nature sightings

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Also saw my first pileated woodpecker last week, at the same playground! I've wanted to see one of those since I was a little kid watching Woody Woodpecker. It was a majestic bird, but I frightened it off by pursuing it too eagerly in hopes of a photo.

peace, man, Tuesday, 30 May 2023 17:52 (ten months ago) link

Saw some good pelicans yesterday. I usually see them once a summer and assumed they were migrating, but apparently they hang out in Wisconsin more than I thought.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Tuesday, 30 May 2023 18:41 (ten months ago) link

Played with the kids in a river in wales where otters and kingfishers have been seen, obviously didn't see those with kids around but did see and catch (and return) some crayfish, up to 12cm long! Probably not that impressive to those more familiar with these things but it was a shock to me that you can find crustaceans as big as that in our rivers. It was only last year that I saw tiny (1cm) freshwater shrimp for the first time.

ledge, Wednesday, 31 May 2023 10:55 (ten months ago) link

Was sitting on a bench today and saw a barn swallow perched on a hanging cable directly under the eaves of a building. He was keeping a close eye on my wife and me, kind of stepping to left and right but never flying away. Then I saw a movement out of the corner of my eye and realized there was a nest at the top of one of the building's columns about five feet from where he was perched. He was guarding his family. So we got up and left. Didn't want to disturb him any further.

but also fuck you (unperson), Sunday, 4 June 2023 20:15 (ten months ago) link

Stag beetle action in the Chinaski garden, pt 1

https://i.imgur.com/o1v5ILR.jpg

Stars of the Lidl (Chinaski), Friday, 16 June 2023 22:04 (ten months ago) link

Pt 2: I didn't know where to look

https://i.imgur.com/ZAMcTIk.jpg

Stars of the Lidl (Chinaski), Friday, 16 June 2023 22:04 (ten months ago) link

Awesome!

peace, man, Monday, 19 June 2023 00:50 (ten months ago) link

one month passes...

https://i.imgur.com/XIyaX1H.jpg

Came across this luna moth just before sunset yesterday.

peace, man, Thursday, 27 July 2023 17:39 (nine months ago) link

I saw a turtle by a path this morning. In an odd coincidence, I was listening to Supertramp, who have a song called "Hide in Your Shell".

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 27 July 2023 17:43 (nine months ago) link

the turtles in Central Park eat hotdogs. fishermen buy franks from vendors in the park and use them to lure turtles in the Lake away from their lines. i was surprised to learn they're not vegetarians.

all this time I thought you were British (Deflatormouse), Thursday, 27 July 2023 18:32 (nine months ago) link

walking down the high street i saw a guy crouched down trying to coax a remarkable looking golden hairy caterpillar onto a shopping back, though it was more intent on crossing the road. i managed to coax it onto a bit of paper and we put it on the only bi of scrubby green space near by. at one point my app identified it as a dagger moth but now it's not so sure.

https://i.imgur.com/s29gJWi.jpg

a holistic digital egosystem (ledge), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 12:52 (eight months ago) link

further searching reveals it to be a sycamore moth caterpillar.

a holistic digital egosystem (ledge), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 13:08 (eight months ago) link

So orange! I have also been coaxing caterpillars onto pieces of paper.

https://static.inaturalist.org/photos/305429330/large.jpeg

https://static.inaturalist.org/photos/305504763/large.jpeg

This one was an American dagger moth.

peace, man, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 14:18 (eight months ago) link

why are they so hairy

oh i also finally achieved my ambition of seeing a kingfisher - just the typical flash of blue across a river from about 30 metres away, so ambition updated to a better sighting.

a holistic digital egosystem (ledge), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 14:40 (eight months ago) link

In some species, the hairs are a protection against predators. On this guy, the long black hairs contain venom and can sting you. On other species, like the sycamore moth above, their fuzz breaks off in your skin if you try to grab it, leading to irritation. But then you have others like wooly bear caterpillars (from the Isabella tiger moth), where the fuzz doesn't seem to cause any harm at all.

peace, man, Wednesday, 9 August 2023 15:17 (eight months ago) link

yes protection against predators was my first thought, immediately followed by 'why are the non hairy ones so non hairy then' :)

neither of us caterpillar rescuers wanted to touch it so job done anyway.

crutch of england (ledge), Wednesday, 9 August 2023 15:57 (eight months ago) link

three weeks pass...

around 2 a.m. i bumped into a trio of raccoons coming toward me on the path. two were lagging behind, pouncing on and grooming each other, while the third, the smallest, rabbit-sized, ambled up to me with frank interest until he was about a foot away. then he seemed to realize i was a human and slowly backed up, confused. one in the back noticed us and stood up like a little bear to get a look at me, and then they all faded into the shadows.

i bet if i'd had a snack with me i could have knelt and offered it to them, and we could have become great friends.

sleepy bee (cat), Friday, 1 September 2023 19:40 (seven months ago) link

They're so adorable. I wish they didn't have such a problem with rabies.

