The baskets behind the story poles are of Papago manufacture. One bears a tag saying that it was made by Linda Mike. The necklace is my own beadwork, using clay Raven heads handmade by an artisan from Olympia WA.
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.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Totems
The baskets behind the story poles are of Papago manufacture. One bears a tag saying that it was made by Linda Mike. The necklace is my own beadwork, using clay Raven heads handmade by an artisan from Olympia WA.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Smoke And Mirrors
As I stumbled along the ruts left by skis or tripped in elk and deer tracks, I began thinking about my secret waterfall. The distance there and back was appropriate to my clothing and lack of gear and there was a possibility it might provide some interesting ice structures as indeed it did.
There are two illusions in this image. The first is that it is a black and white photo. It is not. It was shot in full, living color. The second is that both fire and ice coexist in this special niche. In truth, the smoke in the background is splashing water, rendered into haze by a lengthy exposure. Smoke and mirrors...the camera is good at tricks!
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Frozen Fish
Today, I stopped at a public access on the banks of a large reservoir which is famous for its kokanee and silvers, intending to make some photographs of the leaf ice lining the shore. Imagine my surprise when I found this specimen of rare Eulachon (Thaleichthys frigidus) skimming along on the frozen surface like some mad walking catfish.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Tillandsia
For some bizarre reason, there are a few difficult exotics which thrive for me, such as a 15-year old Dioscorea (a member of the Yam family), a species the grower admitted to losing consistently before the plants attained two years of age. Yet I kill African Violets with abandon, overwatering some, underwatering others and never striking a happy medium. I've tried Tillandsias before. After all, they are an epiphyte or "air plant," meaning they grow without necessity for soil, requiring only the occasional misting with the occasional addition of fertilizer to the spray. Members of the same family as the larger Bromeliads, in the wild these plants simply rest in trees, drawing nutrition from whatever other decaying plant matter washes onto their roots. How can you fail to grow a plant like that?
We'll see. This one followed me home from a nursery today. If it's still around in a month, I'll be pleasantly surprised.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Microenvironment
The lichens and little mushroom thrive on rotting wood while the mosses have taken hold in nutrient-poor soil, blown in and trapped in crevices within the structure of the tree's bark. The fern has rooted within the organic debris of previous generations of moss and lichen. In time, these plants and fungi will consume the stump and, having nothing more on which to feed, they themselves will die off, creating detritus in which yet other species will thrive. As the cycle continues over countless generations of Man, this small patch may again support a cedar to fall naturally or be cut, again to supply an environmental niche to fern, moss, mushroom and lichen alike.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Raven Himself
This majestic, intelligent, wary creature is among the most difficult to capture in a detailed image. The slightest glint off a lens will send him off to the top of the tallest tree, the least motion on the part of the photographer likewise. Perhaps he couldn't see me kneeling in the kitchen doorway, his vision obscured by blowing snow, or perhaps he decided to favor me this once. I prefer to think the latter.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Porch Parrot Profile
Porch Parrots came to be called such while my husband and I were on a backpacking trip. As I was cooking dinner, I heard a whoop and call of, "Come here! Come quick!" so I ran to the edge of our campsite to see what was causing the furor. "Look!" Bruce continued, "A whole tree full of parrots!" Indeed, a flock of Evening Grosbeaks had descended upon a conifer and were busily gobbling as many seeds as they could possibly shell.
Friends who have flocks of these beautiful birds visiting their feeders often refer to them as "pigs with wings," an unjust appellation despite their voracious appetites for black-oil sunflower seed. Here, I often go through 500 or more pounds of black-oil seed each year, loving every moment of watching them and listening to their plaintive "Churp?" call. Next to Crows and Ravens, the Porchies are my favorite people, and today they appeared at the feeders, two months earlier than they have ever arrived previously.
You will undoubtedly see many more photos of Porch Parrots here in the days to come!
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Birdie Buddy
Monday, November 22, 2010
Snowflake
Sunday, November 21, 2010
White Zygocactus
All of the Zygos are low-maintenance plants. Water when they become dry, and only transplant when absolutely necessary. They are easy to slip. Just pinch off two joined segments and pot so that the junction is buried in soil. Keep moist until new growth appears. They may also be rooted in water. As a general rule and despite their reputation as "Christmas" cacti, they will reward you with a flush of blooms in mid to late November, followed by another lesser blooming period approximately six weeks later.
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Deer Fern
Friday, November 19, 2010
Rhytidiadelphus Triquetrus
Thursday, November 18, 2010
The Whiskered Boy
My first attempts took me to various pet stores. Kittens were not to be had, only fully grown cats. The humane society told me I'd come in the wrong season. No kittens. I expanded my search to the next county, to newspapers and bulletin boards. No kittens. I kept saying to myself, "It used to be you'd find kids with boxes of kittens out in front of every grocery store. What's going on here?"
