female Sonoran blue on birch-leaf mountain mahogany
female Philotes sonorensis on Cercocarpus betuloides
female Philotes sonorensis on Cercocarpus betuloides
Rosaceae
Yay! This is my second visit to Pinnacles in a dozen days to capture a photo of the Sonoran blue. I actually spotted a couple back on February 25, 2014, but they were too elusive for the camera on the stonecrop rocks. That sighting is now the first Sonorans for the 2014 Pinnacles butterfly report that Paul Johnson keeps. I thought this would be another new record of nectaring use for Jeffrey Caldwell and the book he's writing; however, upon closer inspection its proboscis is not sipping. He's been looking for first-hand accounts, and here I already have a * nectaring label on Nature ID, ready made for him. I think for him, he especially likes that I have taken the time to ID both the butterfly and the local nectar source. I'm proud my blog can be useful to someone other than myself.
OK. Am I nuts to be driving all over the place just to find a tiny animal? Hey, I have a gas efficient car and the time, so why not? I'm now officially part of the unemployment statistics. Ugh... I've also been painfully feeling the passage of time, and I'm afraid I'll look back and regret not having done more with my life. I guess I'm in the midst of the classic midlife crisis.
I have Ken @ Nature of a Man to thank for getting a possible solution started when he sent me a query about a Sonoran blue he found near Mariposa 2 weeks back. I didn't even have to look this one up, because I already knew about the Sonoran blue even though I have never knowingly seen it in person. It's a sweet sighting and a unique butterfly. Then, Ken had the audacity to call me "Butterfly gal" and a "Lepidopterist" with a capital 'L'. I denied it and said that was from another life in another state. But, is it, really? I think I underplay what I have accomplished and what lies in my heart. To avoid too much public navel-gazing, I'll leave it at that. Thanks, Ken.