View allAll Photos Tagged web
a sign meant for caution, becomes a graffiti surface, a surface for a spider to create its web for catching food
web of the Triangle Web spider, Hyptiotes. lit at night, you can see here how some spider webs reflect blue.
I have to be honest I didn't spot the caterpillar when I was looking for a web today, so that was a bonus when I clicked and zoomed! HWW
"Stone Beach ... "
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*DISFRUTA de LANZAROTE en FOTOS*
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We have spiders all over the outside of our house. This was a cool looking web, hanging just outside our garage.
Window Webs - A shop window with security panels of white ironwork, Grand Avenue Arts District, Phoenix, AZ.
"Pasillo al Mar"
+ Puerto del Carmen l Lanzarote l Islas Canarias
+ Web l www.lanzarotephotografika.com
+ FanPage l Lanzarote PhotoGrafika by Roberto Villar
+ photo l Roberto Villar
+ contacto l robydemardel@gmail.com
+ Todos los derechos reservados ©
*DISFRUTA de LANZAROTE en FOTOS*
#puertodelcarmen #lanzarote #islascanarias #photobank #lanzarotephotografika #imagenes #fotografÃas
Silence is exhilarating at first - as noise is - but there is a sweetness to silence outlasting exhilaration, akin to the sweetness of listening and the velvet of sleep. ~Edward Hoagland
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Here is a tiny Orb Web Weaver (Araneidae) spider on an old seed head of Black Sage (Salvia mellifera, Lamiaceae). It's web is off to the right - and if you look close, you can see it is tending a line to its web with the leg on the screen-right, like using your index finger to sense the line while fishing. I'll make a note. I believe the spider is in the genus Araneus, though it's tiny compared to the the large bottlecap-size spiders I find in the fall, see this photo. I actually found two of these tiny spiders today that look quite different, see my [Previous] photo. This spider is probably Araneus bispinosus or A. montereyensis, see this photo for more info, especially Alice Abelia's comment. Given that in my spider the abdomen seems to dip between the humps, then maybe it is Araneus montereyensis. (San Marcos Pass, 31 March 2019)
Today was another near-perfect spring day, though there was a breeze this morning - from the south?? The temperature actually got up into the high 70s, not quite 80° but close! It was no doubt the warmest day of 2019 so far. Now it's expected to cool down a few degrees tomorrow, and high clouds already are moving in. We do have a (slight) chance of rain late next week.