Several years ago, I was chaperoning a group of 1st graders to a nature center field trip. I had a few braggadocious boys in my group who were claiming to have seen all sorts of animals. "I saw a bald eagle!" "I saw a deer!" "I saw a rattlesnake!" I'm 100% sure the wildest thing they saw was a squirrel. I know because we all stopped to look at it for like, 3 minutes.

After we sat down to lunch at some picnic tables, a girl told me in the quietest little voice "I saw a raccoon." And, absentmindedly passing out the lunch bags, I'm like "Oh where did you see it?" And she points, and quietly says "over there." And sure enough, the biggest chonker of a raccoon I've ever seen was popping out of a dumpster next to the picnic pavilion! So I gathered all my kids and we all hurried over to get a slightly closer look at this wildlife before it clambered up a tree. Her observation was the highlight of the field trip for all of us.

peace, man, Saturday, 2 September 2023 15:02 (seven months ago) link

Anyway, here's a crappy cell phone pic of a bald eagle I did see (ha! ha! first-grade boys) while kayaking the other day.

https://static.inaturalist.org/photos/316077341/original.jpeg

peace, man, Saturday, 2 September 2023 15:17 (seven months ago) link

wild turkey family

https://i.ibb.co/VpWf5s2/IMG-20230823-131146111-HDR-2.jpg

https://i.ibb.co/XSXfj4p/IMG-20230823-131152079-HDR-3.jpg

raccoons near 108th st in riverside park emerge from a crack in the wall every evening approx 5:30pm before an adoring audience bearing scraps. they are celebrities.

a racoon licked my shin once while i was drinking a glass of wine in my friend's backyard in the middle of the night. i was startled by it's sweet kiss and jumped, then looked under the table expecting to find a puppy.

Deflatormouse, Saturday, 2 September 2023 18:03 (seven months ago) link

A herd of between 12 and 20 deer, depending on the night, shows up in the field behind my apartment building pretty much every night. It's been a few weeks, maybe two months, so I've been able to watch them grow, which is pretty amazing.

read-only (unperson), Saturday, 2 September 2023 18:35 (seven months ago) link

heard squealing out the front and went to have a look and there were two urban foxes going through the binbags (only recycling so slim pickings). one wandered off, the other just curled up in the middle of the road (it's 02:30 and the end of the road's closed for water works so no traffic)

koogs, Tuesday, 5 September 2023 01:40 (seven months ago) link

Speaking of foxes and the middle of the road, we have had foxes in our neighborhood for years. It's been fun to catch an occasional glimpse of them at night dashing into someone's yard late at night. But this year, for some reason, they've started shitting in the street. You can tell it's fox scat rather than someone's dog because there are usually some visible berry seeds or the occasional tuft of fur.

peace, man, Tuesday, 5 September 2023 09:01 (seven months ago) link

Used to walking past foxes in the middle of the day now as they gingerly wait between two parked cars for you to pass by on the pavement just a couple of metres away so they can get back to that tasty binload.

nashwan, Tuesday, 5 September 2023 09:10 (seven months ago) link

two weeks pass...

a deer, less than ten metres away, watching us over a fence for a couple of minutes. I'm no deer expert but I think maybe it was a young roe, not a muntjac.

also I've been hearing an owl at night, haven't seen it yet but someone on the street took a photo of it on sitting on a television aerial.

lurch of england (ledge), Sunday, 24 September 2023 07:21 (seven months ago) link

six months pass...

if using my binoculars to watch squirrels have sex is pervy voyeurism then i don't want to be right, squirrels have the cutest sex

"enthusiast" (cat), Thursday, 4 April 2024 23:12 (three weeks ago) link

most of the squirrel sex outside my kitchen window seems involuntary, a lot of chasing from branch to branch

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 4 April 2024 23:31 (three weeks ago) link

aw, my little guys do lots of cute grooming and tumbling in the branches, the only chasing happens when an unwanted third pops up!

"enthusiast" (cat), Thursday, 4 April 2024 23:57 (three weeks ago) link

Am in Taiwan right now. Squirrels here small and dark brown ie black. We've seen lots of birds, mainly black drongos and night herons. At night as well as the aforementioned herons you hear night hawks squawking loudly. They're misnamed...not Raptors, but related to the nightjar. We've heard lots of frogs, but haven't actually spotted any!

