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Not quite mating season, but soon. The passion vines will be dense in a month, and among the tendrils I look for this pair to meet again. She is a visitor in his territory. Perhaps they were the couple I saw last year who met among the passion vines?
I saw a pair engaged in the act of mating last year. Then during the wintertime, I discovered 3 tiny eggs laid in a basket inside my garage. I thought they were possibly hummingbird eggs, laid by a hummer trapped in my locked garage. So thinking they were no longer viable, I placed the three in a black metal sake cup and placed them as a memento in my house.
It was a couple of weeks later that I noted the eggs had "hatched" and the eggs were not bird eggs, but something else, for the shells were laying in slivers like fingernails, or scales from a fish, not broken open, but slid open like an eyelid might open. A week or so later, I discovered one of the tiny trio on a plant brought indoors for the winter, and I took plant and guest out to the sunny south side of my house where he might find something small enough to eat. I suppose he was all of an inch long.
I assume the eggs hatched early being indoors where it was warm. Most of the baby anoles show up in June outdoors all over everything.....barely noticeable among the plants of the garden.
Edited with PRISMA on my iPadPro.
Sunset Reflections, London, UK. March 17, 2021. Photo: ©Edmond Terakopian. Shot using a Lumix G9 & Voigtlander 29mm f0.8 MFT Super Nokton Lens.
A composition of buildings in Uppsala. Shot with an iPhone7+ and composed on an iPadPro using the apps Photoshop, Snapseed, Colorama and Mextures.
Here's a skull found in the 1918 edition of the "The American journal of anatomy."
The execution of this piece rests on True Grit Texture Supply's rusty nib inkers (brush #1).
The textures are from the #collageretreat freebies.