
The leaf has blown away, but the impression it left on the sidewalk will remain for a while longer.
The leaf has blown away, but the impression it left on the sidewalk will remain for a while longer.
A very decorative fungus growing on a log deep in the woods in Bird Park, Mount Lebanon.
End-of-summer sunlight filters through the leaves along Montour Run in Moon Township.
Three different colors of morning glories were blooming in this patch in Beechview, and in one spot all three colors happened to line up and beg to have their picture taken.
Among wild morning glories, deep violet and pink are the usual colors. The pale blue is much rarer. Here is one of those blue flowers on its own. Enlarge it to see the tiny fly with bright red eyes, which shows us that nature is never at a loss for decorative ideas.
More of the flowers that bloom in every season can be found at Flora Pittsburghensis.
There is always room for more zinnias, which give us some of the most outrageously bright colors in the annual garden.
Father Pitt is fairly certain that the insect enjoying the pollen of this Cosmos sulphureus flower is a Pennsylvania Leatherwing (Chauliognathus pensylvanicus), a common kind of soldier beetle that prefers yellowish flowers that match its own snazzy uniform. He is always delighted to be corrected, however, by someone with more entomological expertise than he has.
Zinnias are everywhere these days, and they make the world brighter. Here are a few different varieties of zinnias from here and there.