As I was putting together my slideshow of favorite photos of 2016, there were two photos I considered including but didn’t, mainly because they were in a vertical (portrait) format. The two photos were taken within just a few minutes of each other on a beautiful June morning in the Nebraska Sandhills.
My friend Gerry and I were out looking for flowers to photograph and I ran across a patch of larkspur (Delphinium carolinianum) bathed in golden light from the rising sun. After playing around with several different flowering stems and compositions, I finally got one I really liked. I took versions with and without the horizon line showing behind it and decided later I liked the one with the horizon better.
As I was getting ready to leave the larkspur patch and look for something else to photograph, I noticed a flowering stem without any blossoms on it. I bent down to take a closer look and found a pretty little green caterpillar with a satisfied look on its face. Based on some quick internet searching, I’m thinking it’s likely a looper moth caterpillar, but I’m hoping someone will recognize it and either confirm or correct that. Regardless, I liked the cut of the caterpillar’s jib, and was happy to be able to get a reasonably good photograph of it.
Everyone’s gotta eat, right? Flower-feeding caterpillars can be seen as pests in gardens when gardeners are working hard to produce flowers or vegetables, but in the wild, they’re just another cog in the machine. Caterpillars eat flowers, but in turn provide food for birds and other animals who also need to eat. I’m happy to have opportunities for up-close views of the whole process.