Grandpont Genie, Friday, 5 April 2024 06:43 (three weeks ago) link

drongos r so goth i love them

those bloodred eyes, hell yeah

it is very cool, imo, that you are in taiwan! and hearing invisible frogs! out here in boringsville, usa, i ~think~ i've maybe started to hear quiet froglike creaky croaks near marshy areas -- in addition to the red winged blackbird boys staking out nesting sites for their sweeties -- but it might just be bugs impersonating frogs for secret reasons?

"enthusiast" (cat), Friday, 5 April 2024 06:56 (three weeks ago) link

A family of six deers in a field yesterday night on my run - God bless summer time

Nabozo, Friday, 5 April 2024 07:22 (three weeks ago) link

In seven months of running along the canals and other waterways of Birmingham I've seen plenty of herons, the odd egret and once only the glorious blue flash of a kingfisher. In two runs in Norfolk last week I was somewhat disappointed to see only one muntjac deer and nothing else out of the ordinary.

ledge, Friday, 5 April 2024 07:42 (three weeks ago) link

at home over christmas i saw a muntjac deer carcass by the side of the road (in the wooded area by a motorway bridge) followed about 5 yards further on by another. nobody has ever mentioned seeing live deer around there.

koogs, Friday, 5 April 2024 10:51 (three weeks ago) link

saw a couple of bank vole in the new forest on monday

devvvine, Friday, 5 April 2024 11:10 (three weeks ago) link

i am envisioning harried little voles in 3 piece suits

"enthusiast" (cat), Friday, 5 April 2024 12:20 (three weeks ago) link

they are carrying tiny editions of the financial times

"enthusiast" (cat), Friday, 5 April 2024 12:20 (three weeks ago) link

just spotted in my inner-ish London front garden: a blackcap!

imago, Thursday, 11 April 2024 09:39 (two weeks ago) link

I really recommend the Merlin app, which identifies birds by their sounds. Know what the birds are before you see them!

https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/

It doesn't only work for birdsong; it can identify woodpeckers by their pecking!

Grandpont Genie, Thursday, 11 April 2024 10:36 (two weeks ago) link

learning to identify birdsong yourself (which you'll be able to do over time if you use one of the apps regularly) is genuinely one of the most life-enriching things you can do

what once was just pleasant background noise becomes incredibly engrossing - especially when you can pick out alarm calls and know something (e.g. a hawk) might be about to go down

Also when you know most of the common birds, anytime you hear something out of the ordinary you'll be desperately scrabbling for your app!

Number None, Thursday, 11 April 2024 13:15 (two weeks ago) link

@girlinwhiteglasses on instagram has a series of cool posts for birdsong identification: "if it sounds like a..."

https://www.instagram.com/girlinwhiteglasses/

Regarding alarm sounds, I saw a hawk grab lunch from a nest the other day. Various other birds were in the air and branches around it, creating a racket. A few were definitely crows, but there were smaller birds in there that I couldn't identify.

peace, man, Thursday, 11 April 2024 14:09 (two weeks ago) link

We saw a Northern Flicker woodpecker on the ground we thought was dead. Turns out it was feeding - they dig for ants and beetles.

just like Christopher Wray said (brownie), Thursday, 11 April 2024 18:20 (two weeks ago) link

recently saw a yellow shafted northern flicker in the vacant lot outside my kitchen window... I jumped up, had no idea what the hell it was... I thought it might be somebody's escaped pet. Apparently pretty rare in the west, but not unknown in the winter

https://photoartflight.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/mg_3370paf.jpg
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/NFlickers2-yellow_McMullen-red_Steckel.jpg

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 11 April 2024 18:26 (two weeks ago) link

Yes, recently I found out the same is true of one of the UK woodpeckers. The green woodpecker feeds mainly on ants on the ground and doesn't forage on tree trunks like the others.

Grandpont Genie, Thursday, 11 April 2024 18:31 (two weeks ago) link

Jeez that yellow woodpecker is beautiful.

Green woodpeckers don't drum either - only greater spot/lesser spot (and it's only in the spring for sexxy reasons, not, as one might think, to get food).

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Thursday, 11 April 2024 18:57 (two weeks ago) link

This magnificent giant Pacific Octopus caught off the coast of California by sportfishers pic.twitter.com/X3upclo62I

— Nature is Amazing ☘️ (@AMAZlNGNATURE) April 7, 2024

Andy the Grasshopper, Friday, 12 April 2024 02:22 (two weeks ago) link

free him


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