THREE DAYS IN THE STONE QUARRY

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·@borjan·
0.000 HBD
THREE DAYS IN THE STONE QUARRY
Well, I didn't spend three whole days in the quarry to get the abundance of visual material for today's post but I did visit it for a few hours a day, three days in a row, in the first half of October 2023. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbQtJTXTMpQEN5a45Ht5UgZhJ2dhHeJ618PhThBbSEi4o/img_7644i45i67i71_cetiroshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbQtJTXTMpQEN5a45Ht5UgZhJ2dhHeJ618PhThBbSEi4o/img_7644i45i67i71_cetiroshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

All the photographs I'm presenting here were taken on three occasions in the period from the 7th of October to the 9th of October last year ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPVWdMxMXfUXhCs2978m7LRrmX9A6i8o3R2uGwVuovNXR/img_7776_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPVWdMxMXfUXhCs2978m7LRrmX9A6i8o3R2uGwVuovNXR/img_7776_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... in the abandoned limestone quarry situated in the coastal area called Marlera ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcpEQhHxVZh6t6xePSFzBD6jhuKJjPipoBr1FbMCPSLhq/img_8033_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcpEQhHxVZh6t6xePSFzBD6jhuKJjPipoBr1FbMCPSLhq/img_8033_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... a couple of kilometers from the village of Liznjan and five or six kilometers from Medulin, the small, tourism-oriented town where I live.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmTD4e4Jd1pmTiTChmoq1QGpfR2cobhBoKFPj86zSgiPAq/img_7723_malo.jpg)

I had a lot of fun searching for insects and other small arthropods in those days ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYQowAnSiNiuopGkxRuKwqidEQHLs5Rva4wewnXvTQMAp/img_7720_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYQowAnSiNiuopGkxRuKwqidEQHLs5Rva4wewnXvTQMAp/img_7720_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... so expect plenty of macro in this post—stuff like this portrait of a Locusta migratoria grasshopper. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNufJHvdipgvKc8DuSdJzGBMvqdaFFnapznCzrqgNi1nK/img_7708_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNufJHvdipgvKc8DuSdJzGBMvqdaFFnapznCzrqgNi1nK/img_7708_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The grasshopper was well-camouflaged on the dry, brown vegetation.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZtVb6X6YYiCbsbmmDr3FatA1PHbJP6AzZQ5Je3LCqjSs/img_7710i14i16i19_cetiroshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZtVb6X6YYiCbsbmmDr3FatA1PHbJP6AzZQ5Je3LCqjSs/img_7710i14i16i19_cetiroshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Locusta migratoria is a big, robust grasshopper I only encounter in the seaside areas near Liznjan.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVxHrxQEASjxcgwTD1JAZ5dqJ7geiuaA8aeZgU2xY8D8g/img_7613_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVxHrxQEASjxcgwTD1JAZ5dqJ7geiuaA8aeZgU2xY8D8g/img_7613_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see a pair of beetles mating. They are black with a bit of blue-violet iridescence, especially on their legs.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQXYyF5dsHf7pJZ1vcThyzpQYVVGzn4iTxxYbdF3d7WTd/img_7602_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQXYyF5dsHf7pJZ1vcThyzpQYVVGzn4iTxxYbdF3d7WTd/img_7602_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The dark blueish shine can be seen only in natural light. I used the small, built-in flash in this photograph.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW2PTD3iEG8AUiMPP7U9wMHAJGkRQRhpK81nM83wVHEfv/img_7604_i07i09_trooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW2PTD3iEG8AUiMPP7U9wMHAJGkRQRhpK81nM83wVHEfv/img_7604_i07i09_trooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The light was pretty low in the shade so I had to use the flash to get a sharp shot while the beetles were moving.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmdzT8K6A5NKVmBZTjeygwxG2yaiX8ToC9bSJ1YthCdq46/img_7615_malo.jpg)

