Wings as light and transparent as a ghost,
a Golden-eyed Lacewing:
collaboration between spirit and silk.

The twists and turns of an ambitious young starling.
Have you a better way to go crazy?

After the rain, an aloof mantis nymph
conducts the little restless midges.

A Black-capped Chickadee hovers mysteriously,
the point where speed meets gravity and an overcast day
is lit by a small missile.

A White-breasted Nuthatch promises the impossible,
a figment of my imagination,
charming and rude all at once.

An ant contemplates the awesome and ominous view
deep in the microwilderness, perhaps a scene
from the fever dreams of Caspar David Friedrich.

Just found out my Wild Light blog has been included in the list
“50 Amazing Nature Photography Bloggers”,
a nice resource for some fine wildlife photography.
Here’s a young bandit hours after birth,
a praying mantis nymph caught up in some abandoned
spider webbing searching for tiny prey.

After the rain, a Charlevoix chironomid midge finds shelter among pine needles,
a world of spikes and angles.

Here’s a detail of the midge’s world.

Not enough energy? Rebellious songbirds show off,
rolling and tumbling, tangled-up in battle.

I’m the Featured Artist on the Fotomoto.com site today, with one of my ant images.
I used this image for my post “The Queen was dead”, about biologist E. O. Wilson’s story
in The New Yorker, Trailhead.
Is there a way of knowing that ants actually experience emotion?
Read more here: Ants and Answers: A Conversation with E. O. Wilson.
