urbpan: (dandelion)
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Until the drought killed them, our nasturtiums were a food source for many. This bejeweled true bug (hemiptera) is unidentifiable, but was probably drinking plant juice.

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Likewise these candy-stripe leafhoppers were using their beak-like mouthparts to jab holes in the plant and sip its fluid.

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And then underneath the leaves these black aphids were also settled in to drink.

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Enter the cavalry: ladybeetle larvae specialize on soft-bodied plant-feeders like aphids.

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Off they go to eat some aphids--ultimately the plant succumbed to the combined stress of drought and bugs, but it was fun to record the events.
urbpan: (dandelion)
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These little black aphids are feeding on our nasturtiums. I was aiming to get a good sharp view of them and ended up with something softer and more impressionistic.

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urbpan: (Default)

I'm saving the nasturtium and the weird spherical cucumbers for when Alexis gets back (TWO AND A HALF HOURS, THANK GOD) and I brought the ringless honey mushroom in for a spore print (IT TURNED TO GOO AND MAGGOTS) but them tomaters are gooooooood (AND I DON'T EVEN LIKE TOMATERS).


Pork chop, rice, onions, and "baby bellos" (Agaricus bisporus) from the stupidmarket, bell peppers from Dedham Farmer's Market, tomaters from our garden.

I don't know why I'm talking like this. I think I'm delirious.
urbpan: (moai)

Photos by [livejournal.com profile] urbpan. Location: In front of an antique shop, Harvard Street, Brookline Village.

Urban species #235: Nasturtium Tropaeolum majus

This popular garden plant is attractive, easy to grow, fast-growing, hardy, and edible, making it a favorite among even novice gardeners . The flowers are used as an edible garnish, possessing a peppery taste. It grows as a weak spreading vine, or loose fragile bush. They are native to western South America, and have been widely introduced. They grow wild in the city of San Francisco, and elsewhere in California, and are considered invasive by some sources. Their roots are weak, and the plant can be easily pulled, but root fragments may resprout. The USDA reports nasturtiums growing in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, suggesting a tolerance for environments urban, rural, tropical, and cold. In places with mild winters they may grow year round. Populated areas of Easter Island were covered with thick growths of the plant when I visited in mid-winter a few years ago.

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