I've always been detail oriented, but since I started taking pictures for this blog, I find myself looking at things in a different way. Especially the way light and water are mixed and present on a given plant.
It had been raining last night, and I woke up to sunlight painting pattens on my bedroom wall. Absolutely perfect conditions to find a spider web. But I would have to go looking now, before the sun burned off the beads of water on the fine stands of silk. I grabbed a quick breakfast and headed out.
It was chilly, fall is here. The leaves muffled the sound of my footsteps, everything was hushed, the calm after a storm. The air was so clean, I love the smell of fall. I crossed our dirt road, a small stream and followed a winding trail to the Flat Brook River.
I was thinking that the fields of tall grass by the river would have a good chance of holding a spider web.
Once I reached the fields, I stopped and looked around. I smiled and shook my head. Not a spider web, hundreds.
If you were to just glace at the field, you wouldn't see anything gut wet grass and that's about it. But if you take a lil time, and actually look, you'd see the hundreds of small, intricately woven strands of silk forming small insect death traps.
It was captivating, small beads of water clung to the fine stands of silk, and when the sunlight hit the webs it was an impressive sight.
I spent oven an hour looking at and taking pictures of the work of some of natures finest architects.
But, there are some things you cant capture with a camera. If you look at the water beaded webs from the right angle in the correct sunlight, tiny rainbows can be seen shimmering between the strands of silk.
I couldn't capture this in a picture, because it wasn't possible the get close enough to the web without block casting a shadow on the web.
Fascinating, how something so beautiful can only be seen after the rain, and before the sun burns off the rain/