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    Nature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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    • approxinfinityA Online
      approxinfinity
      last edited by

      Ohoh spider. Nah man that things a harmless fly catcher

      nuleafjhawkN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • nuleafjhawkN Offline
        nuleafjhawk @approxinfinity
        last edited by

        @approxinfinity The giant ass spider!

        America! Where you have the right to be wrong.

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        • nuleafjhawkN Offline
          nuleafjhawk @approxinfinity
          last edited by

          @approxinfinity dammit - I looked at this thread again.

          America! Where you have the right to be wrong.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
            RockChalkinTexas 0
            last edited by

            Today's photo is of a Viceroy butterfly. I looked him up. He mimics the monarch because the monarch is reputedly distasteful. It is found in open places, where the larva feeds on willow and poplar. I don't have poplar but I do have willow. We are situated on the migratory path for many species. In the spring and fall we can hear the whooping cranes, sandhill crances and geese heading to or from South Texas. We've seen massive waves of them fly over. You actually hear them before spotting them because they are so far above. We watched one year as a couple Vs of sandhill crances descended and took to the lake for a break. Birds are another. Have a pair of Baltimore Orioles come through each year, seeing Robins means spring is on the way and good luck (from my days growing up in Minnesota), but the Monarchs come right through our property and they in years past were so abundant with them filling up the branches on our oak trees at night just like the pictures you see of them congregating down in Mexico for the winter. When I worked and drove every day, I would always wince whenever one would smash into my grill or windshield. I've never seen a banded one. A former co-worker headed up a Monarch banding program back in the 90s and I saw her on the news last year still advocating for planting more milkweed and other beneficial polinators along the paths. The flowers in this photo are of wild sunflowers that bloom late in summer and are there for not just the monarchs, but you can see bumblebees and the small Texas honey bees swarming all over them.

            backgrnd.jpg

            #RCJH GO KU

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            • nuleafjhawkN Offline
              nuleafjhawk
              last edited by

              If I was still looking at this thread I'd say that is beautiful. But I'm not, so I didn't see anything.

              America! Where you have the right to be wrong.

              approxinfinityA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • approxinfinityA Online
                approxinfinity @nuleafjhawk
                last edited by

                @nuleafjhawk if i were nuleaf id be like “all i see is spider food!” But i’m not. What a cool butterfly!

                RockChalkinTexas 0R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                  RockChalkinTexas 0 @approxinfinity
                  last edited by

                  @approxinfinity I'm not sure why the pictures are so LARGE when I post them. It does present a different perspective.

                  #RCJH GO KU

                  approxinfinityA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • approxinfinityA Online
                    approxinfinity @RockChalkinTexas 0
                    last edited by approxinfinity

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                    • approxinfinityA Online
                      approxinfinity
                      last edited by

                      This post is deleted!
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                      • approxinfinityA Online
                        approxinfinity
                        last edited by

                        This post is deleted!
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                        • approxinfinityA Online
                          approxinfinity
                          last edited by

                          Doesn’t look like nodebb supports dynamic resizing on render and solutions are limited to resizing client side before upload. I could look into making a code change to where the image is configured. Historically i have avoided anything beyond configuration or ui layer (this would involve storing dimensions to db) but im feeling frisky. We will see. In meantime, your only option is probably changing the image size on your device prior to upload

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                          • H Offline
                            HoraceZontal
                            last edited by

                            Nice use of frisky. Don’t see that word enough.

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