This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Otter Water
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Red-Breasted Merganser
In birdwatching, the observer in the field must have a quick eye, a camera or both. When you are photographing birds for documentation purposes, you must try to include as many identification points as possible. These include such things as beak shape, presence of facial markings, and barring or spotting on wings, back or breast. Keep your field guides handy! Spring is on the rise!
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Badge Moss, Plagiomnium Insigne
(Somehow this entry failed to upload on the date it was submitted. I discovered the error on the 31st and corrected the omission.)
Friday, January 28, 2011
Bushtit
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Icmadophila Ericetorum
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
It's A Frog Pelt!
I discovered this specimen and two others in Charles L. Pack Experimental Forest near LaGrande, WA. Pack Forest is one of my favorite places for short hikes and it frequently provides me with natural curiosities such as this.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Fascinating Fungi
The top image shows a Clavariadelphus species I have not been able to locate in any reference material. It is possible that the coloration is due to its age, however, it felt fresh. The fruiting body was approximately three inches long, white near the base.
The bottom photo shows easily identifiable Sarcoscypha coccinia, also known as Scarlet Cup. The ear-shaped specimen measured approximately one inch across the long dimension.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Tip's Dreams
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Backyard Burner
Saturday, January 22, 2011
When Winter Goes
When Winter goes,
Its icy breath exhausted and efforts spent;
When its strength and savage beauty fail
And it rises no longer from its bed
To pillage days with frost and snow,
And torture nights with acid winds,
Then ventures the bud to emerge,
The bird to sing in hope of mating.
When Winter goes,
And life returns to the Earth's warming bosom,
The lakes and rivers rejoice and creatures with them,
With a chorus of raindrops echoing their glee.
The hills shrug off their coats of snow
And clouds frolic above them, laughing,
When Winter goes.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Shootout At Crow Canyon
***Shootout At Crow Canyon***
It was sundown on the Holodeck, and that rascally varmint and bandito Worf had been lootin' Miss Deanna's henhouse again. Why, he'd done got all the last batch of eggs, the ones she was plannin' to take to the orphans down in town so's they wouldn't have to go hungry a-mornin's. Well, I can tell you, she was right fed up, Miss Deanna. She saddled up Old Paint, and now she'd tracked that scoundrel to his hideout in Crow Canyon. Tyin' her horse to a bit of sagebrush, she went on foot through the chaparral, keepin' hid behind tumbleweeds and rocks until his tracks disappeared over one of them hills. She'd hunkered down low to wait her moment, wantin' to see the whites of his eyes afore he spotted her, wantin' to draw a bead on him smack between those big brown eyes o' his and then she'd lay him low. Yep, there he was now. She waited, wantin' him closer and then...BANG! Worf bit the dust, hard as twenty-five pounds o' spuds in a ten-pound gunnybag, his shootin' iron flyin' from his hand. Then out from behind a big rock come Alexander the Kid. Yep, the Kid took his own daddy down for egg-thievin'. Now that's an ornery varmint, that young'un, but a lawful one. Betcha he's gonna make Sheriff somewhere down the line.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
We Call Them Hills
Most, if not all of these rolling mounds of earth and rock have borne timber at one time or another. Most have been logged once, twice, even three times since the days when old Paul Bunyan first urged Babe the Blue Ox into their canyons and onto their crests. These are penetrable hills, were the timber company gates thrown wide to public access, not alpine challenges such as Rainier and Adams and Baker, which are covered with permanent glaciers and deep crevasses. The elk and deer roam these fields, summering high and wintering low where forage is easily gotten. Fish are plentiful in the higher lakes where no roads go, and only fishermen with map and compass venture. But hills these are, not mountains, and my eyes lift past them for sight of the peaks of my younger years.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Courting Tree
Although I have no way to confirm my suspicions, I have not seen Missus for several days. The Town Crier has been very vocal with some bit of news, however, proudly proclaiming to all other Ravens in the area that something important is or may be occurring. If familiarity with patterns may lead to a conclusion, I would incline toward the belief that Mister is the news-bearer, here telling one and all that his lovely lady is setting eggs.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Northern Flicker
That said, I am on a first-name basis with Flicker when he comes to dine at my establishment. I know his preferences and serve him promptly, as an honored guest. He is somewhat resentful of the fact that the less mannerly Evening Grosbeaks frequently sit down to table beside him, and has been known to deliver a sharp peck to an interloper who has attempted to elbow him away from his place. His handsome spots and characteristic swag-like flight pattern ("swoop-swoop-swoop") make him easily identifiable, and although he would prefer a diet of insects, black-oil sunflower seed provides both high protein and the oils which he needs to keep his feathers sleek throughout the winter.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Proof Positive
Old and new, my marble collection weighs close to fifty pounds and fills a five-gallon pickle jar with overflow into a cookie tin. Swirlies and aggies, cat's-eyes, clearies...no knuckling down for this Crow and lover of shiny objects!
