I'm leading a painting workshop soon and needed to get some practice in with acrylic paints, a medium I haven't used since high school. Here's a clip showing my work. (Check for our rescue kitty, Gustav, photobombing the second half of the clip.)
Laurel Sundberg is a professional artist and naturalist in the Twin Cities, Minnesota. She also does sports like riding bikes off-road and on gravel, Nordic skiing, and falling off paddleboards into lakes.
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Time lapse painting: Green Darner dragonfly
I'm leading a painting workshop soon and needed to get some practice in with acrylic paints, a medium I haven't used since high school. Here's a clip showing my work. (Check for our rescue kitty, Gustav, photobombing the second half of the clip.)
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
June and early July phenology
Here are some fun shots from the past several days.
Spicebush or black swallowtail on Vervain in the rain garden. Just noticed the Vervain blooming this past week.
Butterfly weed (left), a type of milkweed, looking showy and covered in native bees too small for me to get photos of.
Speaking of milkweed, this Common milkweed is hosting a BIG Monarch caterpillar, almost ready to form a J and go into chrysalis. This guy has his own manure pile, loads of "frass" or caterpillar poop.
Ebony jewelwing hanging out along Purgatory creek, near home. There were hundreds of these along the creek banks. Delicate lacy little things...hard to believe. I know they often emerge in masses but had never seen that until recently.
Ok, have a great July 4th holiday. Thanks for reading.
-Laurel
Monday, June 19, 2017
Vlog: Color strings, warm tints
Mixing strings of color is a way to explore how your palette interacts with white. It gives me insights about how it will behave along with my other colors as well.
Wednesday, May 31, 2017
Native Bee Survey
Last week I attended a native bee identification training. It was fantastic and very timely since I will be leading a citizen science survey (say that 3 times fast) coming up in about a week and a half. If you're interested in learning more join me at Lowry Nature Center June 10th 12:30-2:30 to help us survey our restored prairies!
| Native bee nest tunnels (I swear it's not poop) |
Native bees are often solitary nesters, or only loosely colonial. This means that the female is responsible for finding food, building the nest, doing all the jobs a honeybee uses a whole colony to complete. The way they accomplish this is to have a much smaller range for their habitat. 300ft in some cases!
| Bumble bee colony |
This means native bees need to get their habitat JUST right. With food, water and nest areas, everything they need, close by. Habitats like the one below...
Until then, thanks for reading.
-Laurel
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Virgin Islands, from February 2017
Here are some notes from a recent trip, to get away for a few days in winter.
On St. Thomas, leaving Charlotte Amalie for Red Hook, to catch the ferry to St. John, where we spent most of our visit.
| Leaving Charlotte Amalie |
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| Cinnamon Bay |
We took a looooooong hike (15 miles) across the island to Reef Bay to visit ruins, petroglyphs, and this old sugar mill. Lots of bats, very interesting old structures. The steppes used to raise sugar we still apparent all the way down the side of the mountain to the shore.
Big old gears that used to power the mill, strewn about inside the ruin. They provide some parkour challenges for the hermit crabs in-residence. I didn't get any good portable photos of the bats. Just look for the guano and you will find a group nestling together to sleep until evening.
Looking back up to the mill, from the large circle where donkeys would've powered the giant grinder to break down raw sugar cane to get ready to make sugar and rum.
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
Chilling with Chickadees.
I visited a special bird feeding site called Chickadee Landing. It's 0 Fahrenheit today and windchill is -21, so bear with me, it's hard to talk and move my face!
We use this site to get close to nature with school groups. Despite the cold temps the entire time I was there I was surrounded by Chickadees and other birds eagerly await the suet. It's a magical site to visit and makes you realize even in the dead of winter, nature is alive and kicking.
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