Only when they finally stopped for a minute, did I get an opportunity to show the scene in the subdued ambient light.
The name of the species is Timarcha goettingensis. It belongs to the Chrysomelidae family.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYXneJhPa8DLV8gV9ZSkj29gVSjZ8tCDcsTAmHygy4w9V/img_8019_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYXneJhPa8DLV8gV9ZSkj29gVSjZ8tCDcsTAmHygy4w9V/img_8019_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In this wide shot, you can take another look at the scenery.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmS1iHkBGK6HksrPh2UkZzMpoKwAZ2RY1UN4vnANqx2WSM/img_7635_malo.jpg)

This is the Nomisia exornata ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTCsuAZfRByJgLTaeZmvVBF6tM6FvF1XXU3y93j9Dq8rs/img_7639_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTCsuAZfRByJgLTaeZmvVBF6tM6FvF1XXU3y93j9Dq8rs/img_7639_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... a spider from the Gnaphosidae family.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcFNbGST2bhtUT1WJMb2wVRsTrhRfrG8A62whDNdhDPYJ/img_7636_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcFNbGST2bhtUT1WJMb2wVRsTrhRfrG8A62whDNdhDPYJ/img_7636_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Gnaphosidae are commonly known as ground spiders.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmUQTwte3Rv8nHPh31DXMpzxg4V2pNDZpdaLxWw1ntABW3/img_7616_malo.jpg)

Here you can see a woodlouse running across the gravel. The name of the species is Armadillidium pallasii. The family is Armadillidiidae.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNkDn5xPBazpGdSpxAPgo7dx6Ge7Uymu8Xc1Q5SkYyraq/img_7618i20i25_trooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNkDn5xPBazpGdSpxAPgo7dx6Ge7Uymu8Xc1Q5SkYyraq/img_7618i20i25_trooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

A few minutes later ...

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmYHe6P2qfpExMvVcgSF26MGgseKAzkHKzZpwxz49Yh7g1/img_7628_malo.jpg)

... when I overturned a bigger piece of stone that was lying nearby ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW3yNuTZ1hXP6pZidiM6y8EQVJqzkJjfbw1bnSJDzsyKe/img_7619i22i30_trooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW3yNuTZ1hXP6pZidiM6y8EQVJqzkJjfbw1bnSJDzsyKe/img_7619i22i30_trooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... this group of Armadillidium pallasii was uncovered.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmfNXwc1kTPX4fPcHatpsjMf7FWXuBKxhs5f8QxX9UqrUD/img_7629_malo.jpg)

Once I exposed them to the light of the day, they started searching for a bit of dark and quiet in the crevices.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaZP378vUQYsvfetkeZMD8hcbxDkqnZrZUbkWc38sf3Bu/img_7623i27i31_trooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaZP378vUQYsvfetkeZMD8hcbxDkqnZrZUbkWc38sf3Bu/img_7623i27i31_trooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

At moments, the woodlice were moving at different speeds so one of them ended up motion blurred in the last picture on the right in this tryptich while others are frozen in action and sharp. The same happened in the previous photograph, I mean, the one you saw before the tryptich. 

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmSRR3JWC2mVXa3H81ixnuocFszaHo99W8VuCnKVyK7iX9/img_7626_malo.jpg)

Observing the Armadillidium pallasii woodlice sure was fun to me but for them those few minutes were probably a bit stressful ...

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmQEC41T2E4UagKRCKcQQukqTS57i5YJ6jABrQZf2fDEBX/img_7634_malo.jpg)

... so I returned the stone to the position in which I found it. The woodlice were in a dark and quiet place again.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmWUqZDwoTtUNUnL1cqcpVi3szyPnB8p8UP2xC4hMGbYyf/img_7643_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmWUqZDwoTtUNUnL1cqcpVi3szyPnB8p8UP2xC4hMGbYyf/img_7643_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In some places, more or less in the center of the abandoned quarry, the Dittrichia viscosa plants were in bloom. About ten meters from the yellow flowers shown in this shot ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRRBc9mNsJZbaharJxbA3oar1qEVyxvVgCKCy12cF824n/img_7688_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRRBc9mNsJZbaharJxbA3oar1qEVyxvVgCKCy12cF824n/img_7688_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... a barren patch of terrain was covered with interesting crust.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaQzeuByepHzYWnXwz9j6b1kzjhrerinkRFNoPTEyu7nP/img_7706_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaQzeuByepHzYWnXwz9j6b1kzjhrerinkRFNoPTEyu7nP/img_7706_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The crust looked like a bunch of lichens from a distance but upon closer inspection, I started to think that these formations were only limestone dust modeled by the humidity.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmV8NpRpWwYJSPFsdkb5QUmc2SMxf6iwRyruchnhcE1gDD/img_7686_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmV8NpRpWwYJSPFsdkb5QUmc2SMxf6iwRyruchnhcE1gDD/img_7686_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Maybe some bacteria also had a certain role in creating this thing. I don't know. It's a visually interesting, photogenic phenomenon, that's for sure.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmZDQdw4v8V3KhLGN9cyuzdkGAG3JDAzemmH6GVTWV5xRS/img_7698_malo.jpg)

