Permalink Reply by Joan Denoo on January 18, 2013 at 7:16pm Dominic, are these your photos? What a nice diversity of critters. This fellow with the chin flap, is it a co-inhabiter of your garden? The little red-eyed frog looks like a good insect catcher. Oh my, the butterflies and bees round out a nice group of residents.
Permalink Reply by Dominic Florio on January 18, 2013 at 7:20pm These were all taken in my Florida garden. I love all plants and animals, but I specifically garden to attract wildlife. I use both natives and tropicals and combine them in island beds. I also have a wooded area which provides a wide diversity. Chin strap is a Cuban anole showing off for the females. The tree frog is just a baby. I see butterflies 12 months out of the year.
Permalink Reply by Joan Denoo on January 18, 2013 at 7:48pm Dominic, thank you very much for sharing with us. A very great treat, especially with all the ground and trees covered in snow here. It is a special type snow that comes when fog moves in and freezes on every leaf and branch. A true winter wonderland.
frost + fog = fost.
Permalink Reply by Sentient Biped on January 18, 2013 at 10:19pm Beautiful pics Dominic! You show that gardening is about more than the plant kingdom - there are also the animals.
Thanks for sharing, Dominic! The black and white butterfly looks like the one that needs passion flowers, I think. The Rotterdam zoo had a lot of those butterflies.
Permalink Reply by amer chohan on January 19, 2013 at 6:36am Beautiful Dominic! Thats what we call interconnection of species in life cycle. Still there are many that we can't see. That is the way life should be looked upon.
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