, and my favorite Michigan wildflower. Ironically, I have never seen a butterfly land on the flowers, although it does attract a variety of wasps and hornets.
Earth Day 2023
Giornata della Terra
cerchiamo di non distruggerla ...
Tettigoniidae
Dark bush-cricket
Pholidoptera griseoaptera - nymph
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sorry, to me is very difficult to visit people that always only leave a fav without commenting...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As has happened several times in the past few summers, I discovered a grasshopper on a houseplant, which I carefully brought onto the terrace and placed on the echinacea. I put a few drops of water on the flower and the little guy drank and later nibbled on one of the flower petals.
These crickets were enjoying a daisy snack until I came along and pointed the camera at them : ))
Best viewed in large size
In many parts of the world, particularly China, crickets are thought to bring good luck.
Have a fabulous Friday
Orthoptera is an order of insects that comprises the grasshoppers, locusts, and crickets, including closely related insects, such as the bush crickets or katydids and wētā. The order is subdivided into two suborders: Caelifera – grasshoppers, locusts, and close relatives; and Ensifera – crickets and close relatives.
Baby crickets on a daisy flower.
The fires (California ) are terrible, I hope they are all put out soon .
Very small cricket on a rose petal.
Macro
Going to be hot here for the next few days 40-41c
Have a nice day
A white fence encircling the cricket oval, that at first sight looked like a picket fence. On closer inspection, the fence turned out to be tubular aluminium.
The horizontal lines in the background is a corrugated iron walls of a transportable building with an alternate view of the oval, likely for sporting commentators.
You want to shoot a tiny little flower .. Suddenly, you find a smaller insect living there. These insects are too small for you to see unless you really take a closer look.
Have you ever heard a cricket song? Here is one:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJKjFCIAF6s
An amazing cricket song slowed down
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qwxa7ZCEBQs
Looool .. got you.
Finally .. a love cricket song .. sooo wonderful
www.youtube.com/watch?v=YbIGm1NCb0U
The lyrics are written in the comments to this video.
Hope you like it.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sorry, to me is very difficult to reciprocate your visit if you only leave a fav without commenting...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From the possible subjects and ideas today, I chose this little cricket ball. It is about 1 1/2 inches in diameter and with its silicone base keeps insects off my drink. In the background its alter ego the tennis ball.
If you zoom in, you can see what I assume to be cricket legs barely out of the corners of it’s mouth.
Speckled bush-cricket (Leptophyes punctatissima) female perched on a false Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus inserta) leaf.
Samica wątlika charłaja (Leptophyes punctatissima) siedząca na liściu winobluszczu zaroślowego (Parthenocissus inserta).
Speckled bush-cricket (Leptophyes punctatissima) on a rusty wire mesh fence.
Wątlik charłaj (Leptophyes punctatissima) na zardzewiałym sietkowym parkanie.
Tettigonia viridissima (Nimfa - Ninfa - Nymph)
La cavalletta verde dalle lunghe antenne, più imparentata con i grilli che con le locuste
Dedicated to John Carson Essex UK.
Thanks to him for bringing
♥ Flowers or Insects - MACROS ONLY
to a new life !!!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sorry, to me is very difficult to visit people that always only leave a fav without commenting...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------