Monday, December 21, 2009

Return of Yoat... no Sightings of Baby



Yoat has returned, and is spending a lot of time cruising the property. She has been sitting in her "favorite" spot under the trees in the early twilight as she did last year. As always, she is not afraid of me, but i have noticed that when other people are present to enjoy the Yoat-watching experience, she is MUCH less apt to hang around and have her picture taken.

Even when observed from the house, she seems to know that there are strangers watching her. It is possible that her ability to smell is alerting her to unfamiliar aromas. She is likely accustomed to my scent, since she and I inhabit the same property.

Yoat eats the pinon cones that have fallen-- she did this last year as well. In fact, when I went out into the yard with my friend Nick to collect pinon cones last year, I noted that ALL of them were gone! Now given the size of the property and the number of pinon trees, that is a LOT of cones! Yoat does spend a lot of time looking for cones and then eating the entire cone.

I always wondered what the coyotes are eating out there. Since Yoat began to hang around, there are no more rabbits-- and this is great for my garden. Also, the usual hordes of ground squirrels are gone! This is also terrific. The damage inflicted to my fence line and other problems cause by the enormous rodents has ceased to be. Thanks, Yoat! I assume that it is Yoat who is controlling the rodent population.

When I first moved here, I thought that coyote eat deer. We have a lot of deer here. But not once, and not anywhere have I seen signs of a deer kill. Not a fresh kill, not an active kill and not an old kill. In fact, the deer and the coyotes seem to leave each other alone. I have only once (last mating season) seen the coyotes in a group greater than 3. Since the coyotes are very small-- maybe 40 pounds at most-- I doubt that one or even a pair could take down a huge mule deer. A young deer, perhaps, but not an adult. Those things are huge!

Baby has been missing for a number of months, and so her fate is uncertain. She may have moved on to live in another location. Her relationship to Yoat is also unknown. At first, I assumed that Baby was Yoat's pup. Then I began to wonder if maybe they were a pair-- a male and a female. Baby was very small when she showed up with Yoat last year, so maybe she was, after all, Yoat's baby, and has grown up and moved on.

Friday, November 6, 2009

New-comers: Young Evening Grosbeaks




These cute little guys showed up a few weeks ago. First there were only one or two, and now there are about 4 or 5. This is the first year I have seen them.

As I had thought earlier, these are, indeed young Evening Grosbeaks. Thanks to Sam Crowe at namethatbird.com for giving me a definitive answer.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Pointy





Hummingbird season is over, but I figured I should pay tribute to the little guys!

Strange Little Fungi

What ARE these things? I have no idea! A dozen of these wee mushroom-type-things seem to have popped up in one small low-lying area of my property. I have never seen these before.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Farewell My Best Friend

The Baerleht
December 1994- 6 October, 2009

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Weather Balloon

We have had lots of weather balloon sightings in the past couple of months. Here is one that we saw last week. It is certainly a weather balloon, and has a distinct balloon shape.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

El Nino Beginneth?




According to the spritely Mark Ronchetti, TV Weather Man for KRQE, this will be an El Nino year. Last night he warned us of our first sign of an early winter storm... I was too busy cheering on Jordan (Winner of BB11) to notice the weather.

But after being woken up repeatedly by uncharacteristic LOUD thunder and the power going on and off, I realized that Mark had mentioned the storm.

This morning, there is, indeed, snow on SF Baldy and out in Truchas (I think it is Truchas-- I call it "Tuchas" ). It's DAMN cold, and currently the mountains are concealed in a solid fog-- you can see patches of it rolling in from the photos.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Of Mice... and Moss

Look who was living under the old aerobics step! So much for my clean-up efforts today. I was hoping to make the area where I photograph critters a little more attractive, but I will give these guys a day or two to find a better home.
Some better photos of tree moss.

Above: The terrarium-friendly moss I discovered after the rainstorm went right back to being ugly and brown after a few dry days!

I am giving this moss a try in one of my terrariums. It's got a nice sage green color and a cool shaggy texture.

Legs Sneaks a Drink


Here is some video I took of Legs. You do not usually see coyotes drinking a lot of water, but this particular coyote drinks a LOT every day!

Friday, September 11, 2009

Woke Up This Mornin'... Got Myself a Finch Bag


Pictured at top: To the left is the home-made Finch Feeder bag, to the far right, you will see the Walmart-purchased finch feeder. Read on to see how I made the finch bag!





Above is the ready-to use Finch bag.
Below, see a close-up of the bag I made from stockings.

