Wednesday, 28 May 2025

The Adventurous Bumble Bee

 


There are lots of bumble bees about around here just now, trying to make the most out of the rhododendrons. However, some of them also seem to be looking for I'm-not-sure-what - and in really unlikely places...
 
The photo below is AI generated, but a surprisingly good reconstruction of what I found yesterday morning when I came to raise the venetian blinds in my kitchen window.
 

What I may not have quite succeeded in explaining to AI is that my blinds sit inside triple-glazed windows. Even so - yesterday morning, underneath the bottom of the blinds, there was a bumble bee lying completely still on its back. After I had raised the blind it was still lying there, in the same position, trapped between the outer and inner glass panes. So I was convinced it was dead. How on earth it had managed to get in there still goes beyond my understanding. That window had not been opened in weeks, and even if I open it, the window frame is held together by two 'latches' that I need tools to open. The last time I washed that window was when I put up my new curtains a couple of months ago - but then I only washed the outside and the inside, without taking it apart. Where the bumble bee  managed to find an entry in between the glass panes from outside remains a mystery. (Not to mention the question why it would even get the idea to try!) 
 
Anyway... It bothered me to have a dead body inside my window, so I found a tool and managed to get the window frame apart... 
 
... And then I possibly gave a scream (at least internally!), because the dead body suddenly started to wave its legs about... 

In the midst of shock, I temporarily forgot all about what I recently read on Janice's blog about First Aid for weak bees, and just went ahead with my original plan - which was to gently lift the body bee with a piece of paper and throw it back out from where it must originally (somehow!) have come... 
 
However, right down below that window there are rhododendron in bloom. So if it was able to crawl about at all, hopefully it was also able to find its own nourishment. And if not - well, at least it got an adventurous life, and a half decent burial... 


Kitchen window with venetian blinds raised.

"An adventure always has an element of the unknown.
Being adventurous means you're willing to go
where you haven't been before and do things
you've never done, even if you don't know
how it's going to turn out." 
(Vocabulary.com)

Monday, 26 May 2025

More Spring Beauty

 

The azaleas are dropping some petals to the ground now, but it feels like the cooler weather lately has slowed things down a bit - making spring last longer...

Had a bit of sunshine on my walk today, but it's very windy, and rain showers come and go.
 

I just can't resist taking yet another photo...
... and perhaps just one more...
... and...

Purple rhododendron in the cemetery

Pink/red ones "right on my doorstep" at their best just now.

 

"In the spring, I have counted 136
different kinds of weather inside 24 hours."
— Mark Twain


Linking to Mersad's Through My Lens #485


Through My Lens

Sunday, 25 May 2025

Lilacs and Global Warming


May 16
 

May 16


May 24

Lilacs are in bloom now, and have been for a while. Back in my childhood/youth I used to associate lilacs with the end of the school year, i.e. the first week of June or so.These days they seem to come into bloom at least a couple of weeks earlier. 

Even scientists seem to agree that spring does start earlier than it used to; connected to global warming. 

Do you have the same feeling where you live, connected to memories of your own?

Saturday, 24 May 2025

Hanging Out with Doves

 

Passing through the park in the city centre on Monday this week, when the weather was summery and warm, I noticed this group of girls hanging out peacefully with a flock of doves.

A question for my readers from various corners of the world: 
Do you call them doves or pigeons

The internet tells me there's no difference: 

They're all from the same big “Columbidae” family of birds. “Pigeon” is simply the name the French gave to them – from the Latin “pipio” for the peeping sound chicks made. Meanwhile, “dove” was named by Germans – for the bird's diving action. But there's no difference.

In Swedish we call them "duvor" (sing. duva, pl. duvor).
The German word is Taube; and Swedish is more closely related to German than to French.

Linking to Skywatch Friday and Weekend Street/Reflections

Thursday, 22 May 2025

A Rainy Day

 

As predicted, a rainy and chilly day today - but I ventured out for my usual walk anyway. (Dressed in four layers, with rain coat on top; and rubber boots on my feet!)

The azaleas didn't seem to mind a long, cold shower... :)



At home, I took in my geraniums from the balcony last night, just to be on the safe side... Probably not necessary, as they stand on the bench close to the wall - but I think I'll keep them indoors for another day or so. (
I'll definitely not be sitting out there looking at them tomorrow either, according to the weather forecasts...) 

Photo from a week ago (on the balcony).

"Mother and babies"

I've been taking cuttings from a coleus plant that survived the winter, and planted those yesterday. (They're super easy to propagate.) Some of those will also go out on the balcony later. I'll be keeping them in individual pots as that makes it easier to rearrange things according to the weather etc.

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