
BUTTERFLIES AND CAMERAS.
At first I thought it was artificial, a butterfly made of painted wood, with wire legs and antennae. One of the kids had put it there to fool me, or as a surprise. I stared at it closely, and one of its legs twitched almost imperceptibly. Its black body was covered with white polka-dots, close together in horizontal rows. It appeared almost surreal, its delicate wings black and a cobalt blue, with yellow and white dots.
My cellular phone was in my pocket, and I took three photos before the phone’s camera froze up. It would not shut down, save, change functions… the light would not go off.
[Here’s where the plot thickens, in maddening illustration of Murphy’s Law of Cameras.]
My trusty Nikon had died, and I had been using my son’s camera. It works well enough, as long as the packaging tape holding the battery case stays tightly in place. But there was a problem, I had neglected to replace the batteries…I guess hoping for a break giving another burst of power . The power light flickered a couple of times then quit. OH NO! Prying off the tape was more difficult than it sounds, but there were four AA batteries in the refrigerator. They would not work…apparently old batteries that should have been thrown away.
I kept glancing out the window, checking to make sure the butterfly was still there. I tried to call my camera savvy daughter, who was not answering her phone. Verizon had a “longer than normal wait” for service. A small radio in my room had no batteries. Finally another look into the refrigerator bag miraculously provided four brand new AAs, which worked fine. The tape worked as it was supposed to and the battery case was in place. The red light came on.
During my frantic search the butterfly continued to sit in place without moving, for a full twenty minutes. Once it spread its wings fully and walked up the post a few inches, stretching its legs. But when I went back outside, the camera ready–the butterfly was no longer there– apparently tired of waiting for me to get my act together.
Well…the photo that I did get turned out, proving that my butterfly was real. I’m honored to have communicated with the butterfly. Now if my camera skills, or rather my battery replacing skills improve–maybe I’ll be ready the next time nature leaves me a beautiful gift!
© Sometimes, 2011
AN UNLIKELY VISIT FROM A HUMMINGBIRD
My story about the Butterfly on my deck originally included a Hummingbird. The tale is true, but I decided not to stretch my credibility by putting two improbable creatures in the same post, but they were in fact on my deck under a canopy at the same time.
There are a pair of the little birds that work the red Bee Balm, and the huge Hibiscus flowers, a brilliant scarlet. We have had hummingbirds in the gardens for years, so although they never outwear their welcome and run short of charm, they are not really a novelty. The birds prefer red, going after Million Bells hanging plants which they like so much they actually come around the plant to work the flowers hanging underneath the roof. They are not shy about being inside the canopy.

So, while I was trying to get the photos of the black and blue Butterfly with my battery-less camera a hummingbird came around the Million Bells and encountered me–standing less than arms length from his hovering pattern as he treaded air for maybe ten seconds before it flew up and away. Maybe it saw its reflection in my glasses.
This is the first time a bird and I have been in such close proximity, although we do watch them frequently through the glass door. Too bad the camera was following Murphy’s Law — if anything can go wrong, it will — and I admit it is the operator and not the camera that are to blame.
©Sometimes, 2011
[Thanks to photographer and blogger Karen Chandler, of Visioning, photography and digital scrapbooking, for permission to use her photo of the hummingbird.]
Congratulations! 500 posts in five years! Aren’t you something!
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any idea what? 🙂 That’s only a hundred a year (assuming my math is right) thanks–I think… 🙂
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Quality, not quantity. You stuck with it for five years, which is amazing. Many of the blogs I followed when I began a year ago no longer have activity. I enjoy your writing, so please keep it up.
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thanks, Anne. actually I really started in earnest in October 2014, before that I had very few. Three in 2011.
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Congratulations!!
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thanks, G… 🙂
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Congratulations….Appropriate ‘re-posts’. Hugs! ❤
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thanks…I saw that butterfly or one of her offspring earlier this year.
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Congratulations! Happy Birthday! The photographs are, as the British might say, smashing!
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Thanks! Yep, another birthday. I forget how old I really am, which is why I fall of my face periodically. fortunately I have good bones. 🙂
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Beautiful articles and pictures, beautiful website..Bravo
I invite you to see my creations:
http://www.paintdigi.wordpress.com
WELCOME
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thanks! I just visited your site…great photos…especially love the library café, I’ll visit soon again. 🙂
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Wow, 500 posts! I’m a baby blogger, if you can be a senior citizen and a baby all at the same time. Will I get to 500? Did you ever say to yourself that you would get to 500? Love your first two posts, makes me want to see more.
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Sure you will get there. I just post every day, something I write, have written in the past, posts I re-blog that others have written. The STATS that WordPress puts out about us is very cool, I just looked at my stats and see that I have 798 followers. I love that…some actually are regulars, some not. I love blogging! Thanks for commenting. I’m on my way over to visit your blog right now
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Thanks so much, I think we are kindred spirits.
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could be…thanks for visiting, I’m following you too
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