Category Archives: Critters

Trash Pandas

I don’t remember which of my friends on FaceBook used this term the other day, but it cracked me up and I found it to be perfect. (Yes, I’m easily amused.)

One of the reasons it caught my attention was the return of Rocky & Raquel. Some nights they’re back with several of their friends. Their orgies/rumbles can be quite loud at time.

The other night I tried sticking my camera on a long monopod along with the remote trigger I normally use for astrophotography, then holding it up above the back porch roof to see if I could catch the rascals in action. I wasn’t sure if it would work, since it was really dark and that gives the camera nothing to focus on. Sometimes it takes several tries for it to find something vaguely in focus and trigger the flash.

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The Christmas lights were still up at the time, so the camera (with the telephoto lens) liked finding and focusing on the big palm tree out in the front yard.

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The corner of the garage roof was a popular target for the autofocus.

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This guy’s not in focus, but his eyes make excellent reflectors!

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No paparazzi!!

 

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My Issues With Horses

One thing this site has brought me is some good friends who I have never met in person. One such would be the lovely woman who writes the “Musings From A Tangled Mind” blog. (It’s wonderful, you should subscribe and read regularly.)

The other day she posted this, I went and made some smartass comment (as is my wont), she responded with a goofy answer, and we went back and forth (see the comments section on her post), I ended up saying, “I’ve got some old issues with horses…” and she ended up saying, “I can tell. LOL 😀 You should tell that story too. Cause now I’m curious.”

Ok, I can tell this story half asleep (the first full week at the new job has been wonderful, but the days are long and my sleep is short), so here’s one for you, Wendy:

I was maybe nineteen. I’m pretty sure I was out of my parents’ house by that time. We were all living in Orange County, California, they in Huntington Beach and I in Westminster, a couple of exits north on the 405 Freeway.

There came to pass a weekend trip out to Temecula. These days Temecula is a land of wineries and hot air balloons, but in the mid 1970’s it was a dusty, small town out in the middle of the desert. We went to visit some long lost relative of my father’s, possible a cousin.

My father came from the dirt farmers of southeast South Dakota, and with very few exceptions (my father being one of them) they’re still dirt farmers. Or at least they have a lot of dirt farmer blood in them. (And before anyone gets their knickers twisted over the term “dirt farmer,” I learned it from them and they wear it as a badge of honor and pride, not an insult.)

My father’s cousin had the sort of place you can still see out in the desert,but they’ve moved out a hundred miles or so as the urbanization and gentrification has taken over. Now you find places like this out in Anza, Mohave, and Agua Dulce.

Nothing paved. Dirt, dirt, and more dirt. A nice A-frame house, just fine for one person. Rough fences everywhere, made mostly of really old, weathered, skinny, broken tree trunks. Plus the odd cactus and wad of barbed wire.

I’m the oldest of eight kids (it’s not just the dirt that’s fertile in southeast South Dakota) and we were all there. It was hot as hell, we were (as usual) fighting all the way for the two hour drive out there, and there was nothing to do. I doubt he even had a television to distract us, and this is way, WAY before the days of smart phones, pocket game consoles, and DirecTv.

At some point, the cousin asks if we want to go horseback riding. Sure, a couple of us will give it a shot even though it’s slightly hotter than the surface of the sun out there. Why not? At least if we get heat stroke we’ll get to ride in a nice, air conditioned ambulance to a nice, air conditioned emergency room.

Out to the barn and there are two horses. The first is named something like “Widowmaker T-Rex” and he looks a lot like those red-eyed, fire-breathing beasts the Ring Wraiths rode in the Lord of the Rings movies. The second is an old, old, old swayback mare who had three hooves already in the glue factory.

My youngest sister, who was ten or eleven at the time, walks up to the pawing, rearing, hell demon of a beast and starts petting its nose and the demon beast says, “Ooooh, yeah, that feels good! Right there. A little more towards that ear. Yes, right there!”

She mounts up, having to my knowledge never been on a horse in her life, and ten minutes later is doing moves like she’s trying out for the Olympic dressage team.

I’m her big brother, I can’t let her show me up!