In some places ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcRWhPAXANVnh2ZLJXmVGFwwewUm9acDmg5sNG5ZtSpTE/img_7693_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcRWhPAXANVnh2ZLJXmVGFwwewUm9acDmg5sNG5ZtSpTE/img_7693_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... the crust was covered with moss.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmbFMXYtLeep86xkjr6uiG2SWGKJzKFrvtpDAMLvNBad4m/img_7810_malo.jpg)

That moss was a joy to observe and photograph through the macro lens.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmTmHLo1dgehrKDfSP4XxArC8MGs82cRG8W3ViuFSESnAo/img_7815_malo.jpg)

In some spaces, the moss was sparsely scattered across the white surface that looked like a miniature version of the desert landscape.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmX2rnmyXkX7H6FZYrbk753oiBw58tt1s9Z6L7d9NyEhqJ/img_7808_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmX2rnmyXkX7H6FZYrbk753oiBw58tt1s9Z6L7d9NyEhqJ/img_7808_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In other, the growth was very dense, resembling an inviting, soft carpet. 

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmZv9qPFZmEFRuvo8b6vpDYFSyf4WkPvtCkbyxj8JxhVK7/img_7805_malo.jpg)

I don't know what type of moss exactly this is, can't tell you the name of the species.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmfJs6xD1uowEcn5D5voAhHNQT8hsN9xyWitdou3evPhXj/img_7813_malo.jpg)

Near the moss and the crust ...

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmYbw98tukVp4xC3LeJ1jWQqLehqq9c5x9AJh7Lgdy4cEQ/img_7707_malo.jpg)

... only a few meters further ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNy9LJVhbvTKwcLVu3VZFB5foD9WYmXmozfvjsnsqf52A/img_7986_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNy9LJVhbvTKwcLVu3VZFB5foD9WYmXmozfvjsnsqf52A/img_7986_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... I came across this tiny jumping spider.


![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmXiWSDe2VLc1cEfsiHjfM7qsM6BDnJWeZabAUW2snHXcf/img_7938_malo.jpg)

The spider looked completely black at first sight, but ...

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmf1MQNrX2PnSS4d7t7GC18FTbxBQAVYZ7Hg9e5i9bwVMF/img_7937_malo.jpg)

... but from a certain angle and in a certain light, its abdomen was iridescent.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW8gAWwBm81HS1TYfwjHEotoEj2pYDqsgQ6kefFBLT5p8/img_7923_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW8gAWwBm81HS1TYfwjHEotoEj2pYDqsgQ6kefFBLT5p8/img_7923_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The name of the species is Chalcoscirtus infimus. The family is Salticidae, of course.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPoS8M2gTsLebM8onCRNYjtWeM4yyfe3eK6sQ1kjPZvey/img_7987_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPoS8M2gTsLebM8onCRNYjtWeM4yyfe3eK6sQ1kjPZvey/img_7987_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In this photograph, the spider is staring at you, while in the following one ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQHFXD2hk28hPswDJYMYgm568nrLRYNg7C5UPJrhwBLej/img_7807_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQHFXD2hk28hPswDJYMYgm568nrLRYNg7C5UPJrhwBLej/img_7807_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... the focus is on the soft green moss again.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmagXmRJpd9zo7Kj8F5DpxQzQ9AEGAmQxiwveUFL9fp5mn/img_7816_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmagXmRJpd9zo7Kj8F5DpxQzQ9AEGAmQxiwveUFL9fp5mn/img_7816_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can take one last look through the macro lens before waving goodbye to that moss.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSJYbNyaHeDxCeRdCJVqxj6f1sqivXcXesbJf1zqKDSsL/img_7794_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSJYbNyaHeDxCeRdCJVqxj6f1sqivXcXesbJf1zqKDSsL/img_7794_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

