Friday, March 11, 2022

Franklin Park Conservatory Butterflies

The missing gardener gave me a ticket to the Franklin Park Conservatory for use when the weather is crummy. I had reason to vacate the house Monday, so I used the ticket then. The Conservatory hosts butterflies for about three months early in the year.

I was bummed that tripods are not allowed--how could I get good macro shots of butterflies without one? It turned out that the rule is good. Some of the paths are quite narrow, and using a tripod would have been difficult and rude. As it was, my shots with a telephoto lens were better than many of those with the macro lens.

Blue morpho (macro). I focused on the head, and the wings aren't very sharp.

Blue morphos are rather famous for their electric blue wings, but their closed wings are beautiful, too.

blue morpho

It looks like the butterflies were Photoshopped-in, but they were really there, flying.




Postman, I think. If I'd had my wits and noticed the nifty red edge of the leaf when I took the shot, I might have framed the photo differently (I cropped it to get what you see).

As with some other animals, butterfly identification can be hard. There was a sign with a bunch of butterflies and their common and scientific names, but I did not see this one. (Also, only open wings are shown.) The only one with red and white on its wings was a postman. At home, a search for "postman butterfly" included pictures that matched both what's on the sign and the above. I found what some random person wrote on Facebook articles in Nature, a reference in PubMed, and a website devoted to the Heliconius genus. This one is a postman, a regional variation, a hybrid, a mimic, or ...


A postman, I guess

I couldn't identify this butterfly. Heck, it could be a postman.

Sometimes, the more I look at a picture the better it gets. I thought the one above was ho-hum. The butterfly is turned away, after all. Then I thought it was decently framed, with nearly all the green bowl included. The orange is sort of a contrast to the green, and, for once, I included more than just the animal. It grew on me. Viewing pictures on a large monitor helps me change my mind, too.

 

Uncertain (macro). Possibly a giant swallowtail in its former life.

 

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