Word must have gotten out in the Goldfinch Community that Sunflowers were on the menu around here! My Black Sunflower crop this year was being decimated by goldfinches, and my attempts to ply them with plenty of boring yellow sunflowers did not work this time around. No sir. Not only did they eat dozens of yellow sunflowers, they developed a taste for the Black variety as well. So much for next Spring's profits on the sale of Moulin Rouge Black Sunflowers!

So I got a finch bag, thinking this will give those devilish sunflower-munchers something to chomp on instead of my plants. WRONG! I ended up with 10 times as many goldfinches-- where before I only had 4 or so, I now have an entire flock of dozens.

The bag shown in the picture is a ready-made bag which I purchased at WalMart for about $5-$6-- it included the seed. Not wanting to drive all the way back to WalMart for more finch-bags, I made some more of my own.

Finch-Bag Making:
Supplies:
1 bag Thistle Seed
pantyhose feet in a light color/knee-high stockings will work too
rubber bands, twine or string
sharp object for poking holes

I happened to have lots of pink ballet tights which I am not currently using, so I cut the foot/ankle portions out of a pair of tights for the body of the bag. You could also use white or a light color of those knee-high trouser socks. Anything which is light in color and has a mesh type weave will work. Old lingerie-washing bags or other light colored mesh bags are perfect.

I then filled the tights with seed, packing it tightly. You want the seeds to "poke out" of the weave to entice the finches.

I tied the top of the hose with some string-- you can use anything so long as it won't hurt the birds. I would not recommend twist-ties or anything metal.

Then I tied a long piece of twine to the top of the bag. I tied the bag to a stumpy protrusion on a pinion tree and wound the bag around the tree until it came to rest on the tree-- the panty hose sort of velcro'ed themselves to the tree. This makes the bag more stable for finches to feed. Then I stabbed the bag repeatedly with a meat fork which was very satisfying on a number of levels. Do not make the holes so large that the seeds spill out.

After you poke some holes, you will want to squeeze the bag a bit to get the seeds to pop out in an inviting manner. At this point, you have a finch-ready seed bag.

Note that I did position my home-made bag against a tree to make it easier for the finches to climb aboard. The homemade bag close-up also demonstrates the seeds poking out which is really vital if you want finches to feed from the bag!

An advantage to the homemade bag is this: The larger the holes of the mesh, the faster seeds will spill out. I would estimate that 1/3 of the seeds placed in the store-bought bag spill onto the ground. With the bag I made, very few seeds are wasted.



Sunday, September 6, 2009

Moss Mania After a Rainstorm


Out of sheer boredom and because I have a house which is too dark to sustain most houseplants, I have recently taken to making terrariums. I know-- "how very 5th grade science project" of me.

Drawn in by the creations of Etsy seller "BeadStyle", I purchased one of her do-it-yourself terrariums. I was hooked. As soon as she told me I could add native plants to the assortment provided in the kit, I was already combing the property in search of things to add.

The photos below are of plants which are unidentified (by me) and which are growing on my property... as soon as I identify them, I will know whether or not I can add them to an indoor habitat. Any assistance in identifying them would be awesome!

The moss-ball formations which have broken free of the ground make for easy collecting! This was what I first noticed while hunting for plants to add to my terrarium. I am assuming the moss breaks free in light-weight balls so that it can "travel" to new places?


Another area of "loose balls".... so to speak.



Above: Moss-clumps with coyote scat. This moss tends to grow in areas where coyotes do their business.

While out hunting for moss to terrarium-ify, I noticed something very cool. The weird brown dried-mud-looking clumpy moss stuff which is everywhere somehow turned into very springy little clumps of green moss!

The brown yucky looking crust-blobs not only turned green in many places after our rainstorm yesterday, but I also noticed that small balls of the moss popped free of the ground. The balls are made up of tiny star-shaped green leaves.



Above, is an area where you can see both dormant and active moss-balls. The moss-cluster areas also tend to accumulate an assortment of other little plants. I am guessing that this is because the moss prevents soil erosion and holds moisture.


The photo above is what the mossy areas usually look like : just crusty areas of brown blobby gunk. Not too attractive, right?




One of the trees that overhangs the moss field has at least 6 different types of tree-moss.
Different angle of the same moss-covered tree. Lousy time of day to be photographing, but I will certainly add more pictures soon of this particular tree and its green booty.

Friday, September 4, 2009

The Google Ads... SAP?

While attempting to make my blog look more exciting, I enabled the google ad-thingy on this blog. For some reason, the SAP "socially alienated person" anti-smoking ad seems to find itself on my page every day.

How does google decide where this "SAP" ad goes, pray tell? I am a smoker. My mom is a smoker. My sister is a smoker. Most of the people I know are smokers.

The only reason a smoker might tend to find herself "socially alienated" these days is on account of all the nonsensical legislation prohibiting smoking from virtually every known location.