At some point, while rambling around the deserted quarry ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRB3Sr1fActBQY6MrgesuF5Gv5dpF9zivFzd9ZLKbctv9/img_7908_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRB3Sr1fActBQY6MrgesuF5Gv5dpF9zivFzd9ZLKbctv9/img_7908_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... I came across a lizard ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcAu3MURppqphBAGqyoLL6k3zaVmL13dXMWrYEuvw332o/img_7887_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcAu3MURppqphBAGqyoLL6k3zaVmL13dXMWrYEuvw332o/img_7887_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... that was enjoying the warm October afternoon ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNbi4w6EHpLEmXdoayeHUNCQ449yMTkQt4TEFJy2FbQXv/img_7897_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNbi4w6EHpLEmXdoayeHUNCQ449yMTkQt4TEFJy2FbQXv/img_7897_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... on the dark surface of an old tractor tire that someone recently threw away to rot at the bottom of the quarry.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXrcKqf8V8ARd1bvEbHDV5JcSo7HeD5MbvVNkP6jt3Da6/img_7901_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXrcKqf8V8ARd1bvEbHDV5JcSo7HeD5MbvVNkP6jt3Da6/img_7901_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

I saw three lizards later that day. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVM9DDaVPMEmGQ6YNcD2Y31Te2ocA6b8ZXrV3VsHFAFkF/img_7904_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVM9DDaVPMEmGQ6YNcD2Y31Te2ocA6b8ZXrV3VsHFAFkF/img_7904_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Two of them were sunbathing on the top of the tire.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRLJHsWvq5bWjsptFivajYMYbFfKa4aPTefN43MwqX7DC/img_7920_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRLJHsWvq5bWjsptFivajYMYbFfKa4aPTefN43MwqX7DC/img_7920_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

One was hidden in the crevices of that rubber island. These are all Podarcis siculus, fast and agile lizards from the Lacertidae family.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbSTuXVFL3kf1VJBsoJNEYDrnkqzEJrhqA3fjgjC7SX2A/img_7910_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbSTuXVFL3kf1VJBsoJNEYDrnkqzEJrhqA3fjgjC7SX2A/img_7910_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This moth from the Pterophoridae family was also posing on the tire.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmRq8DVeh8bcWoixwSuQBgacERQayGQEPwWHYWy2fC6kk9/img_7916_malo.jpg)

The name of the species is Hellinsia pectodactylus.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXLLeeN1B59Qadm3ZyP3ABdBkwbgTLkWXbHDnxZsMCBde/img_7797_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXLLeeN1B59Qadm3ZyP3ABdBkwbgTLkWXbHDnxZsMCBde/img_7797_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This grasshopper is very visible on the black surface of the tractor tire, but ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQme7Kgx7bhc8rHfdhf3z1288WRoAR6xpQzqmCzJZgEmYMd/img_8000_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQme7Kgx7bhc8rHfdhf3z1288WRoAR6xpQzqmCzJZgEmYMd/img_8000_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... but down on the terrain covered with stones, dust, or gravel, the insect has a great camouflage. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXc81rPobg6p7VQSJxo1mZFauFpYL7U8aCZmNh7T6PDGG/img_8002_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXc81rPobg6p7VQSJxo1mZFauFpYL7U8aCZmNh7T6PDGG/img_8002_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The name of the species is Sphingonotus caerulans.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRD5Fdyhj5q5sEz4ext7SWqDLdpfVx8MmJ4dY5PpbTy6P/img_7774_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRD5Fdyhj5q5sEz4ext7SWqDLdpfVx8MmJ4dY5PpbTy6P/img_7774_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can take another look at the scenery. The friend who was there with me is posing right in the middle of the shot. 

