Saturday, December 31, 2016

Ten Seconds


There will be plenty of people counting down the seconds to the new year tonight. 
Since I hope to be sound asleep by then, here's my own countdown a little early--
10 of my favorite animal sightings of 2016:


Fox Kit

10. Fox Kit


Wood Duck

9. Wood Duck


Eastern Chipmunk

8. Eastern Chipmunk


Eastern White-tailed Fawn

7. White-tailed Fawn


Eastern Wild Turkey

6. Eastern Wild Turkey


Raccoon

5. Raccoon


Monarch Chrysalis

4. Monarch Chrysalis


White-tailed buck

3.White-tailed Buck


Male Cardinal

2. Male Cardinal


Golden Retriever

1. Golden Retriever, Barley


Happy New Year!



Linking with Saturday's Critters



Saturday, December 24, 2016

Avian Testimonials


Red-bellied Woodpecker on suet


Early this week, with the ground dry and parched and the temperature plunging like an elevator in free-fall, the birds at our feeders were ravenous. It seemed like a good time to mix up some suet.

Suet is easy to make. Here's my recipe:

1 cup lard
1 cup crunchy peanut butter
1 cup oatmeal
2 cups unsalted sunflower seeds, shelled
1 cup flaxseed meal or yellow cornmeal
1/2 cup raisins

Melt the lard and peanut butter in a large saucepan, and mix in the other ingredients. Spoon into molds (I used the bottom 2 inches of plastic cups), press the mix together, and freeze. Sometimes, I also press the mix into pinecones.


Downy Woodpecker on suet


When the suet was frozen and out of the molds, I made a hole with a skinny nail through the center of each one, then threaded a thin wire through the hole, and hung them in a tree near our feeder, where the birds were sure to notice them.


Tufted Titmouse and Carolina Chickadee on suet


It's always nice when your cooking is appreciated. 
When the food is devoured and they come back for more, it's better than 5 stars on the internet.


Carolina Chickadee on suet


Consider these photos visual testimonials.


Cedar Waxwing eating winterberry


Of course, there's Winterberry for desert.






Monday, December 12, 2016

Mountain Lion Hollow


male cardinal on winterberry


It's good to see the sun after several gloomy days, which had closed in on us like grey felt in a flower press. The hunting season finally over, Barley and I have taken to walking in the hollow below our house. Where the trail makes its final descent into the hollow, winterberry trees have put on their Christmas decorations, bright red candy-colored balls. Birds flee at our approach, receding as waves into an ocean of weeds, or wildflowers, depending on one's perspective. I stand still, holding my breath, and the birds return, one by one, drawn by the fruit, devouring the ornaments like a child who can't wait for Christmas.




Barley holds his breath, too, standing motionless several paces behind me.




The hollow is quiet this morning, except for the twitter of birds, but this place is not always without drama. One October, in the early morning dark, Don walked down the trail and set up with his bow in a tree facing the valley, overlooking the creek. As the first rays of light streamed across the hollow, he noticed movement in the tall amber colored weeds, about 75 yards away. He fixed his gaze on the area for a short time before a tail appeared, swishing slowly back and forth. Then the steely eyes of a mountain lion came into focus, staring straight at him. A chill went down his spine.

Don remembers thinking that he’s always preferred to deer hunt alone. It was more true that day than ever before. Looking down at his bow, he calculated his chances of getting off a clean shot at a charging cat. Not good. He decided to begin his retreat. Then, if the mountain lion charged, he’d have time to get his back against a large tree and pull out his hunting knife. He got his feet on the ground and took one step sideways up the hill, keeping an eye on the path, and one on the predator below. The mountain lion didn’t move. Its tail twitched, but its eyes were steady.

Don continued to sidle up the hill, judging, with each step, the distance to the next tree. He was home before he could breathe easy. 

I think about that mountain lion once in a while when Barley and I are walking in the hollow, and my fingers tighten, momentarily, on the knife in my pocket.






Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Co-inhabitants


Every once in a while, when we start thinking that this place where we live belongs to us, 
we are reminded that our opinion is not universal.


eastern wild turkey gobblers

Most mornings lately, four Eastern Wild Turkey gobblers have been gathering on our back patio.


eastern wild turkey gobbler in birdbath

They like the convenience of fresh water (or sometimes ice) in the birdbath, a chance to admire their reflections in the window glass, and the exceptional acoustics. If volume had anything to do with ownership, when they gobble, they would have the deed to the house in their feathery back pocket. The turkeys retreat a little when we pass by the windows, but seem only mildly inconvenienced by the other occupants of this place, namely us. Their forebears, after all, were here long before ours were.
 
Before dawn yesterday morning, Don watched a skunk saunter away from the back of the house, while a fat raccoon sat in the bird feeder, eating a bedtime snack. We've been wondering why the bird feed disappeared so fast, and now we know that it's been going to two more residents.


mother raccoon with kits
              
In the summer, a mother raccoon and her two kits would come in the evenings to eat... 


raccoon kit in oak tree

...before climbing up to their nursery in a large oak tree behind the house. 
In the nighttime, the place belonged to them.


button buck

Deer have always been occupants of our woods. 
Of the seven we see regularly, one button buck has taken to the dog kennel, and helps himself to fallen acorns. 


white-tailed buck

We see the larger bucks less frequently, but in the shelter of the darkness, they may consider this place their own, too.


barley golden retriever

Barley is the only four-legged creature with a key to the house.

So far.







Saturday, November 19, 2016

Morning Fog


trees in fog


Morning fog alters the atmosphere, washing out the background, and painting the foreground in simple shapes.



fall dogwood tree in fog


Not even a falling leaf makes a sound on the dampened earth.



Eastern White-tailed doe in fog


A young doe stands at attention and listens...



Eastern White-tailed buck in fog


...while a buck sniffs the air, depending on non-visual cues.





The ancient oak seems to listen, too, leaning into the fog.
What does he hear?



Linking with Saturday's Critters