View allAll Photos Tagged web...

One of four photographs on the cover of the new Luppitt Cookbook - a fund-raiser for our local church.

Web of Mystery / Heft-Reihe

> I Died Laughing

Script: ?

art: Jim MMclaughlin

Ace Magazines / USA 1954

Reprint / Comic-Club NK 2010

ex libris MTP

www.comics.org/issue/223202/

Yale University, New Heaven, CT.

It's spiderweb season! Bring your branches or anything else and go to the forest for a walk to destroy many spiderwebs, because you want to go through the forest with no spiderwebs on your face. That is how I do it, but most of the times I go around the web, to not destroy it, but sometimes things happen.

Frozen spider web frost

A Nursery Web Spider in Pasir Ris Park Mangroves Forest.

Go wild with me in my blog: Go Wild at Pasir Ris Park and Mangroves

 

*Note: More pics of Insects and Arachnids in my Fauna ~ Invertebrates Album.

Once we finished taking our sunrise photos of Mount Rainier Laura and Tracy spotted some flowers and spider webs on the side of the road. So we hang out for a while taking different shots and messing with the macro lens.

 

Harvest is going strong here. We are hoping they started harvesting out at my friends family's place soon! I hope everyone has a great Friday!

This is a wasp tied up in a spider's web. I think that the wasp was still alive here, but I'm not sure. Its mouth parts seemed to move now and then as if it was trying to chew its way out.

 

The spider was a house spider - quite a lot bigger than the wasp. I had no idea that house spiders fed on wasps, but they obviously do.

 

I didn't see these wasps (there were two in the web) land in the web. I had been watching the spider for a while and then went away for 20 minutes or so. When I came back there were the wasps all cocooned like this. I wonder if the spider had stored them somewhere and then brought them back to the web where it could handle them and feed on them.

 

It makes a change for me to feel sadness and sympathy for wasps. A few years ago I watched wasps attacking and then decapitating bees. I felt sorry for the bees then, and no sympathy for wasps. But wasps meet harsh ends too. All part of nature's cycle.

Parked at the Blisland depot on a sunny Saturday afternoon was Webbers KVL63H, a leyland Panther woth Roe bodywork, new to Lincoln as their 63

His ambition is to be the spider in the World Wide Web

Of old things...

 

Lionfish. Denver Aquarium.

 

Click here to see a long exposure of this fish

www.flickr.com/photos/ajschroetlin/340700915/

Holland Landing, Ontario

Handball in Roosevelt Park, Chinatown, NYC. Shot with a Sony RX100m4. Processed in Photoshop.

Spider's web covered in the moisture from a foggy morning at Djurön, Sweden

I couldn't make up my mind on the processing. What do you think?

Sometimes it pays to be short; this web was across the trail about a foot above my head. Lucky for me AND the spider!

Took a few of him/her.

1 2 ••• 28 29 31 33 34 ••• 79 80