Winged Wednesday 10. 22.2025 : Birds! Bugs! Why Choose?

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
You saw the title and thought, “Birds. Of course.” But plot twist: it’s birds and bugs today—because why limit the chaos?

It’s been a week since my surgery, and I’m doing great—thank you all for the kind words, messages, and general refusal to show up in person with casseroles.

So this week, we’re going full garden safari: dragonflies, paper wasps impersonating hovercrafts, and yes, a bird too. If it’s winged and mildly ridiculous, it’s probably here.

Blue-eyed Darners.jpg

Blue-eyed Darners (in the act)
This is dragonfly courtship, or what passes for it—zero privacy and no eye contact. The male grabs the female by the head, she loops around to form a heart-shaped wheel, and together they create what can only be described as nature’s weirdest Valentine. Romance? Maybe. Efficient? Definitely.

Bananaquit-424-Edit.jpg

Bananaquit
Built like a warbler, wired like a hummingbird, and named like a fruit-based hostage situation. This little nectar thief refuses to sit still, insists on eating dessert first, and somehow manages to look both cute and judgmental at the same time.

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Valley Carpenter Bee (Yellow Form)
This is not a bumblebee, it’s a power tool with wings. Loud, hairy, and absolutely uninterested in your personal space. It doesn’t sting often, but when it does, the vibration registers on seismographs.

Umbrella Paper Wasps.jpg

Umbrella Paper Wasps on Water
They float like little boats. They drink like polite demons. Not only that, but they leave without saying goodbye. It’s hard to decide what’s more unsettling—their elegance, or the calm confidence of creatures that know exactly where you live.

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Leaf-footed Bug
Nature said, “Give this one leaf-shaped legs and a face only an entomologist could love.” The result? A walking contradiction: armored but skittish, leaf-footed but not vegan. It also buzzes when startled, which is not helpful for anyone.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
Glad you are up and doing well Eric. Sounds like there might be a 'tough old bird' in there somewhere. Your images this week are so clear and beautiful. I really like that Umbrella
Wasp.
I have a few insects from the back yard where I was staying in Denmark and one creation from many years ago.

Common Drone Fly.

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Yellow-barred Peat Hover Fly
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Close up of the face of a Crane Fly. Lots of legs on these guys.
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My apologizes if this isn't appropriate in this forum.
A few years ago I made a sculpture for a show in Alaska called "The Bug Show". I called my entry --Motherboard Wasp: “And you thought computer viruses were bad”.
I made the body out of wood, the eyes, legs, antennae and wings out of acrylic and the stinger out of metal rod. It is mounted it on an old computer board.
DSC_1099altered.jpg
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Glad you are up and doing well Eric. Sounds like there might be a 'tough old bird' in there somewhere. Your images this week are so clear and beautiful. I really like that Umbrella
Wasp.
I have a few insects from the back yard where I was staying in Denmark and one creation from many years ago.

Common Drone Fly.

View attachment 84696

Yellow-barred Peat Hover Fly
View attachment 84694

Close up of the face of a Crane Fly. Lots of legs on these guys.
View attachment 84693

My apologizes if this isn't appropriate in this forum.
A few years ago I made a sculpture for a show in Alaska called "The Bug Show". I called my entry --Motherboard Wasp: “And you thought computer viruses were bad”.
I made the body out of wood, the eyes, legs, antennae and wings out of acrylic and the stinger out of metal rod. It is mounted it on an old computer board.
View attachment 84692
Your wasp might be made out of wood but I see wings on it. Eric has never specified that your winged offerings have to be able to actually fly 😁
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Glad you are up and doing well, Eric. Sounds like there might be a 'tough old bird' in there somewhere. Your images this week are so clear and beautiful. I really like that Umbrella
Wasp.
I have a few insects from the backyard where I was staying in Denmark and one creation from many years ago.

Common Drone Fly.

View attachment 84696

Yellow-barred Peat Hover Fly
View attachment 84694

Close up of the face of a Crane Fly. Lots of legs on these guys.
View attachment 84693

My apologizes if this isn't appropriate in this forum.
A few years ago, I made a sculpture for a show in Alaska called "The Bug Show". I called my entry --Motherboard Wasp: “And you thought computer viruses were bad”.
I made the body out of wood, the eyes, legs, antennae and wings out of acrylic and the stinger out of metal rod. It is mounted it on an old computer board.
View attachment 84692
Love them all, Trent. The Motherboard Wasp made me laugh so hard my sock flew off. The crane fly is an incredible photo.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
I am not much for being a patient bird photographer and tend to grab shots of them when an opportunity presents itself rather than wait for them to show up. Sneaking up on ponds to grab shots is one way to go about it but when you lack serious stealth-fu your best bet is to get better at shooting them in flight when they flee the scene. This first shot came after I interrupted a Ladies Luncheon gathering in Mirror Lake up in the Columbia River Gorge last Monday. I think these are mostly Mallard hens with one Northern Pintail hen as well.

CR5m2_LadysOfThePond102025.jpg


And an Egret from a previous visit to the same area.

CR5m2_EgretInFlight1101425.jpg
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Checking for something to eat I presume

View attachment 84708
Beautifully photographed, DES. She looks like she’s between molts—those short wings and full abdomen suggest one more transformation ahead. Amazing how you captured her at that “almost there” stage, poised between awkward and elegant.

Not really relevant here, but as a veterinarian, DES mean diethylstilbestrol—a synthetic estrogen we used for urinary incontinence in spayed female dogs.
 
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Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Mid Air Hook up, DragonfliesView attachment 84710
That’s an outstanding photo of Variegated Meadowhawks, Roger. What we’re seeing is a relationship best described as “committed with boundary issues.” The male is literally hanging on until the female lays her eggs — what entomologists call “mate guarding,” and what humans might call “grounds for a restraining order.”
 
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Roger Bailey

Well-Known Member
That’s an outstanding photo of Variegated Meadowhawks, Roger. What we’re seeing is a relationship best described as “committed with boundary issues.” The male is literally hanging on until the female lays her eggs — what entomologists call “mate guarding,” and what humans might call “grounds for a restraining order.”
Wow, thanks for that information Eric, Always leaning new stuff is fun!
 
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