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmUs9WvZGnoPYAzfB3o2DC3K8KgKoaaEMvsQ8BxbjSERfp/img_7749_malo.jpg)

This is an insect I rarely encounter. I saw it only a few times in nature.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmU1yi4V22UgwF9Ej1eZoCNzHEfNvEQefch6R8pNK5FfWN/img_7746_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmU1yi4V22UgwF9Ej1eZoCNzHEfNvEQefch6R8pNK5FfWN/img_7746_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

It's a planthopper from the Caliscelidae family. The name of the species is Caliscelis bonellii. This is a female. Males look considerably different.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbn3xuJ8RW5WwSAhA4mD3SVVmpzFv4CUdRkrSwWQwZvbY/img_7730_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmbn3xuJ8RW5WwSAhA4mD3SVVmpzFv4CUdRkrSwWQwZvbY/img_7730_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Rare encounters are always a special joy to photograph.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmT7EZq1Y4x5CECDqqyijzY7aVdeUDhTUbRSnaSNQ69Q48/img_7955_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmT7EZq1Y4x5CECDqqyijzY7aVdeUDhTUbRSnaSNQ69Q48/img_7955_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This well-camouflaged caterpillar was resting on the lower, dry part of the Dittrichia viscosa plant. The caterpillar is the larval stage of the Thalpophila matura, a moth from the Noctuidae family.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVhj3U1hd2YRuD2aEWQkbF92WQ7U8JbkWsGCQd6esrM82/img_7645_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVhj3U1hd2YRuD2aEWQkbF92WQ7U8JbkWsGCQd6esrM82/img_7645_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In the foreground of this shot, you can see the needles and branches of a small, shrub-like pine tree that grows in the middle of the quarry. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmamZUTgZXAixLdBiUKmyLXADwe1zpid9rVkxVwSRhURhw/img_7649_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmamZUTgZXAixLdBiUKmyLXADwe1zpid9rVkxVwSRhURhw/img_7649_oshtro.jpgg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The pines on the harsh terrain at the bottom of the quarry are all small.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUSWyXqgVc5BrC4XmY28dtqd9s32Jdh66n6psarDEFXWt/img_7647_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUSWyXqgVc5BrC4XmY28dtqd9s32Jdh66n6psarDEFXWt/img_7647_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

I don't know how exactly old they are but I'm pretty sure they looked pretty much the same a few decades ago.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmRg7iaShmj16bFu7oQmxAWhAVGdY15yPH1PLBN5abgkQA/img_8025_malo.jpg)

Small pines can be seen on the walls of the quarry as well.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXiQ6m239Lg4UVBXYtFfHqK5vHrWfkNiYRrCaq4ZUbPq8/img_8030_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXiQ6m239Lg4UVBXYtFfHqK5vHrWfkNiYRrCaq4ZUbPq8/img_8030_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

They don't look particularly interesting at first sight but after a bit of zooming in and observing through the lens of my camera, I started noticing a distinct personality in each little tree. 

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmTswbkq3HzvNhazFeiPQ9P5avPgxAPkAR1SMF67wviiSP/img_8028_malo.jpg)

With a few decorative balls, this one could be a nice Christmas tree on the rock. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVHgFwxhDQ7TipXE4YykfJvbaAn3U3L24JJxKzkECFf31/img_7646_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmVHgFwxhDQ7TipXE4YykfJvbaAn3U3L24JJxKzkECFf31/img_7646_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see another tree from the bottom of the quarry. 

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmceXfNT7gynhTFR4A7ZK1xReufsZR8PpAYJmGBRwquDKD/img_8020_malo.jpg)

