Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts

Friday, June 1, 2012

The last day of May...



















On the 31st of May I joined a little group of outdoor enthusiasts at Veteran's Oasis Park where we listened to Naturalist, Laurie (of the Maricopa Audubon Society) teach us about dragonflies and damselflies.  At 8 a.m. it was already well into the 80's with not much of a breeze.  However we saw lots of  different specimens, a few of which were identified by Laurie.  We also learned some fun information about various birds at this reclaimed water-park and bird sanctuary.  Above is a damselfly (not identified), the tiny blossom of a native plant which Laurie identified and I have forgotten (grr!).  And also a green heron who wanted us to leave so he could get about his fishing business.  Some more photos from the morning are below. 

Another unidentified damselfly...





















a Familiar Bluet damselfly... (with many hungry minnows following!)
















A closer view of the Familiar Bluet...
















The resident desert tortoise...














Other fauna seen but not photographed were; Anna's Hummingbird catching bugs to feed her nestling(s), Great Blue Heron, Swallows, Great Egret, Turkey Vulture, Thrasher, Pied-bill Grebe, Cormorants, Pond turtles (not red-eared sliders), Wandering Glider (dragonfly), Red-tailed Pennet (dragonfly), Coots, and quite a few more critters!  A photo of a Common Gallinule is coming up next for a wordless Friday post for the 'this moment' series.  I love Veteran's Oasis park. 

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Backyard Massacre


a backyard tragedy., originally uploaded by Az~Kate.
I have a sad tale to tell. Last night we went out for Thai, and when we came home Petey (our mixed terrier mutt) was quite excited...we figured he'd been barking at something outside the wall, as he commonly does.

However this morning, I noticed a couple adult Gambels Quail continually pacing atop our block wall. And while watering the garden, Petey was nosing around under a shrub as if on the hunt. The mama Quail just above him on the wall would not leave. uh oh.

I put Petey in the house and sealed his doggie door. Hunted around the shrubs hoping to spot a chick who couldn't get over the wall to rejoin its family. Nothing. Eventually I gave up, then was tending the pool, when I found a tiny quail chick near the leaf catcher... I cried. Figured Petey chased it into the pool where it drowned. But I knew this chick was not very old, too small to have come into the yard, had to have been born here. Oh dear. First quail nest in our yard in 14 years... what were that pair thinking! Petey is a notorious bird chaser.

So, I started looking again and found 7 more dead babies all in the pool pump enclosure, and a small ground indentation in the corner behind the filter, their ground nest. I had a full blown nature massacre taking place while I was enjoying my Spicy garlic eggplant! I was heart broken and have declared our once beloved pet, an evil monster.

I cleaned up the remains, and noticed the parents still scurrying atop the wall and calling out warningly... could any of these tiny babies have survived? What a large clutch, this must have been. There was no way for them out of our yard at this tiny, too small to fly, size. The drain holes were full of rocks somebody had put in them to keep bunnies out (not me!). Ron and I opened up several of them, on the chance that the parents would escort any remaining chicks to a safer place.

Lo and behold Ron soon discovered 2 which had managed to escape the slaughter! The photo above is of one. He is no more than 2 inches tall. The other one scurried under the wall (through the freshly opened drainage holes) before I could snap its picture. It was a paler, lighter colored baby, perhaps a female. I'm glad at least couple made it, I am still mad at the dog and wonder why the parents dared put a nest here. The Mama scurried them to the wash behind our yard, I hope they are safe now.

UPDATE on June 8.
Well later that day the quail family was back in the yard, apparently the chicks were too young to make a significant move, or for some other instinctual reason of which I am unaware.  So over the weekend we kept Petey under a tight rein.  I was able to get a few more pictures of them, below.  Yesterday morning they were nowhere to be found, and I can't hear the rest of the covey calling from the wash any longer, so we assume they've finally moved to a safer place.  I am wary of cleaning the pool leaf catcher again though, afraid of what I may discover.  It was sweet to watch the tiny 2 surviving chicks over a couple of days though.  I can't say I'm terribly impressed with the parents protective tactics though.


Above, mama quail watches the chicks who are at the base of the wall... whenever she'd hop out of sight they would start peeping and running in circles, which is why I thought her continuing to do that was not a very protective move!  When she would stay with them, they'd quietly sit with her under the shrubs, well hidden.

  Here they are the last afternoon we saw them around the yard, the next morning there was no sign of them.  There are still some bowl shaped 'nests' under the shrubs they spent the most time around... pretty easy nest construction, and not too effectively camouflaged.  God speed little quails, you'll need it!  ;o)

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Vacation Delights




Our July vacation had multiple delights. An entire week in a beautiful new cabin outside of the delightful town of Alpine, AZ. (close to New Mexico) The White Mountains were not crowded with tourists, wildflowers in abundance, fauna in abundance. Good fishing for Grandad, Nana, Ron and boys. Zac and Lisa were able to come up and spend a couple days with us, on my birthday! I read Cathy Johnson's Sierra Club Guide to Sketching in Nature and doodled. (she even became my facebook friend and a flickr contact! wowza) The picture at left is a sketch I did of an elk cow and her calf who were wading in Sierra Blanca lake, with a huge herd nearby. Gorgeous drives, hummingbirds that fed from my boys hands, butterflies in droves. Great Blue Herons, Osprey, afternoon thunderstorms. What more delights could one wish for? Okay, in truth, I didn't sleep well & never caught a fish, but everything else was gravy! If you want a better view of my sketch, just click on it.

Photos of the gorgeous White Mountain landscapes, flowers and wildlife can be found at my flickr stream, here; 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/36245209@N00/ 


There are two 'collections' on the right side where you can find them quickly.