Bees in our Backyard

Bee on a coneflower blossom
Circle Jerk
One of the joys I find in wildlife photography is that, because you spend so much time in the field watching an animal, you get to study its behaviors and learn firsthand the many ways they have adapted to their environment. This applies just as much to macro photography as it does to traditional wildlife photography.

After I had been shooting bees on our coneflowers for a while in the summer of 2006, I noticed that the large bumblebees would sometimes use a special technique to collect nectar. While they would often just amble here and there about the cone, sometimes they would anchor one of their long back legs to a spike in the center of the flower and then swing themselves around the edge of the cone in a circle, collecting nectar as they went.

In the words of a famous science officer: fascinating.

A bumblebee on a coneflower blossom
Rising Coneflower
I intentionally positioned my camera so that the bumblebee would appear in front of the purple coneflower behind it, it reminded me of a large monster climbing over the earth (the cone of the coneflower in front) before the rising sun (the out-of-focus coneflower bloom).

I’m easily amused, in case you hadn’t noticed.

Bee on a coneflower blossom
We Meet Again, Mr. Bee
These fascinating little creatures are my mortal enemy. It’s nothing personal and not even their fault, I just happen to be allergic to their stings. Makes your heart beat a little faster when you’re photographing them a few inches away.

This particular bumblebee was covered head to stinger in pollen from the many coneflower blossoms it had already visited.

Bee on a coneflower blossom
And Now For Something Completely Different
When I first saw this little bee nestled between some purple coneflower petals, I knew I had a chance to take something other than the typical bee-on-a-coneflower picture.

However, all but the bee’s tail was in shadow, which usually calls for fill-flash to even out the exposure. The on-board flash would leave a strong reflected pattern in the bee’s eye and my external flash was too tall to penetrate the petals. A ring-flash would have been useful had I owned on.

Rather than give up on the picture, I decided to combat the effect in software by using an extremely low contrast setting when I converted the RAW image. I positioned the lens so that there were only three areas of interest: the bee, the out-of-focus blue/green background, and the mostly out-of-focus pink petals of the coneflower arcing across the image.

Bee on a coneflower blossom
Hold On! Don't Let Go!
A small bee struggles to avoid being pulled down to its death inside the carnivorous coneflower.

OK, so maybe coneflowers aren’t carnivorous. And maybe the bee isn’t struggling at all and it’s only the angle of the petals that suggests its about to fall into the fiery orange center. The petal above it helped hide the bee so that this was in fact a fairly secure place to hang out for a sleepy little bee.

Dead bee caught in a spider web
Drift Net
A bee hangs lifelessly from a mint plant, two legs stuck to filaments from an abandoned spider’s web. A nearby bumblebee had met a similar fate, unable to escape from a single strand that was still stuck to the stem of the plant. At first I thought they might be alive, but it turned out that their bodies were just waving about in the gentle breeze. The scene reminded me of drift nets in the ocean indiscriminately killing the animals who get trapped in the nets and eventually die, their bodies slowly waving in the ocean currents.

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Last modified: September 23, 2009