The pines on the edge of the quarry are taller. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZMrdtcKKFTjfQTGGmdqQm7XBv6jeZD5FVhetErUALofc/img_7671_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZMrdtcKKFTjfQTGGmdqQm7XBv6jeZD5FVhetErUALofc/img_7671_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This small, juvenile spider belongs to the Lycosidae family. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTQ8SuMXAEtDMbHaNsjqBeqtgwVYD9L6wRRwLC6AYGmEU/img_7677_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTQ8SuMXAEtDMbHaNsjqBeqtgwVYD9L6wRRwLC6AYGmEU/img_7677_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The name of the species is Pardosa lugubris. What looks like stones in this and the previous photographs are grains of gravel. Adults are much bigger.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNvcCUDtFrVsxaRdw1KH95BGdVAcNYUCQ5L4As6YwssmW/img_7766_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmNvcCUDtFrVsxaRdw1KH95BGdVAcNYUCQ5L4As6YwssmW/img_7766_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This wide shot is here to let you take yet another break from the macro view. It shows the scenery and a friend of mine resting on a deckchair that someone threw away to be a piece of garbage in the wrong place. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmU8nLfckhB7orpNCqkqJHXgHkZK8LMZj5yRa1wpXbJixp/img_7803_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmU8nLfckhB7orpNCqkqJHXgHkZK8LMZj5yRa1wpXbJixp/img_7803_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see the tiny, juvenile Hogna radiata. The adult Hogna radiata is a big, robust spider from the Lycosidae family, one of the biggest spiders that can be seen in my area.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcyzS8gtvgwEwfSSbmA64SnyKCfidLKhVCgoEEziwYUvv/img_7784_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcyzS8gtvgwEwfSSbmA64SnyKCfidLKhVCgoEEziwYUvv/img_7784_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This is the biggest grasshopper in my area.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmQPPZobJU6iMwHMVCpy7G8LGCQdsQrj5oPoaPsTww6HA7/img_7781_malo.jpg)

The name of the species is Anacridium aegyptium.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSNzYd31xXTTHQp8aNuSFcQNK1U7kRkYj7vCbKyF5yyKD/img_7787_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSNzYd31xXTTHQp8aNuSFcQNK1U7kRkYj7vCbKyF5yyKD/img_7787_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The grasshopper was slowly walking across the gravel to one of the small pines shown earlier in the post when this and two previous photographs were taken.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaxLZrWeTzXCuqak1mQWJyr4DX5Y6sEeGdWCmCoK6ZQH9/img_7650_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaxLZrWeTzXCuqak1mQWJyr4DX5Y6sEeGdWCmCoK6ZQH9/img_7650_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

I found the spider shown in this shot when I overturned one of the many small pieces of limestone scattered all across the quarry. It looks like a species from the Oecobiidae family. That's all I can tell you here.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmcv3EEw6uxuNeUhxGTQT4w4rXDWb3tJMXybp4pqfoyp7b/img_7601_malo.jpg)

Here you can take another look at the wider setting, the abandoned quarry with its limestone and a small community of resilient plants.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQtSfeuVG4NFZLYjHvdqQ8wLMoiNHM4DiJN35d2p979pU/img_7829_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQtSfeuVG4NFZLYjHvdqQ8wLMoiNHM4DiJN35d2p979pU/img_7829_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The Locusta migratoria grasshopper was the first insect I introduced in today's post. That grasshopper was completely brown.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTMz5JLUxWDBb1hnJwkjHk6EysEvmEAeTyELMHQiPPD3L/img_7825_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmTMz5JLUxWDBb1hnJwkjHk6EysEvmEAeTyELMHQiPPD3L/img_7825_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see a different morph of the same species for a change.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW9kHTR876KugUn5c1SdnJDyRPTBeyiyMcHaZZHrnWPKX/img_7822_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmW9kHTR876KugUn5c1SdnJDyRPTBeyiyMcHaZZHrnWPKX/img_7822_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This is also Locusta migratoria, but ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcFGaLMP34e8bxcVwe498BeyXd3QrdB2SD6twRcCeKWAM/img_7832_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmcFGaLMP34e8bxcVwe498BeyXd3QrdB2SD6twRcCeKWAM/img_7832_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... but the grasshopper shown here is mostly green, only its wings are completely brown. A bit later that day ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmWy2zRZAEfn7KKDWtdixACr71SEvpLFT8dZRS5XiUsyZD/img_7877_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmWy2zRZAEfn7KKDWtdixACr71SEvpLFT8dZRS5XiUsyZD/img_7877_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... I found another brown Locusta migratoria in the quarry.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmSXAMxTTxPgoWfdDhmivRMiUhXecewzhfbZVPgajRFLe1/img_7870_malo.jpg)

This one ...

