I don't know about bears, but deer definitely do shit in the woods:
View attachment 34511
Mt. Charleston, South Loop Trail, close to 10,000' up.
Deer poop on my lawn all the time. They are spherical around the size of marbles in a nice pile.
I don't know about bears, but deer definitely do shit in the woods:
View attachment 34511
Mt. Charleston, South Loop Trail, close to 10,000' up.
I don't know about bears, but deer definitely do shit in the woods:
View attachment 34511
Mt. Charleston, South Loop Trail, close to 10,000' up.
Deer poop on my lawn all the time. They are spherical around the size of marbles in a nice pile.
I don't know about bears, but deer definitely do shit in the woods:
View attachment 34511
Mt. Charleston, South Loop Trail, close to 10,000' up.
Deer poop on my lawn all the time. They are spherical around the size of marbles in a nice pile.
Amateurs.
They're absolutely endemic here in SEQ, where they are also called 'Pee-Wees'.For some reason there are fewer birds than usual in my garden than in past years. I was therefore particularly happy to see a bird of a species I had not seen before. Curiously named Magpie-Lark (it is neither a magpie nor a lark) this male made himself comfortable in one of my cedars for a few minutes.
The difference between a Plover and a Lapwing is that you can't knit yourself a nice Lapwing.Something very like that (but not identical) used to be called a Mudlark around here, but was recently renamed the Magpie Lark.
I wonder if genetic studies caused the rename?
The same happened with the Plover, now the Lapwing.
I wish they would leave bird names alone, it takes me long enough to learn them.
Curses on scientific accuracy.
Identical bird, actually, and it's been called the Magpie Lark since before the 1850s.Something very like that (but not identical) used to be called a Mudlark around here, but was recently renamed the Magpie Lark.
On my tiny phone screen, I thought that a few of them were on holidays in the Central Highlands of TAS, but it turns out to be the Lakes District.Identical bird, actually, and it's been called the Magpie Lark since before the 1850s.Something very like that (but not identical) used to be called a Mudlark around here, but was recently renamed the Magpie Lark.
The Mudlark/Magpie-Lark's habitat
How big was that?Two years ago this huntsman spider was my housemate.
I named her Lisa del Giocondo on account of her alluring smile.
She roamed around in my study and kitchen for a few weeks, then disappeared. Not enough prey to jump at, I guess.