I start to mount up, have problems, but eventually get on the swayback mare. Who sees demon beast prancing around out in the yard and sees her chance. She takes off like a bat out of hell out of the barn, through the corral, and toward the road. Freedom! Sweet freedom! Let my people go! With a hearty heigh-oh silver, away!

I’m clinging to her neck for dear life. As we head off down the road and I’m considering something stupid (like jumping off head first into some cactus while she’s running at top speed) or even more stupid (like trying to regain control – after all, I am the 19-year-old male human full of testosterone, right?) I hear in the distance, fading behind me, my father’s cousin yelling, “Just let her go and don’t fall off. She’ll come back home eventually on her own!”

Eventually she did, forty-five minutes to an hour later, with me still clinging to her neck for dear life and hurting in places that I didn’t know I had places.

There’s only one thing that could make it worse. Well, make that seven things, as in my brothers and sisters. The teasing was merciless.

Meanwhile, the swayback mare has had her fun and is now home, ready for a nap. She heads to the barn, through the corral – where my eight-and-a-half-years-younger-than-I  sister is still practicing dressage, yelling”Isn’t this cool! You should try it!”

Absolutely 100% (which equals 80% to 85% here) true, I swear.

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Filed under Critters, Family, Paul

Alligator Lizards

To continue with the critter parade…

I’ve previously posted a picture of a reasonably large lizard (ten to twelve inches long, including tail) we used to see in our back yard. We named him “Fred.”

Then there was a similar but smaller lizard (six to eight inches) we would see regularly out in the front, who we dubbed “Mini-Fred.” There have also been the odd sighting around the yard of other lizardss that were presumably “Spawn of Fred.”

We haven’t seen Fred or Mini-Fred for a while, but at the beginning of the summer we started seeing a really small one (three to four inches) sunning itself out on the rocks and sidewalk in front. We named him “Micro-Fred.” He’s actually been growing all summer, and is now up to about six inches long. He can be spotted on most sunny days.

Imagine my surprise a week ago when I came around the corner from the driveway and saw not only Micro-Fred, but a second lizard, about the same size. Not knowing any better, it’s been christened “Mrs. Micro-Fred.”

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The pictures aren’t the greatest, since I came around the corner, saw them, and froze in my tracks, hoping not to spook them into the bushes. I carefully got out my iPhone and took a couple of pictures, including the “zoom” photos below, which tend to be smaller and grainer than normal.

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This is Micro-Fred. You can see that he’s sort of tan or brownish.

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This is Mrs. Micro-Fred. She (it?) is much darker, almost an olive green color.

I will readily admit that I’m anthropomorphizing like crazy here, assuming sexes with absolutely no basis in fact to go on. On researching it, I found it’s almost impossible for anyone to tell the sex of an alligator lizard without a physical exam, and even then it’s difficult. But hey, two lizards, and there seem to be multiple generations of them over several years, so I’m okay jumping to the conclusion that one’s male and one’s female.

If they’re not, well, that’s okay too. I’m not here to judge, and this is a pretty liberal state. As long as they’re happy together and everything’s consensual, it’s none of my business. However, it wouldn’t bode well for the appearance of any “Nano-Fred” in the near future, if you know what I mean.

Now, I told you that story to tell you this one…

How, you might ask, do I know that these are alligator lizards? Well, let me tell you.

One of my favorite authors is Seanan McGuire (aka Mira Grant). // // <meta http-equiv=”refresh” content=”0; URL=/?_fb_noscript=1″ />(_If you don’t know who she is, read (and be wonderfully horrified & terrified by) the Newsflesh trilogy (“Feed”, “Deadline”, and “Blackout”) ASAP. Most highly recommended!

Seanan also is quite the storyteller on Twitter. A couple of her more memorable tales recently involve her love of lizards and reptiles in general, and alligator lizards in particular.

The first of these stories has been assembled here. That’s how I learned these are alligator lizards. I also learned that, while I have no fear of being attacked by these lizards (they’re not going to leap for my jugular just ’cause they can ’cause they’re monstrous, cold-blooded, evil lizards), I’m not going to try to pick any of them up if I can avoid it. While they’re too small to do much harm and they’re not venomous, they do bite. I prefer my epidermis unpunctured, thank you!