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXg21n5m2tMzfscAzK9dPvJnWEsECtaFrbj6A1p2DAasp/img_7869_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXg21n5m2tMzfscAzK9dPvJnWEsECtaFrbj6A1p2DAasp/img_7869_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... was resting on a relatively big piece of stone.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaaZVi2uk22biGJrY9w7uQoraD3NyjrCX52WUWhynQfss/img_7878_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmaaZVi2uk22biGJrY9w7uQoraD3NyjrCX52WUWhynQfss/img_7878_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

It was near dusk and the light was fairly low so I used the flash on most of the shots. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRQ52xbZBieamzs6CLAPRriEUTGUyZyt71qxhuZnAVzrJ/img_7873_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRQ52xbZBieamzs6CLAPRriEUTGUyZyt71qxhuZnAVzrJ/img_7873_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see the same grasshopper photographed in ambient light.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXWpQLY8rdYog3ph6apUXeVr6Bodi4sPHKRcXMwfF5NRT/img_7886_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXWpQLY8rdYog3ph6apUXeVr6Bodi4sPHKRcXMwfF5NRT/img_7886_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Locusta migratoria is pretty big for an insect, but like all insects, it looks rather small from a couple of meters distance.  

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYyYVNzKG7cFpiuffRXbEZMmRT1qkHmkjUonuJEaiRkqq/img_7818_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmYyYVNzKG7cFpiuffRXbEZMmRT1qkHmkjUonuJEaiRkqq/img_7818_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here, especially if you enlarge the picture by clicking on it,  you can see the young Podarcis siculus lizard and an adult Locusta migratoria standing near each other in the same shot. Both animals have a nice camouflage on the stony terrain with small green plants scattered across it and they are both more or less the same size.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSnhXeNc47fT3P9CQgBgMA5HbM2aU4n3dW4X661B8Vc89/img_7819_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmSnhXeNc47fT3P9CQgBgMA5HbM2aU4n3dW4X661B8Vc89/img_7819_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

I came closer to the grasshopper in this photograph.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmP8iWBF5zym8yQnjXc76ETxHrF7SRKet4WKKxJzjvpww3/img_7817_malo.jpg)

It was an interesting scene to collect through the lens of my camera and put in today's post. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZdoenUa33xf6jdN4HVNM6FK7eV5ByeuBEnHf6jbgiwcy/img_7760i62i64i65i70i71_shestoshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZdoenUa33xf6jdN4HVNM6FK7eV5ByeuBEnHf6jbgiwcy/img_7760i62i64i65i70i71_shestoshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In this set of six photographs, you can see the friend who was there with me posing in the limestone scenery. 

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmb1UXQrWVH5iNpxoPpr3YRUKZ9FCaCoT9ZUqRPoqnd4MR/img_8012i14i16_trooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmb1UXQrWVH5iNpxoPpr3YRUKZ9FCaCoT9ZUqRPoqnd4MR/img_8012i14i16_trooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Here you can see a weevil walking across the stretch of stony terrain with no plants. The name of the species is Otiorhynchus ligustici. The family is Curculionidae.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmfRjnQAdcra7u8cdXnKrHdfZYQNUrJDKMiWozrM7WPDfL/img_7664_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmfRjnQAdcra7u8cdXnKrHdfZYQNUrJDKMiWozrM7WPDfL/img_7664_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

This is yet another grasshopper. The insect was partially hidden by the gravel when I took this photograph.

<a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRZJmTbZy7S4tECohCxD3i2TZwj4cMuGkyi7ZQrPB8WZA/img_7658_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRZJmTbZy7S4tECohCxD3i2TZwj4cMuGkyi7ZQrPB8WZA/img_7658_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Compared to Anacridium aegyptium and Locusta migratoria ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUL9cbHhv1LtGkXLvnkN6uR2hWkjbWoPxJPCc513Nng8G/img_7663_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUL9cbHhv1LtGkXLvnkN6uR2hWkjbWoPxJPCc513Nng8G/img_7663_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... Acrotylus patruelis is a much smaller grasshopper.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXkLS7KTdTxZWz3SLNZBQ7PHpHTKbYo4i1BjFgFKcNE7j/img_7665_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmXkLS7KTdTxZWz3SLNZBQ7PHpHTKbYo4i1BjFgFKcNE7j/img_7665_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

