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Hungry bee beetle

Sierra de La Cabrera. This beetle made serious inroads into this poor daff at the rate of knots!
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13 comments

William Sutherland said:

Great catch and detail!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
6 years ago ( translate )

Andy Rodker said:

Thank you, William!
6 years ago ( translate )

Jaap van 't Veen said:

Lovely springtime flowers.
6 years ago

Rosalyn Hilborne said:

Never seen one of those before!
6 years ago ( translate )

Eunice Perkins said:

The beetle needed its dinner.
6 years ago ( translate )

Cämmerer zu Nau said:

Huckepack auf dieser Wildnarzisse, wird das Pelztierchen seinen Rüssel bald im „Honigtopf“ versenken. Schön.
6 years ago ( translate )

cammino said:

Great!
6 years ago ( translate )

Nora Caracci said:

well seen and profited !!!
6 years ago ( translate )

micritter said:

Beautiful. Excellent detail in the beetle.
6 years ago ( translate )

Jenny McIntyre said:

No daffodils out here in my garden yet - but next door have a carpet of crocuses on their lawn. There are some early daffodils and crocuses in Instow - about 3 miles from my home, and these bloom around middle of January!!!!
6 years ago

Andy Rodker replied to Jenny McIntyre:

Still midwinter in Madrid, but then we are high up on a windy and cold plateau.
The Madrileños describe the climate here as:

"Nueve meses de invierno
Y tres meses de inferno"

Nine months of winter and six months of hell.
An exaggeration perhaps, but you get the idea. English friends who only know the Costas say "Oh, you lucky thing, Spain in the winter!" Little do they know! I have far more need of thick winter clothing here than ever I did in the UK, outsideof winter hill climbing and walking!
6 years ago

Nouchetdu38 said:

Great close up!******
6 years ago ( translate )

Andy Rodker replied to Nouchetdu38:

Merci, Nouchet!
6 years ago ( translate )