I haven't seen many shieldbugs this year so I didn't expect this Bronze Bug (Troilus luridus).
Previously, I have mentioned that finding one uncommon insect can make a whole week seem worthwhile. Well here is another of those successes.
Rhingia rostrata female. I have found one or two a year at one small wood so thought that they must be elsewhere in the area. This one was from another small wood beside an estuary.
It was originally feeding on a flower but I accidentally disturbed it before realising it's identity. When it settled on a barbed wire fence, and posed so well, I though this will make something really different.

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I need to carry some depth of field tables in my head. To focus this well on a Pen the magnified view has to be used - 7x so it's like using a 700mm telephoto or 1400mm in 35mm terms hand held at close distance. Worse still only a small proportion of the subject can be seen so I even had to hope they remain in the view as I move backward and forwards to focus. The Pen's don't have image stability for focusing. Only when the shot is taken.






. I wondered what kind of plant it was untill I read your text. It proofs to me that macro is beautiful in lots of cases.