A friend was in town from Chicago, staying at his second home on Whidbey Island. I went up to visit him and discovered that my other friends had contrived a plan: I was not to go home without a kitten if there was one to be had in all of Western Washington.
Well, to cut the story short by a full day's hunting, we eventually found my sweet little Boy at a cat rescue facility in Kirkland. Tip for short, his full name is Tipperary...because as the lyrics to the song tell, it was "a long way to Tipperary...a long, long way to go."
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Hardanger Embroidery
As opposed to drawnwork where all threads are left in place in the fabric, Hardanger is a form of cutwork. Clusters of stitches (Kloster blocks) frame open areas and provide stability where severed threads terminate. Various pattern stitches may fill any or all of the open areas. Oftentimes, satin and stem stitch embroideries will be used to embellish the pieces, although traditionally, Hardanger is comprised solely of Kloster blocks, wrapped threads and pattern stitches within openings.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
The World's Most Perfect Houseplant
You might think this was a delicate hothouse species requiring infinite patience and care. Quite the opposite! If you are a haphazard caregiver as I am, you may notice that you've allowed its leaves to wither until they look like green raisins. Don't panic. Just pour some water on it and a few hours later, the leaves will have plumped up again.
Hoya bella is a member of the subdivision of Hoyas known as "everblooming." It will put on a profusion of blossom clusters such as this one approximately every six weeks. The flowers are thick and waxy, delicately scented with a soft perfume. The pendent umbels contain up to ten individual flowers and form not only at the tips of the stems but also at various nodes.
The plant is a rapid grower. When mine reaches three or four feet in length (at least once a year), I prune it back to a more manageable two feet and root the slips to give to friends. No home should be without one!
Monday, November 15, 2010
Waterfall
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Spotted Towhee
Towhee's bright red eye is brown when the bird is young. His outer tailfeathers are cornered with white to complement the white spots on his wings, a field identification point which is often helpful as a flash of black and rust darts from the edge of observeration and into dense brush.
He is sometimes referred to as the "Rufous-Sided Towhee" (Pipilo erythrophthalmus) in field guides, although taxonomists now tend to consider the East Coast and West Coast variants one and the same bird.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Lipstick Cladonia
You might not notice the nearly microscopic scarlet knobs unless you were specifically looking for them. The grey-green scaly clubs (podetia) from which the Latin name is derived are a mere 10-20 cm. in height. Each club arises from a cluster of basal scales. The fruiting bodies (apothecia) are but pinheads of scarlet, significantly larger than life in the image.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Cladonia
In reading my field guides, I have learned that lichens retain radioactivity in much higher concentrations than flowering plants do and in turn pass it along to creatures higher on the food chain, such as the animals which rely on the species for fodder. A frightening thought occurs: that the venison jerky my neighbor provides might be laced with isotopes which somewhere down the line might prove deleterious to my health.
It all connects...a thread here, a fiber there...all woven into the fragile web we call Life.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Mineral Reflections
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Crow-Motion Photography
Cousin Fred here had been perched contentedly in the top of a favored tree until I went out the door with his breakfast, camera slung around my neck. I thought to get a portrait or a profile before heading back inside, but as soon as he saw the meal I'd laid out, he launched headlong toward it, rewarding me with this abstract view of perfect downbeat wings.
Crows often guide me, both literally and symbolically. Fred, bless his buttons, taught an excellent seminar on motion-blur photography.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Golden Ilex
Monday, November 8, 2010
Phenology
Today, I received in the mail a somewhat unexpected package. I say "somewhat" because the program's coordinator sent me an email last week saying something was on its way to all volunteers who had transcribed over 5000 cards, a thank-you for the hours these people had put in. I had no idea what might be in the box, so when it arrived, I ripped into it like a kid on Christmas morning. To my delight, I found a matching set of coffee mug, mouse pad and fridge magnet bearing the logo of the program, as well as a pen and a letter of appreciation.
If you'd like to know more about the program or would like to participate in this valuable and on-going project, please visit
www.pwrc.usgs.gov/bpp/index.cfm
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Swofford Pond
Saturday, November 6, 2010
A Sudden Fall
Friday, November 5, 2010
Echoes Of Fog And Flora
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Evergreen Blackberry
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Wilkeson Creek
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Beaver Pond Reflections
Monday, November 1, 2010
Pineapple Express
The figure you see shown on my Davis Weather Monitor II represents what poured into the pluviometer between 7 AM and 3 PM. It is still coming down in buckets, barrels and reservoirs, and looks like it has no intention of stopping any time soon.
A footnote: 1.63" fell in the 24-hour period.
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