Saturday, September 21, 2019

The Babies


There it was, such a tiny nest precariously perched on a small decorative light cord covered above only with the cross-stitched sunscreen on a pergola in the back yard.  The tiny darting bird, wings furiously slapping air, is building a crude but perfectly engineered bed using spider silk and dull green lichen in which to lay two jelly bean-sized eggs.  


Within 3 weeks, little nestlings, their heads with spike-like hair on naked bodies bob and weave above the rim of the nest with beaks wide open and eyes clamped shut.

 
The feeding frenzy begins as the mother, an Anna Hummingbird, spends much of her time looking and foraging for insects and insect eggs found in local trees and on the ground.  Trip after trip, she makes, as she dutifully feeds her two babies the nectar and insects which she has ingested, only to regurgitate it deep into their crops. 



 
They grow quickly, new feathers appear and their beaks sharpen.  And they share the same small space, moving in unison for a comfortable spot.  The mother continues without hesitation to continue her sole purpose, and that is the constant feeding of her babies.
 

Eventually, it is time to leave the nest and face their world.  One at a time they each spend time flapping their wings, building up the muscles and tendons which will transform them into darting, hovering, zipping hummingbird.     



One is left and for another day she works her wings, practicing hard for the moment of lift off!.  After a long period of flapping, she lays down across the nest, pooped.  Eventually, she recovers and the next morning, she has left the nest.  



Saturday, September 7, 2019

Walking Wild

Walking Wild:



As real-estate developments swallow up the wild and native lands in my neighborhood to build new homes and tilt-up structures housing small commercial enterprises, the canyons and some green spaces are the last remaining habitats for native animal species  which are being pushed further into cramped spaces. 

One of the negative results of over-development (and overcrowding) is native animals spilling out into the streets and parks of the neighborhoods foraging for food and ranging in the area.  Humans and their pets have learned to cohabitate with the wild kingdom in their own backyards.

This interaction often results in the human’s pets becoming the food for the hungry and displaced; sometimes, the wild animals hang out in the neighbor because they are aware of a continuing source of food without ranging and looking for it. 

Recently, I heard that there was a bobcat hanging in the neighborhood.  So, I decided to purchase a Stealthcam camera and put it along the trails in the neighborhood to confirm the rumor.  I wasn’t disappointed in what I found: 


 This is a bobcat walking on the trail after dark but caught on infrared mode.


 


 The bobcat walking toward the camera captured at night on infrared mode.


I also discovered the “coyote highway!”  I was stunned at how many were walking just feet from the backyards in the neighborhood – brazen, big, yet beautiful.  Lots of neighbors have lost pets to these voracious carnivores. 






Man and nature co-existing right in my backyard (Carlsbad, CA.)