Desert O'Piñon
Chumono
Hide your pic-a-nic baskets!!a bear walking by this morning
Hide your pic-a-nic baskets!!a bear walking by this morning
Welcome?!a bear walking by this morning
Looks like he's just going to get a cup of coffee.a bear walking by this morning
Definitely a breakfast blend; he's not awake enough to notice the cameraman, which is irrelevant, because the cameraman never dies. A good reason to keep your phone on your person at all times.Looks like he's just going to get a cup of coffee.
Definitely a breakfast blend; he's not awake enough to notice the cameraman, which is irrelevant, because the cameraman never dies. A good reason to keep your phone on your person at all times.
Not many amphibians in the desert, and the majority of legged reptiles are too fast to catch. But I love the desert box turtles.Five-lined skink and pickerel frog:
Not many amphibians in the desert, and the majority of legged reptiles are too fast to catch. But I love the desert box turtles.
I did, however catch a coachwhip yesterday that had just eaten a dove egg. I released it in a small lagoon that still has a bit of water.
When I was a kid I used to spend summers on the Texas Gulf coast just across the La line. Anoles were all over the place. My grandmother showed me how to get the lizards to open their mouths. Once you got that you put them up to your earlobe and they’d clamp down tight with bulldog bite. Wanna freak your mom out? Come in the house and say “chameleon earrings”. The lizard would hang on a while then drop off (be outside when that happensWhen I was ten, I was a master at catching skinks. Now that I'm thirty, I'm mostly too slow. I caught this one because it was trapped in a large water bowl.
When I visited Disney World at age eleven, I was more interested in the anole lizards than the rides. At one point, I had gathered seventeen live anoles in my shirt tail, and I was handing them out to other kids.
I did a lot of growing up in North Texas. As a boy, I caught just about everything I could. My grandfather (a farmer starting as a boy and continuing after WWII until his early 89s) taught me the value of wildlife, the land, and keeping our resources viable and healthy. He was a steward of the environment, and he passionately hated environmental policies. He showed me how to gently catch animals by hand for observation and release them unharmed. I became pretty good at it. Armadillos were easy, but that ONE skunk was a real challenge.When I was ten, I was a master at catching skinks. Now that I'm thirty, I'm mostly too slow. I caught this one because it was trapped in a large water bowl.
I bet their parents were thrilled....At one point, I had gathered seventeen live anoles in my shirt tail, and I was handing them out to other kids.