As a child, I drove my mother mad as I spun a line of marbles 'round and 'round in the lid of a metal fruitcake tin, utterly enthralled by the optical delights of spiralling lines. My favorites were candy-striped, red, green or blue on white, and one tiny cobalt-blue cleary who hung out in my imagination with three yellow and one white solids of the same size. The group always formed the last of the parade, like the segments of a rattlesnake's tail. Equal to them was a coveted single white cat's-eye I'd been forced to trade heavily to obtain.
Well, if I am pressed, I suppose I must admit that my original collection went the way of so many childhood treasures when I moved away from home. However, even today I cannot resist picking up a marble if I find one, hoping that sheer numbers will make up for those lost forever with my youth.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Pussywillow Promises
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Up Periscope
According to the proprietor, these critters have found permanent homes beneath several of this campground's docks. In between intervals of posturing for the camera, one chap in particular delighted in going beneath the boards leaving nothing but his nose and whiskers poking out. If he thought he was hiding, his snuffling and blowing gave away his position quite readily, as did that of his companions when they'd surface from a protracted dive.
Mineral Lake holds plenty of Otter food, from hatchery-raised brown and rainbow trout to a substantial population of crawdads, a fare also enjoyed by humans during the Fourth of July all-you-can-eat crawdad (crayfish) picnic. "Poor man's lobster," they call them, and justifiably so. Tasty with or without butter, the tails are bite-sized morsels of pure deliciousness. Now as for Mr. Otter, he'd better leave me a few!
Friday, January 14, 2011
Invasion!
At the time when Mt. St. Helens began erupting, I was living near Olympia WA. One of the volcanic events coincided with the migration of Evening Grosbeaks, injuring and no doubt killing many and knocking them off their normal flyway. The surviving flock arrived instead at my front door, literally. Burned and blinded birds by the score came to feed on the black-oil seed which was only a percentage of the mix I normally gave the smaller birds. When I realized they were discarding millet and milo for sunflower seeds, I started buying bags of black-oil, trying to save as many of the beautiful birds as I could.
The following year, my porch was on their map. They came in droves! Because of their bright, big bills, we dubbed them "porch parrots" or "porchies" for short. For ten years, we diligently fed them as much as they could hold...500 pounds of seed between May and August!...and every year, they returned.
When I moved away, I gave them into the keeping of a neighbor who had also been supplying them with their selected diet. To this day, she still feeds them until they're "fit to bust," and I have my own flock who seem to stick around from January through October in the knowledge that they'll be very, very well fed.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Loggin' Country - Tubafor Mill
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Double-Crested Cormorant
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Unsolicited Assistance
It is to be noted that while cats are not allowed on "hard" furniture or counters (no tabletops, desks or bookcases), any "soft" spot is open for use. The bookcase is within cat-arm's reach of the back of an overstuffed chair, a circumstance which clearly puts me in the wrong for having placed temptation too close at hand. That said, as I attempted to work a few more rows today, the tangled guts of the skein eventually proved too tedious to pick apart every few stitches. I gave in and pulled the skein apart to rewind with a mechanical winder. My new sock-in-progress will be hidden safely away from prying paws tonight!
