Unfortunately we missed the chance for an equally perfect photo of the pair, but on our return home a mere 45 minutes later, I spotted this lurker hanging just around the back corner of the neighbor's house. In the way of deer, he was probably just waiting to see if he could hang around until the cover of darkness when he would happily nibble away on the neighbor's landscaping, so I foiled him by driving down a side lane and spooking him. Not before, however, I captured these images in the closing light of day, through the dirty windshield, but still not a bad picture. He's beautiful and I hope his proximity to town allows him to escape the hunting season since most folks around here don't shoot into the random horizon for fear of hitting a house. Most folks, anyway.
I've got a busy week ahead, so I'm not making it a long post today. I've got to spend some of today preparing for a Johnson County Master Gardener presentation about Rugosa and Old Garden Roses. Since they're all that Rose Rosette disease has left me, you can bet that I'm going to touch on that hell-borne scourge as well. Happily, I was in Kansas City a few weeks back and, in a large outdoor mall, captured this image (below) of three 'Knockout' roses in their landscaping, right, so-to-speak, in my audiences' back yard. Most of the 'Knockout' roses on display there were exhibiting signs of RRD, so I think this picture will drive home my point about growing and breeding RRD resistant roses.
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