The second, hilarious story has been posted here. It’s Seanan’s storytelling at her finest. Every time I see Micro-Fred or his kin I’ll be remembering that story and smiling.

Live long and prosper, be fruitful and multiply, Micro-Fred and Mrs. Micro-Fred!

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Praying Mantis 

You don’t see one of these in this part of the world very often.

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In fact, I can’t recall ever seeing one around in the 40+ years I’ve lived in Southern California.

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I saw them when I was a kid in other parts of the country. In those days I also spent a lot more time in far less metropolitan settings, out in the woods.

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Here, hanging out on a pillar outside the local post office? Totally unexpected!

Also, taking pictures of a huge bug at the entrance to the post office? A fantastic way to get my fellow citizens to give us a wide berth and look at us with horror. Was it the bug, or me being fascinated by the bug? We’ll never know!

BTW, yesterday’s picture of the giant, blue, bear statue? You can find it outside the main entrance to the Convention Center in Denver, Colorado!

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Filed under Critters, Los Angeles, Photography

Juicy Chunks O’ Wisdom For Friday, October 2nd

‘Cause giving a damn is too much of a pain in the ass at the moment, that’s why.

  • Listening to “Jeopardy” by Greg Kihn Band as it comes up on the satellite feed reminds me again how many songs of the late 1980’s through the early 2000’s I now recognize more by the Weird Al Yankovic parody version.
  • Taking the trash out yesterday evening was an adventure. It was full dark, but we have one of those motion-activated flood lights out there, so no worries. I was just opening the gate from the front yard and it hadn’t yet triggered on, when something slammed into my left leg and another something slammed into the trash bag I was carrying in my right hand. No flood of insanely bad smell, so they weren’t skunks, and I don’t usually see the raccoons moving that fast, so my money’s on rabbits.
  • Observation made the other day – I would prefer that my life story be directed by Frank Capra, but instead I got Hitchcock. Or Kubrick.
  • Twenty-nine days until “NaNoWriMo” starts. Do I participate this year? Do I have an idea to use? Feeling a bit stretched thin and abandoned by my muse.
  • After the leporine hit-and-run, the light turned on and I looked behind me into the front yard. Jessie was there, oblivious to the (at least) two conejoes that had just scampered in front of her nose. We’ll cut her some slack, she’s getting really old and having some mobility issues. Back in the day, she would have chased those rabbits all the way down the block. Of course, I would have been trying to chase her all the way down the block, so maybe it’s just as well.
  • Maybe I need to learn to play the bagpipes. Yeah, that’s it!!
  • Even then, could I get the “2001: A Space Odyssey” Kubrick? No such luck. More and more days it’s feeling like the “Clockwork Orange” Kubrick. Or “Full Metal Jacket.” Or “The Shining.”
  • re: NaNoWriMo, it might be like the line about needing an hour of meditation a day, unless of course you can’t afford the time, in which case you need two hours.
  • No, I haven’t seen “The Martian” yet.
  • Wait, a decent set of bagpipes costs how much??!! And I thought it was the noise that kept more people from playing them.
  • Can we try for “Eyes Wide Shut?”

Remember, “You have to go to people’s funerals or they won’t come to yours.” Thanks, Yogi.

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Filed under Critters, Juicy Chunks, Movies, Music

Feathered Flyers At Point Mugu

The Point Mugu base (these days formally part of Naval Base Ventura County, which also includes Port Hueneme and San Nicolas Island) is literally right on the ocean, in a stretch of marsh land between the Pacific Coast Highway (US Route One) and the water. Given the sensitive nature of the ecosystem there, they take care to help out the local critters as much as possible. In large part, this means birds.

Unfortunately, birds and airplanes don’t always mix together well. A bird strike between a five-pound seagull and a Cessna 172 at 120 knots is capable of taking out the plane, or at least shattering the windshield and causing serious injuries to the pilot and passengers. (I’ve been there, a flock of them scared the crap out of me during training out of Whiteman.) Given that there are much bigger birds (pelicans can be up to fifteen or twenty pounds) and much faster planes (jet fighters out can be cruising at 400 knots or more, even at low altitudes) it’s not hard to see that this could be a serious problem.