Monday, January 10, 2011
At The Edge Of Dawn
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Mister Preens Missus
Their confidence around me is growing. Today, when they were done eating and had settled in on the fence to groom one another, they were not at all perturbed by the rattling of the sliding glass kitchen door as I drew it back. I spoke to them as I stepped out on the porch, both of them looking toward me at the sound of my voice. They returned to their exchange of tendernesses almost immediately and remained on the fence for ten minutes or more while I photographed them.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
An Acquired Taste
Okay, I hear the "Ole and Lena" jokes bubbling to the surface already. You can't have lutefisk without them, or without lefse, mashed potatoes, melted butter and cream gravy. Traditional Norwegian fare, all of them, designed to get sun-deprived Scandinavians through the long, hard, lightless winters with a chuckle and a calorie count which should sustain a caribou until spring thaw. A bland diet, perhaps, but one which ensures against digestive disorders and other ailments caused by a lack of Omega-3s. Clothespins for noses are optional; some say the fragrance of lutefisk can be smelled for miles, but I assure you that the taste is as delicate as one could expect from whitefish. The gelatinous appearance defeats the chef's saying that "the first bite is with the eye," but if you were dining by the Northern Lights, I imaging the colors would refract beautifully in the lutefisk's translucence.
Since our usual New Year's dinner had to be postponed because of snow, today was Lutefisk Day at my fishing buddy's home. He and his family are Norwegian. I am not. But I will try anything once, and when he first introduced me to this savory delight some ten years ago, I was instantly hooked. All I can say to you who are not brave enough to try it is, "You don't know what you're missing!"
Friday, January 7, 2011
Night Driving
Thursday, January 6, 2011
The Burning Of Incense
This antique incense burner is made of heavy, cast copper, a fact I discovered only after it came into my possession when my mother passed away. It was sticky with resins from myrrh which she placed on specially designed charcoal disks, there to be melted rather than ignited as many other forms of incense are. The burner was almost black when it came into my hands, and so gummy that the lid stuck to the base. A variety of different degreasers and solvents eventually revealed the dark copper tones of the metal. Of its history, I know very little. I believe she may have purchased it in San Francisco's Chinatown prior to the Second World War.
Her tastes in incense ran to the heavily perfumed sticks from India as well as the myrrh. Mine are for the aromatic scents of cedar, piƱon and fir, in keeping with my love of the Pacific Northwest and its forests, and respect for the ways of the First People here. After all, there's a lot to be said for cultural exchange.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Down By The Old Mill Pond
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Planting Seeds Of Thought
I am a haphazard gardener. If it likes the conditions it is forced to endure by both me and the weather and actually manages to survive to the blooming point, I will put it on my list of successes to be repeated in subsequent years. If it withers and dies, I'll probably forget what it was and try it again a few years down the line. I only plant flowers. At vegetables, I am a total failure. I flunked zucchini. My radishes never made roots. But enough flowers survive my ministrations (gazanias, notably, and occasionally a rudbeckia or zinnia or calendula) that I always sit down with the Park catalog as soon as it arrives, joyously selecting what I can kill this year.
Monday, January 3, 2011
A Teasel In Rime
Each tiny floret forms a seed, many of which remain caught in the cone. Gatherers should be cautioned to place bags over the heads until the seeds can be shaken or raked out to be disposed of in an environmentally secure way. For all its beauty, Fuller's Teasel is an invasive plant and care must be taken not to transfer the seeds to new areas.
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Lichen Fan Club
Thus it was that I took a little walk across the snowy pasture opposite my home, my own little Lichenville having seen an early sundown thanks to a large cedar stump on its close horizon. In visiting the larger metropolis of Central Lobaria, I was able to find these sun-dappled and brilliantly green specimens waiting for my lens. I am sorry to say that the areas outlying this core of population are suffering a bit from cold at the moment, and while their brown colors are still attractive, they were not quite suitable for presentation. As the season turns to spring, they will again present their best faces for the Lichen Fan Club's admiring eyes.
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Sparkles And Shadows
When I left the house headed toward a higher altitude, my home thermometer registered 24° F. I've fished in worse, and here at least I wouldn't be getting my hands wet. Dressing in layers is a Pacific Northwest custom even for non-hikers, although I found myself getting a bit too warm in two pair of long johns (one polypro, one wool) plus a wool shirt and jacket. Less than a mile in, the shirt was stowed away in the pack.
I had a hard time deciding which of three images to post in 365 Caws today, settling on this one because it best captured the conditions, the light and the mood. A Happy New Year to my readers, one and all!
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