Blog of the El Camino Real Chapter, Texas Master Naturalists, Milam County, Texas
Author: Sue Ann (Suna) Kendall
The person behind The Hermits' Rest blog and many others. I'm a certified Texas Master Naturalist and love the nature of Milam County. I manage technical writers in Austin, help with Hearts Homes and Hands, a personal assistance service, in Cameron, and serve on three nonprofit boards. You may know me from La Leche League, knitting, iNaturalist, or Facebook. I'm interested in ALL of you!
Well , we prayed for rain and we got it! Tons of it and in a short amount of time.
Sadly, it was not a good thing at our place here in Central Texas. It went into our barn, our well house, our front and back porch, and every inch of our pasture and my garden!
Thankfully, it did not get in the house.
We must have at least a million gophers that live under our property. Lucky us. So, when tons of water go in those holes, it must come out somewhere.
So, falling from the sky and coming up from the ground, it did a number on the pollinator garden. And wouldn’t you know it, it was really starting to shine.
This will take some work to repair. It would have been a much easier task when I was younger. But I will just do the best I can. We never give up.
Today on my lunchtime walk, I was looking for butterflies. I walked along County Road 140 keeping my eyes open. Here are some that I found.
Funereal duskywing (I chased these the whole time but they’re hard to grab)Common checkered skipper BuckeyeOrange sulphur Variegated fritillary Checkered whiteToday’s butterflies
I also saw lots of uncooperative tiger swallowtails and black swallowtails, along with buzzy little fiery skippers, tiny dainty sulphurs, and two gorgeous question marks. They were too busy to photograph. It’s a great time of year for butterflies.
A question mark I saw recently at another part of our ranch.
Hmm, why do I have so many butterflies?
I’ll tell you why we have so many! We let the wildflowers grow! You won’t see so many on fields that have been sprayed to remove broadleaf plants. Luckily, I let the milkweed and it’s buddies grow away. I also encourage the Texas prairie parsley.
It’s yellow.
Today I was looking for butterflies on this plant, Polytaenia texana. I didn’t see any at first. But that’s when I realized there were at least a dozen caterpillars in this one plant.
Nom nom
Well, apparently the black swallowtails that were everywhere in March and April have reproduced.
The earlier instars look like this.
It is so much fun watching the caterpillars munching away. And I’m looking forward to seeing them as beautiful adults later!
Many of us who own some acreage probably are seeing this unusual plant right about now It goes by several names: Beebalm, Plains Horsemint, Lemon Beebalm, or Purple Horsemint, while its Latin name is Monarda citriodora. Wow…who knows what to call it? I don’t think the botanists can agree. Myself, I like easy things to remember.
I also have noticed that after looking in four different reference books from my own library, it can look very different from the photo in each book. That is confusing for sure. I think the soil has something to do with the shade of pale yellow and the purple color.
This one at Donna’s house is quite purple.
This plant likes dry, sandy, or rocky soils. It grows one to three feet tall with leaves up to two to three inches long and is a member of the mint family. It is an important pollinator plant here in Texas.
This one is from the Walker’s Creek area near Cameron and is more pink. Photo by Sue Ann Kendall.
So don’t mow it down, it’s NOT a weed.
Monarda growing along County Road 140, with Indian blanket and bluebonnets.
For the past few weeks, the killdeer at my ranch have been in a breeding frenzy. I have even spotted tiny new birdies down by my front pond.
Killdeer have a few interesting habits. When they create a nest, it consists of nothing more than a small depression on the ground, with eggs in it. While the eggs do a great job of blending in with whatever surface they’re laid on, they are just sitting there, exposed.
Killdeer sitting on eggs. Photo by Eric Schmidt, from iNaturalist.
The parents are vigilant about protecting their nests, though. They don’t want a hawk or snake to find them, and they’d prefer the livestock not stomp on the eggs, either.
Ignore the center of the driveway! Nothing there!
They spend much of their time while eggs are incubating making loud sounds and flashing their wings, pretending to be injured to attract predators away from the eggs. I can assure you it’s loud.
My serene butterfly and wildflower observation time has recently been accompanied by many killdeer trying to get me to go away from wherever I am (oh, and dickcissels are also bellowing, too). Those parents have got to get tired, because at least one pair led me all the way down the driveway and partway down the road.
Follow us! We are more interesting than our eggs!
I do wish they were a little more careful about selecting nest locations. So far, I’ve seen two on the pond shore get washed away in recent rains. The current one I’m watching won’t wash away, but I have to warn my family to stay on the driveway and not cross into the middle, because that’s where these two eggs are!
I tried to get a photo of this fellow all week. He finally played dead on a fence as I crept up on him. I don’t creep as well as I used to.
This is a Green Anole, commonly called a chameleon. I love them. They are so neat.As a child I thought they were baby dragons.
The males have the throat thing going on, so they are easy to tell apart from the females. These lizards can change colors very quickly from gray, to brown, to bright green. The females lay a single egg every 14 to 17 days. Incubation takes 30 to 60 days depending on the temperature.
They eat mostly spiders of all kinds. Flies and other small insects round out their diet. They like to be up off the ground, so trees and fences are popular with them. They are faster than you think, just try to get a photo and you’ll see.