When at a restaurant, for instance, smokers must now rush outside to hide whilst smoking. At which point, the "socially alienated person" is prone to bumping into other smokers conducting similar activities.

So while it may be argued that smokers' habits could potentially alienate them from the non-smokers, it opens up a whole new universe of pals-- other smokers. Many times I have met very nice people whose acquaintance I would never have made had I not been sneaking a smoke. Many entertaining, informative, and inspirational conversations have I had with my comrade smokers.

Smoking is not good for one's health. This is true. But many of us smoke. And when we smoke, as now must, in a location far AWAY from the non-smokers, rather than feeling a sense of social alienation, it has become a sure fire way to meet new people.


Thursday, September 3, 2009

"FLYNN" Earrings


The "FLYNN" earrings are made with Bone Batik beads from Africa, copper Bali spacers, niobium french wires, Vintage Chocolate Patina chain, miyuki beads and yummy Swarovski Crystals in mint alabaster.

Part of my Rustic Fall Collection! See them here.



Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Northern Flicker

I do not see these guys too frequently, but this morning, a Northern Flicker was taking a drink at the coyote-depleted water tub. Hopefully, he ate a whole bunch of icky bugs while he was in the area!

Monday, August 31, 2009

"Legs"


"Legs" began showing up in broad daylight-- at 14:00 or earlier. Sometimes he is with a female. Both are malnourished, shabby and appear to be in poor health. Coyotes are not big water drinkers, but Legs shows up pretty regularly each day to empty the bird-water tub.

Coyote Update



I have not really posted too many of my coyote photos. The pair which I usually photograph, the "friendly" duo of "Yoat" and "Baby, have not been seen as of late. This may be owing to the fact that I need to replace my outside lighting and cannot see them in the pitch blackness of night... or it may be that they have chosen to make their home elsewhere.

Yoat and Baby are pictured above, with Baby (the blue-eyed vixen) shown atop her pal "Yoat" (the most beautiful coyote in these here parts). I have loads of pictures of this duo, as they are not shy and have always cared less whether I am nearby. For over a year, they have walked around the property day or night, and other than an occasional run-in with interlopers, they have pretty much been steady residents.

In past weeks, however, I have not seen them and there are other coyotes who appear to be living here.


Hmmmm....


While outside attempting to photograph my new Fall earrings, I thought I saw something odd... and upon further inspection discovered what appeared to be a writhing ooey-gooey worm-ball! Ok, so they are not really worms, but more like caterpillars.

Something must have hatched or metamorphosed or landed in the pinion sapling... just not something you see every day. And that's a GOOD thing. YUCK!

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

If You Pour It... They Will Come



I know very little about Grosbeaks. Not sure we even had them in Florida! Over the past few years, I have noticed the random specimen every once in a while, usually in the late Summer. They are always super shy and somewhat illusive.

This year, however, there seems to be an abundance of these chubby lil' fellers. Maybe it's their strangely shaped heads or the fact that they are more colorful than the average bird in these here parts, but I think they are pretty cool. One thing I can say for certain is that these guys LOVE WATER.

Ok. It's the desert, and if you stick some water outside in a bowl, chances are you will see some bird action...but these guys are pretty much always in or near the water, more so than the other species. And they are not just there to drink. Even when it is pouring rain, they splash around and enjoy repeated plunges into the water. Very cute!

Friday, July 17, 2009

More Florida

Here are some more pics from the front yard.


Fond Recollections...


I was going through some old pics from back home and came upon a photo of my favorite neighbor (sorry Carrot Top, the "Big Guy" was there first). This gator lived in the waters around our island for many many years. He was not exactly shy, shall we say. And just for the record, I did use a zoom setting when taking this photo.


Plant of Mystery... and Serious Skin Irritation

Behold the mystery vine! Every summer I find it and eradicate it. It pops up in places one would never expect.

Wherever there is moisture, these vines seem to spring into spontaneous existence. Because they blend so nicely with other plants, I never see them... until it is too late. The slightest touch seems to cause a swelling, bubbling, itching, burning rash which lasts for weeks. While this plant may not be the only culprit in my dermatologic distress, I can tell you that touching these things without protection is pure stupidity.

When the plant initially bursts forth from the earth, it is a "cute" little guy-- in fact, it looks a LOT like this other mystery plant which has wee purple blossoms. After the initial "cute" green-leafy phase, it then branches out and twirls its nasty way around anything it can touch. If anyone knows what this is, feel free to comment. Similarly, if anyone knows why the heck I persist in pulling weeds WITHOUT wearing gloves year after year, please do not bother to comment... in the meantime, I'll keep slathering myself with Benadryl ointment...