Here's the, slightly belated - Xmas shopping

- last batch of photographs from my Florida trip. These are taken at Fairchild Tropical Gardens just south of Miami. We arrived mid-afternoon and since the place shut at 4:30 - and our flight was at eight - we forsook the guided tram ride around the grounds and wandered amongst the avenues of cultivated plants, lawned areas, strands of trees, palms and the groves of cycads instead.
You can't really do justice to the place in just a couple of hours, let alone the fact that the Matheson Hammock Park is literally just next door (they share the same car park) and that has large areas of a variety of natural south Florida habitats to explore.
One thing you can't miss at Fairchild are the lizards. Spectacular and enormous. As a taster - whilst driving down a road adjacent to the park searcing for an entrance - we came across an iguana (about 2 feet long from nose to tail) in the median separating the two carriageways

Inside there were plenty more... orange with black heads and green legs, fat-bellied tongue-flicking lazy tree-dwellers, scaly dark brown with light blue underbellies... (these aren't technical terms, you know

)

Atala
Eumaeus atala

Eufala Skipper
Lerodea eufala

Horace's Duskywing
Erynnis horatius

Hammock Skipper
Polygonus leo

Julia Heliconian
Dryas iulia

Monarch
Danaus plexippus

Queen
Danaus eresimus

Long-Tailed Skipper
Urbanus proteus - with tail missing
Hairstreak fans will have, no doubt, noticed my deliberate mistake

in saying that there were no more of them to come... as the Atala is, indeed, a hairstreak - albeit a very different looking one

.
My most frustrating moment also came at Fairchild when an - otherwise unobserved - Dorantes Longtail perched delightfully right in front of me for several minutes whilst I wrestled with the camera trying desperately to get it to work. Then some other garden users wanted to squeeze past me on the path... and it was gone... ho hum.
Other species here were: Zebra Heliconian, Cassius Blue, White Peacock, Monk Skipper, Orange-Barred Sulphur, Cloudless Sulphur, Large Orange Sulphur, unidentified black swallowtail, unidentified yellow swallowtail and Barred Yellow. With a little more time I'm confident I'd have gotten more photographs of all of these and probably quite a few other species too.
A tall Bourgainvillea tree also harboured dozens of skippers, of several different sorts, buzzing around its blooms high up in the top branches... oh for a decent camera with a telephoto lens...
...I'll put that on my Xmas list

... and hopefully sometime I'll get a chance to return to see the other 70-odd species Florida has to offer. Thanks for reading.