Ask Captain Sullenberger and the passengers of US Airways Flight 1549.

While sitting at the front of the flight line yesterday at Point Mugu, this pair of turkey vultures was circling overhead.

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They’re beautiful birds, huge, with wingspans of better than five feet. They’re a little less beautiful circling five hundred feet up, a hundred yards from a runway where planes are flying by at 450 knots.

During some of the pauses between flight demonstrations the airshow announcers had mentioned the bird issue and had talked about some of the methods used by the base to control them and drive them away. Then mentioned using raptors as a safe, harmless, and ecologically friendly method. (There are a lot of large airports that do this.)

So two or three times later in the day, I saw this guy flying around and was wondering if he might be “on duty,” so to speak.

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Click on one of these pictures, particularly the first one, to see it full sized. See just behind the left wing, those two strings? I’m no expert on falconry, but aren’t those called “jesses” and they’re part of how falcons are trained?

Also a most gorgeous creature (I’m a sucker for raptors) but I’m glad to see that a few laps around the airport kept his large cousins out of the way of my friends and our large, fast, metal birds!

 

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Filed under Airshows, Critters, Flying, Photography

Emergency Hack, September 20th

Yet again, an “emergency hack” is needed, the result of too many thises and thats and too few hours. Not to mention not enough sleep.

Fortunately, for just such an emergency, I’ve been saving these really excellent pictures of a hawk.

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Of Dogs And Critters In The Dark

It’s hot. It’s muggy. Jessie had to go outside to relieve herself and patrol her territory.

I’m sitting at the other end of the yard waiting for her, minding my own business, checking Twitter on my phone. Jessie’s gone down by the porch where the barbecue and hot tub are, just to make sure everything’s secure. She’s a dog, it’s her job.

Suddenly I hear a tussle down there. Bushes rustling, rattling, and shaking, Jessie growling, maybe something banging off the side of the barbecue. I look, but sitting under the patio light and squinting off into the dark I can’t see a thing.

Another round of things being shaken and then here comes Jessie out of the dark, a white ghost, running toward me, her fur in full “puffed” mode. The running part is significant, since she’s really getting on and most days is really fighting to walk with any reliability. To see her running is quite surprising, to say the least.

She tears past me and up the steps, right into the sliding glass door which is still closed. She bounces off, down the steps, stumbles and falls on the patio, then gets back up and starts looking at me, then the door, then the shadows over by the barbecue, then the door, then me…

Remember that look that Gandalf had when he was fighting the Balrog, just before he fell? “Run, you fools!”

I opened the door, let her in, gave her a treat, calmed her down. Then, probably because I’m a guy and definitely because I’m an idiot, I grab a flashlight and go back out to see what’s out there.

As I crossed the yard I could hear something moving in those bushes behind the spa. I stopped about ten feet away and played the flashlight around, but couldn’t see anything.

Every time I would take a step closer, the rustling would start again. When I got about five steps away, it occurred to me that this was the point in the movie where the protagonist (me) gets attacked and eaten by the antagonist (zombie, alien, leopard, killer bunny, and so on). I did not wish to be attacked or eaten, so I backed off. Plus, I had a hunch.

I went back to my seat at the other end of the yard and turned off the porch light, then let my eyes adjust to the dark. I could still hear something moving around back down there. I just sat quietly and waited.

After about ten minutes I could see something moving down there. I snapped on the flashlight and confirmed my hunch.

Mama Raccoon had at least two cubs with her, and they were using the leftover water at the bottom of the spa (from the sprinklers & odd shower we’ve had) to wash their food.

Jessie had been wise. Or terrified, it didn’t matter. I’m guessing that Jessie might have spooked them when they were down in the spa, and Mama couldn’t get back up into the pine trees while carrying the cubs, so she was stuck in the bushes. If Jessie had given in to her canine instincts and barked or attacked, Mama Raccoon would have kicked her ass.

I turned off the flashlight and left them alone to their dinner.

Thank goodness it wasn’t a skunk!

