View allAll Photos Tagged cabbage
A common cabbage white butterfly. A little black, some gray, some yellow, and white. But of course a green eye.
A Cabbage White butterfly on a Butterfly bush flower.
Not many flowers left now, but the Butterflies are taking advantage of them.
These butterflies can be so hard to photograph at times! I'm happy I was able to sneak a quick shot in.
The cabbage seemed blithely unaware it was being photographed ... hiding my fear as best I could ... I quickly took the shot and hurried off before being discovered.
- Rosa's Garden of Earthly Delights, Keefer Lake, Ontario, Canada -
Large White butterfly, also known as a "Cabbage White" (Pieris brassicae), resting on a purple Osteospermum flower, commonly called an African Daisy.
@ The Urquhart Butterfly garden in Dundas Ontario. This is an outdoor garden where everything is planted to help butterflies. Lovely place!
Kill it he said!! I couldn't believe what I read! I took this photo this past Sunday at the Hawksbill Greenway in Luray VA and posted it on Facebook. One of my friends, a perfectly mild tempered fellow posted "it's a horrible pest, kill them all!" Well, pest or no (and I suspect these in caterpillar form are the ones responsible for the demise of my only two cabbage plants in the garden) I am not one to go stomping on such beautiful little things. Even if I were fast enough! And please, don't even Think about posting a snake photo because the reactions of people are very strong! Well... it's a funny old world anyway...... I was very happy to catch one in flight!
I've seen few butterflies this year and photographed fewer, but I had some cooperative Cabbage Whites today.
Northstar Park, Davis, Ca. June, 2021.
An introduced species. It was accidentally introduced to Quebec, Canada, around 1860 and spread rapidly throughout North America.
Seen at Victoria Park, in Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Cabbage White butterfly.
These are so common that they are often overlooked, so I thought I would post a photograph of one, especially on a slow day for butterflies.
2020_07_27_EOS 7D Mark II_7262-Edit_V1
The park near our new house had thousands of trees planted in 1887 for the Golden Jubilee of Victoria's reign. There are oaks and beech from England and redwood from Canada and even some native NZ trees in there.
The cabbage tree known to Māori as tī kōuka, was used as a source of food and It provided durable fibre for textiles, anchor ropes, fishing lines, baskets, waterproof rain capes and cloaks, and sandals.
Monochrome Bokeh Thursday
Thursday Monochrome
I've been seeing more and more of these elusive little butterflies in my yard.
So beautiful in the flower garden, so destructive in the vegetable garden. I think I'd rather have the butterfly than the cabbage anyway.
Got this shot of this Large White Cabbage Butterfly on my walk around the Ballintemple Coillte Tree Nursery a few days ago. It is surprisingly difficult to photo a butterfly as it bobs and weaves on it’s merry way in rather rapid movements. So delighted to get this one after many futile attempts.
My granddaughter Zahra for the 3rd time in the hospital, the medicine for epilepsy do not work. She now gets another medication.
Mijn kleindochter Zahra ligt voor de 3e keer in het ziekenhuis, de medicijnen voor de Epilepsie werken niet. Ze krijgt nu andere medicatie. Terwijl de andere langzaam afgebouwd moet worden, dubbel op dus. We zijn erg bezorgd om haar.
Experiments with trying to backlight the cabbage leaves. I don't like how tightly cropped the image is but my board was my limiting size. I might try again with a more neutral palette. Happy I tried something new, playing helps my mood. Do you post your fails as well as your successes? I like sharing so others know not everything is successful but you try again another day.
Compositionally Challenged Week 23 - Top Five Favorites (Bokeh and Flowers)
The two spots indicate this is a female.
A large white butterfly (pieris brassicae), the bain of brassica growers, resting on a buddleia bush. Photographed in Great Horwood, Buckinghamshire, England.
Pieris rapae, the small white, is a small- to medium-sized butterfly species of the whites-and-yellows family Pieridae.
Generally the male has one spot on each wing while the female has two.
Here like the other day this one is feeding on our Butterfly bush.
Some sort of exotic cabbage growing in an organic garden at Riverwood Park. I have no idea what kind of moth it is. It seems to have a hat of sorts on its head.
Love the purple color of this ornamental cabbage (Flowering Kale) plant.
-As the weather gets cooler, ornamental cabbage and kale are leafy plants that produce bright foliage that gets more intense the colder it becomes. Both plants are close relatives to several vegetables, including cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, turnips, and mustard greens.-
dengarden.com/gardening/Plant-Ornamental-Cabbage-and-Kale...
Thanks for your visit and comments, much appreciated!