This week the sun has come out.
New flowers and flower flies make it feel like spring is right around the corner.
It has been raining, cold and windy here, so here’s a photograph from the archives.
Do you call these wasps white-faced or bald-faced hornets? I have heard them called both. They get the name because of the white patterns on their head.
White-faced hornets are found throughout North America.
They build basketball-sized nests from a papery material they make themselves from chewed wood.
See how dusty it looks? It has pollen on it. White-faced hornets regularly visit flowers for nectar and can be pollinators. They also catch insects to feed to their larvae. I have seen white-faced hornets grab house flies that were sitting on a wall, to take back to the nest and feed to their offspring. It was amazing!
For more information and photographs:Â white-faced hornets.
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