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Random Photo For June 7th

  • Random number between 1999 and 2015 = 2005
  • Random number between 1 and 12 = 8
  • Random number between 1 and 31 (or 30 or 28 or 29) = 18

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We were in Seattle, our first trip there, a family vacation. In the iconic Farmer’s Market, I saw this sculpture of a giant squid suspended above us.

By all accounts, squid can get quite large, and they’re not stupid. The exhibit curiosity and non-random, non-instinctive behaviors. There have been instances of remote vehicles thousands of feet down in the ocean seeing giant squid and having the squid come back several times to investigate and even play with the submarine.

Better yet, their aquatic relatives, the octopus, are in some cases being shown to be as intelligent as a chimpanzee or dog. They can be trained to perform complex tasks and can use simple logic and reason to solve problems. For example, in this video (which has Spanish titles, but a favorite Jean Michel Jarre soundtrack) an octopus figures out how to unscrew a jar in order to get at the food inside.

I’m hoping that we don’t manage to kill off all of the squid and the octopus as we continue to screw up the planet. We’re seeing significant temperature increases in the oceans as the atmospheric temperatures rise. We’re also seeing the oceans getting more acidic as the warmer water combines with the increased CO2 levels in the atmosphere, creating increased amounts of carbolic acid at the sea/air interface. Of course, we also have issues like oil spills that are causing major amounts of damage in the areas where they occur – look at how much oxygen levels in the water fell and marine life suffered after the British Petroleum spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Then we overfish for many species, depleting them to the point where they’re near extinction, which in turn depletes the species which feed on them, which in turn…

Given the increasing odds that at some point we’re going to screw up so badly that we put ourselves on the endangered species list, I hope that species like the squid and the octopus are able to survive. I know that in the long run, Mother Nature will do just fine without humans, just like she did just fine without dinosaurs and millions of other species before us. Something else will rise to the top of the food chain when primates are gone, just like mammals and primates rose when the dinosaurs faded into history. The planet will be just fine without us.

Maybe it will be octopus that get the next crack at it. If we don’t take them with us.

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Filed under Critters, Disasters, Photography, Travel

Gonzo Is As Gonzo Does

A little “heads up!” here — the next two weeks or so will be a bit gonzo at this end. Pickings here might occasionally be on the thinnish side.

Fifi,” the world’s only flying B-29, restored, flown, and operated by the Commemorative Air Force, will be at my Southern California Wing of the CAF from next Monday to the following Sunday. We expect to see a lot of interest, large crowds, and a ton of work for the CAF SoCal members and staff.

On the good side, you’re likely to get a LOT of pictures of “Fifi” from just about every angle possible. I doubt that I’ll get a chance to go up and fly in her (this time, at least) but other than that I’m expecting some great images to share.

In addition, we’re trying to finalize a complete redesign of our CAF SoCal website, and get it live by the end of this week. (It’s going to look great!)

And my annual audit by the CAF HQ financial staff and their auditors will be next week, while all of this is going on.

Between A, B, and C, I expect to be pulling some long hours.

Gonzo.

For an example of what I consider to be “gonzo” content, consider this:

Tonight we had a lovely quarter moon and it was finally clear as a bell in Los Angeles. The moon was quite bright, directly overhead through the trees when I took Jessie out in the back yard for her “evening constitutional.”

Jessie finished peeing in her chosen spot deep in the shadows, then wandered into the bushes to sniff for squirrels, bunnies, skunks, and raccoon. I chose to admire the stars peeking through the pine trees and pray that Jessie didn’t find any squirrels, bunnies, skunks, or raccoon. (She didn’t, although someone in the neighborhood very nearby obviously met a skunk. WHEW!!)

When I looked back down at the yard, I was struck by how I could see the puddle where Jessie had peed. The outline of the puddle was very bright and clear as it reflected the moonlight perfectly. The whole yard was dark, but I could clearly see that one spot lit up. It was almost like I was seeing sunlight glinting off of the seas of Titan, visible through the methane haze. As the fluid soaked into the ground, the vision faded.

“Reflections On A Pee Puddle.” Gonzo.

 

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