I encounter this species only on the stony terrain in and around the quarry.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZ4rqSrX5GdTXPswVPkLxJzXQDVEZ7De7hM8H3FDicfRx/img_7779_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmZ4rqSrX5GdTXPswVPkLxJzXQDVEZ7De7hM8H3FDicfRx/img_7779_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

In the area near the pine shown in the foreground of this shot ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQme3j1ogPGPgButvLgkkSBftXrUXeC6byyYX1V27Etmk5A/img_7842_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQme3j1ogPGPgButvLgkkSBftXrUXeC6byyYX1V27Etmk5A/img_7842_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... I photographed another Nomisia exornata spider, and then ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQjLdXrHkTrp5XsDdffiybGnuneRGBJVhy5vH6tg5p1oB/img_7849_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmQjLdXrHkTrp5XsDdffiybGnuneRGBJVhy5vH6tg5p1oB/img_7849_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... I came across this tiny grasshopper from the Tetrigidae family.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUY4RoUxYrqMRwn92hAsPcyzhwwHSp8Cnhxg49U8nBs1P/img_7856_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmUY4RoUxYrqMRwn92hAsPcyzhwwHSp8Cnhxg49U8nBs1P/img_7856_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

It's a nymph whose wings aren't fully developed. In the following photograph ...

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmekf3ifSNMQsEVD6su4x3Xw4LxFZiBGeG3DibNrbiMPaD/img_7685_oshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmekf3ifSNMQsEVD6su4x3Xw4LxFZiBGeG3DibNrbiMPaD/img_7685_oshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

... you can see a slightly bigger adult.

![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmR5GD1ofsmUsPYf6T2tPHS6g5jqCd2nN2SXkUz8VAr4vd/img_7839_malo.jpg)

The name of the species is Tetrix ceperoi.

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmR48dc1EcpAmSBUvDcWqyw1F926mpkeJAv9xLrb7KNP3A/img_8022i23_dvooshtro.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmR48dc1EcpAmSBUvDcWqyw1F926mpkeJAv9xLrb7KNP3A/img_8022i23_dvooshtro.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

These two shots show the same scene photographed in two slightly different ways. In the right shot, I came closer to the pine twigs in the foreground and used the flash to illuminate them.  It's a small difference that makes the photograph more vivid and dynamic. 

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRWPcmwMD8rFGWSLs8BP3YyyUaocCuFrPV5XdeKyd3CWu/img_7890_oshtro_text.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmRWPcmwMD8rFGWSLs8BP3YyyUaocCuFrPV5XdeKyd3CWu/img_7890_oshtro_text.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

Yep, that's all folks!

 <a href="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPr7gz516ccoA8QS5ms56VJqNbHmiXHgBHnJfsiR2HYPS/img_7902_oshtro_text.jpg"><img 
src="https://images.ecency.com/DQmPr7gz516ccoA8QS5ms56VJqNbHmiXHgBHnJfsiR2HYPS/img_7902_oshtro_text.jpg"></a> (Enlargeable)

The following links will take you to the sites with more information about some of the protagonists of today's post. I found some stuff about them there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migratory_locust
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timarcha_goettingensis
https://www.arachnophoto.com/en/gnaphosidae-2/nomisia-exornata/
https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/792754-Armadillidium-pallasii
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dittrichia_viscosa

https://www.arachnophoto.com/en/salticidae-2/chalcoscirtus-infimus/#:~:text=Description%20of%20Chalcoscirtus%20infimus&text=Carapace%20shiny%20black.,Male%202%20to%203%20mm.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_wall_lizard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellinsia_pectodactylus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphingonotus_caerulans
https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/gallery?taxon_key=2057937
http://www.pyrgus.de/Thalpophila_matura_en.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pardosa_lugubris
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogna_radiata
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anacridium_aegyptium
https://uk.inaturalist.org/taxa/47587-Oecobiidae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otiorhynchus_ligustici
http://www.pyrgus.de/Acrotylus_patruelis_en.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrix_ceperoi

👍 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,