Category Archives: Animals

Gecko with eggs

A house gecko on a window with eggs visible

I saw this house gecko on the outside of the bathroom window one night and took a couple of photos. Nothing remarkable about that. True, the gecko is securely attached to a slick vertical surface with those magic feet it has. And yes, the window could use a clean!

But look at the belly of the beast and there are pale, round shapes. Those are gecko eggs. They usually lay one or two eggs at a time and they can be anywhere. I’ve found them in light fixtures, window frames, cupboards. The list is endless. Any place that appears dark and quiet is a likely depository.

Many get broken or eaten or otherwise destroyed, but the supply of geckos is not running out. The hatching time for the eggs depends on the species of gecko, generally running from one to three months. Baby geckos are tiny, looking like there’s no room for internal organs.

In this house, they scamper around for no apparent purpose and I rarely see them catch anything to eat. One thing they learn very quickly if they’re to survive, is that they had better watch out for larger geckos because big geckos will eat little geckos like snack crackers!

Black Witch Moth on a red door

A Black Witch Moth rests on a red door

This moth appeared on the back door of the house a few days ago. It remained there through the afternoon and evening, posing a bit of a problem when going in and out. We didn’t want it to fly into the house, but it appeared unconcerned at our coming and goings. Next morning, it was gone.

A plethora of purple

A Bee approaches a purple bougainvillea

This week’s Sunday Stills Monthly Color Challenge is ‘Purple.’ See more responses here.

I’d like to say I have some kind of theme going here, but I don’t, outside the color.

First up is a bee approaching a very purple bougainvillea.

In the gallery, we have a Fiery Skipper butterfly feeding on a Blue Heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) flower, a purple and white spider lily, and some dark purple Helmet Urchins clinging tenaciously to a rock.

A Purple Ice Cream sign at Kapaau, Hawaii

Then there’s a sign advertising purple ice cream. Not sure what flavor that is, but I’m a bit wary.

And finally, a lush purple orchid.

A purple orchid in Hawaii

Hawaiian Garden Spiders

Hawaiian Garden Spiders and their webs

I noticed that in the front border of the house, the ferns and Mother-in-Law’s Tongue or Snake Plant (Sansevieria Trifasciata) needed weeding and cutting back as there was foliage up against the house, a handy highway for ants and centipedes and who knows what else. The only problem is that, at this time of year, this little garden is guarded by a wall of spiders.

These three Hawaiian Garden Spiders are just a few of that kind there, and they’re accompanied by the usual mass of crab spiders and one or two others I’m not familiar with. I wouldn’t mind moving the crab spiders, whose main activity seems to be to build webs in places that mean they’ll end up wrapped around my head. But the garden spiders, I have a soft spot for. The females are quite beautiful and the males, while drab and tiny, are very watchable as they try to mate with the mighty females.

I guess the weeds can wait for another week or two.

How to play pigball

Piglets wrestle for a mango

Leave one large unripe mango on the ground and wait for the arrival of seven small piglets. Watch them bat the mango around, trying to snare it in their small jaws. There are no rules in this game, so pushing and shoving is common, as is running around for no clear reason.

The winner is the one who snags and keeps the mango.

Piglets wrestle for a mango

It’s a strenuous activity so a post-game rest is advised.

Piglets resting