Prehistoric Spiders Discovered in a Myrtle Beach Art Gallery
Of the over 45,000 species of spiders, even if you're not a fan of arachnids, this one will blow your mind
This week, I had the good fortune to be invited to exhibit my paintings and photographs in coastal South Carolina again. Seacoast artists gallery is an impressive gallery located at 3032 Nevers Street in The Market Common, and where they will hang. The Gallery is made up of over 70 talented artists who are juried and showcase their works there, which are in a wide variety of mediums. Market Common is a growing and up-and-coming area with a diverse composite of waterfront, unique homes, restaurants, and boutiques in the Myrtle Beach area, definitely worthy of a visit. While you’re there, I'd recommend a leisurely stroll to visit the remnants of the surrounding old Air Force base and military planes on display there as well.At first, choosing which photos to exhibit was overwhelming, but then quickly evolved into happy memories. As I remembered the back stories surrounding them, I was reminded of all Mother Nature lays before us every morning and I was both humbled and impressed. I wanted to share those stories here, one for the people who purchase my work, and two, for people who have not yet been able to make that journey of discovery, wherever they are greeting mother nature every day.
Here is a snippet of the back stories behind my pictures, some published both nationally and internationally on CNN, HGTV, the BBC, and various other print media including Travel+Leisure Magazine and others. Some of these back stories are informative for parents, educators, and nature aficionados and some are just plain humorous and uplifting to brighten your day.
I framed this colorful spider in a montage with different views of the glamorous gal and her wanna-be suitor. It shows a unique strategy for mating with a very fussy, very cranky diva of a spider, named a Golden Orb Weaver and was a real challenge for me to photograph. She’s a species that warrants attention however, even if you're not an insect or spider fan, so I was excited and nervous at the same time. This particular species has survived over 177 million years according to a recent fossil discovery in China and has also remained virtually the same anatomically as the scientists who found her discovered when they necropsied her. We should all be so lucky.
While I respect this lady for her struggles, survival, and tenacity to continue her species, admittedly I had to get used to seeing her in all her beautiful coloration, but with enormous mandibles, and those large and long hairy legs so prominent in my lens. I patiently set up my tripod everyday – rain or shine, for over 3 weeks. And while it was initially off putting to see this curiously beautiful and colorful spider, it was even more off putting when I didn’t see her because with every wisp of wind, I imagined I could feel her crawling up my leg.
Golden Orbs are one of the most fascinating spiders I've photographed and are so named for their strong webs. I should mention that their webs capture a host of mosquitoes and other flying pests if you're lucky enough to have one choose your yard. These 6 foot plus webs have been likened to having the strength of Kevlar, but also their shimmering deep to light gold colored silk – depending on who is weaving it, is unique in that it's also been used to weave impressive clothing for discerning humans.
I watched many tiny male Golden Orb suitors less than the size of one of
her leg segments, camp out safely on the far sides of her web. They also dutifully repaired her web and you
can see patches of different colors, depending on the weaver of that particular spot. But
the males must earn their right to win her favor as the chosen patriarch of her
family. A family that would hatch out of
the egg case she would meticulously weave and attach to a bush to safely
survive the Winter. At the rate she was
going, given her crankiness and impatience, this Diva wouldn’t find anyone
acceptable in time to get her egg case ready before Fall set in I worried as I watched
her reject then eat one suitor after another and another for almost a month.
One tiny male golden, who I watched being rejected over and over and ultimately given the boot – literally by one of her giant legs to the far side of the web, didn’t give up. The challenge for these Golden Orb males is to get close enough to the female to mate with her before being eaten. That’s accomplished by slowly but tenaciously making his way close enough, over her giant legs to be able to soothe her by rubbing her abdomen, which the tiny male in the photo kept trying time after time.
I
hadn’t seen this recorded in journals or on the Internet until I released it
after viewing it in the series of photographs I took. This particular male approached her powerful, intimidating back legs over and over. Then he – either from past
experience or sheer wit carefully approached her back legs once more, on this one fateful day when she had stuffed
her mouth and was oblivious as she enjoyed another bit of prey. Except this time, he began binding those large powerful
back legs with his silk to avoid the defensive kicking and presumably the
eating. Ever so slowly, carefully, and gently he
wound silk threads around and around, so softly she didn’t even notice
apparently, in her distracted state of eating one not so lucky. Having
accomplished that, he then slowly made his way to her abdomen and stroked it until she was
apparently in total digestion-oblivion and allowed him to mate, assuring
one more hatching of about 100-200 tiny little Orb Weavers in 5-6 months. Thus, the name “Binding Nuptials."
This is a photo of her egg case purely for interest, and not displayed at the gallery. She securely attached it to stems and tucked it in a bundle of leaves in a Rose of Sharon bush only about 4 1/2 feet off the ground. This would be her last act on earth, but I was able to witness the safe hatching of about 160 of her tiny little goldens which you see here, as soon as the weather warmed enough for them to emerge. Then they shimmied up a tall Crepe Myrtle where they remained until they scampered and floated away to make their own webs and assure the survival of their species.
ICE FISHING
One of the challenges I like best about nature photography is working with ole' Mother Nature to provide a little beauty, excitement and surprise to the limitations of what a camera can do. For this shot, when I heard about unseasonably cold overnight temperatures predicted in Virginia in the opportune time when beautiful Great Egrets are adorned especially well in their breeding plumage, I knew I had to get up early. Usually they're donning this special attire later than when the temps are low enough to provide ice. Before dawn, I headed out to a relatively deserted area I'd discovered where I'd observed egrets comfortably fishing in the relative peace of unusually secluded areas. Ice melts early in the day here and I had to drive a good distance then search quickly if I was going to capture the ice before it melted. The fact that he's fluffing his feathers to stay warm emphasizes his beauty, which only happens once a year, and I hoped would exemplify the challenges wildlife face to simply find food, and would philosophically lift my photo to a higher level. The glitz and pattern of these particular crystals in this spot and the natural swirls in the water added the texture I wanted for an intriguing and beautiful background. Waiting for the right position of the sun, I was able to capture reflections and being able to capture the falling water droplets and the bit of food in his beak was the bonus I desired, so I chose this photo and I named it simply, "Ice Fishing."
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