In the morning, a wet mist clung to everything, but it was warm enough that the wetness could be ignored. A mockingbird played with one of the red dogwood berries I had fished out of the water and left on the patio. An egret waited for breakfast by the dam outfall.
At lunch time I glimpsed what looked like a zebra swallowtail on a camellia blossom. It was gone before I could do more than say, "Look!" Then a cloudless sulphur flitted past. A big bird grasshopper clung to the window screen long enough for the camera.
There was only a light breeze on the ground, but clouds streamed out of the Southwest while higher clouds seemed to move more slowly and closer to due East. I again saw a leaf that appeared to be floating in mid air and discovered a huge web stretching from the creek edge to the trees along the pool and a dozen feet high. There was no sign of the spinner. A periwinkle clung to a spartina stalk. I relocated the Argiope egg sack. The saltbush was decked out in white but the saltmarsh fleabane's pink flowers had wilted to brown. Sassafras leaves had turned a caramel brown. The goldenrod did not seem to have attracted insects.
The water was warmer and actually pleasant. A drowned camel cricket floated among the leaves. Innumerable ground beetles waited for rescue. Three spiders preferred to climb the walls. There were also a couple of the tiny velvet-black caterpillars floating. A jumping spider sat on the slick chrome railing. The sun got through the clouds frequently as the afternoon went on.
A Carolina wren investigated the hose bib, the mealworms, and under the rosemary. A song sparrow perched and a cardinal preened in the camellia. There was another spectacular evening sky on my way to Norfolk, though I was inside before the sun set. And a lot of rain fell before I came back.
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