Marking these katydid photos as sensitive for anyone less enthused about bugs.
Posts
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iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted) -
iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted)Another tip I learned is that you can buy a set of camera lenses to clip onto your camera phone to take zoomed in photos.
I bought a set for just $30 and within an hour of them arriving my first moment to try them out arrived.
My partner had this little visitor hanging out on their office plant.
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iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted)Tips for improving your iNaturalist observations.
Fill the frame of the photo with your observation and record the following:
Plants - flowers, fruit, leaves, leaf underside, buds, whole plant
Fungi - top, side, underside -
iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted)And they timestamped the webinar so well. This makes my heart sing.
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iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted)iNaturalist had a great webinar with a Q&A where the first question they answered was mine! (Maybe not *mine* specifically but the same one I submitted)
Is there such thing as a bad post? Should I ever worry about spamming the dataset with my pedestrian photos of the same common plant because I just can't remember whether this thing is a fleabane or a hoary tanseyaster?
The short answer is no.
All observations, even of the most common species, are welcomed.
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Making pancakes, making bacon pancakestake some bacon and you put it in a pancake