Lots of wildlife on a recent trip to florida
http://i277.photobucket.com/albums/k...psbiqnevtk.jpg
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Lots of wildlife on a recent trip to florida
http://i277.photobucket.com/albums/k...psbiqnevtk.jpg
that is mind blowing to me.
they are so plentiful around here some people refer to them as swamp donkeys lol. badger is a rare one to cross off the list tho!
turtles are dope too- that and bromontanas seals reminded me of this
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one of the coolest trips we have been on to galapagos islands. the animals are not bothered by people so you can get very close.
I definitely could have gotten closer/ snuggled in but I obeyed the rules of no touching ;)
The seals and huuuuge tortugas swim around with you too
highly rec
i swam with three young seals in galapagos who swam right up to me. no touching or attempt to be close by me, of course, but i thought i was alone (ha! never). it was all i could do not to giggle underwater. another amazing reminder of humans' lack of efficiency and mobility in water. i pretty much forgot where i was and was totally engrossed with their faces spinning in high speed turns around me, seemingly laughing at my klutz as i tried to mimic their spinning circles.
that ended after a minute or two when mom shot between us like an enormous missile out of nowhere and scared the bejebus out of me. they wanted to keep playing but that was it for mom. and me. nearly had a heart attack.
it's funny that you say giggle underwater bc I can totally relate- they are just so efficient/ having so much fun
I also think I screamed underwater at some point (or multiple) on that trip when we were snorkeling and a huge tortoise or seal would zoom by and scare the bejeezus out of me
yeah i lost all my air when mom came through and since i have had to work hard to overcome reading the first chapter of jaws when i was 8 (there was a naked woman on the front! i didn't notice the shark so much -- how bad could it be? 20 years mostly not in the ocean bad. :) ) -- i was out of the water in a split second.
i also swam with a shark who snuck up behind me on the last day of that trip. it was one of the most magnificent entities i've ever witnessed in person.
thought you all might enjoy these moose hanging out at our town hospital yesterday
https://pitchengine.com/buckrail/201...33201438582102
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Spoke too soon.
One was out to greet us on the way to the airport.
Moose said "Come back soon!".
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...dff85b0e13.jpg
love the seal pic, by the way bbear
Saw a coyote in the middle of Big Sky base village in broad daylight. My stupid son thought it was a fox. I asked a local. It was a fox.
Aquatic wildlife
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...e578e20dc2.jpg
some deer stealing hay from a truck parked at the grocery store :biggrin:
https://pitchengine.com/buckrail/201...31245608408427
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Gittin' sum chest deep pow:
http://forum.pugski.com/attachments/img_3471-jpg.18681/
Boyz in the Hood:
http://www.slidewright.com/Misc/elk_crew.jpg
Fresh cat tracks:
http://www.slidewright.com/Misc/mtn_lion.jpg
Momma and the kids:
http://www.slidewright.com/Misc/Momma_the_kids.jpg
Nepalese 'comfort stop' spider at an inconvenient height and moment:
http://www.slidewright.com/Misc/nepalese_spider.jpg
Another boy 'n the hood:
http://www.slidewright.com/Misc/baldy.jpg
Been holding these since last summer. From AZ and CO.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/Hl...w=w850-h686-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/b7...w=w871-h685-no
Desert Bighorn Sheep
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/0U...g=w898-h685-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/yY...=w1092-h685-no
Little Grandfather to the Navajo
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/4S...Q=w956-h685-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/iA...=w1270-h685-no
Two swamp donkeys on consecutive days
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/gh...g=w886-h686-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/wE...=w1132-h685-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/TO...Q=w606-h685-no
And how about a slug. Just because.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/Q5...g=w914-h685-no
Honey bee swarm. Notice the magnolia on the right appears golden as compared to the magnolia on the left. From Wiki:
Swarming is the process by which a new honey bee colony is formed when the queen bee leaves the colony with a large group of worker bees. In the prime swarm, about 60% of the worker bees leave the original hive location with the old queen. This swarm can contain thousands to tens of thousands of bees. Swarming is mainly a spring phenomenon, usually within a two- or three-week period depending on the locale, but occasional swarms can happen throughout the producing season. Secondary afterswarms may happen but are rare. Afterswarms are usually smaller and are accompanied by one or more virgin queens. Sometimes a beehive will swarm in succession until it is almost totally depleted of workers.[1][2]
Swarming is the natural means of reproduction of honey bee colonies. In the process of swarming the original single colony reproduces to two and sometimes more colonies.[3] For instance, one species of honey bee that participates in such swarming behavior is Apis cerana. The reproduction swarms of this species settle 20–30 m away from the natal nest for a few days and will then depart for a new nest site after getting information from scout bees. Scout bees search for suitable cavities in which to construct the swarm’s home. Successful scouts will then come back and report the location of suitable nesting sites to the other bees.[4]
http://i.imgur.com/4sOutd2.jpg?1
http://i.imgur.com/cpOsfnd.jpg?1
A few hours later.
http://i.imgur.com/HhCGAaU.jpg?1
bees are cool
clams are less cool but never seen one do this before
https://www.someecards.com/videos/wtf/clam-video-sand/
(sorry cant embed video but if you view it on my link vs the weather channel you don't have to watch the stupid ads)
Not my pic (neighbor posted it to FB) but there's an otter hanging out at the local lake:
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Friendly fella.
a sad report on some wildlife-
one of the local famous wolves who had beautiful white fur was found with a shot wound and euthanized
the report came out about her death a couple wks ago but they did not release the cause until just yesterday
she was also quite old about 12 yo whereas the ave age for the wolves in yelowstone is 5 yrs
RIP white wolf
http://buckrail.com/famous-yellowsto...ered-for-info/
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JACKSON HOLE, WYO – Yellowstone officials have confirmed to Buckrail that the famous white wolf found dying last month was shot. Preliminary results from the necropsy of the Canyon Pack alpha female wolf showed that she suffered from a gunshot wound.
Hikers discovered the mortally wounded wolf April 11, inside Yellowstone National Park near Gardiner, Montana. Park staff responded and euthanized the animal due to the severity of its injuries. The deceased wolf was sent to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Forensics Laboratory in Ashland, Oregon for a necropsy. The lab has transferred the preliminary results to Yellowstone National Park.
National Park Service law enforcement believes the wolf was shot on the north side of the park, near Gardiner, or near the Old Yellowstone Trail which is located in the park on the northern boundary. The incident likely occurred sometime between April 10 at 1 a.m. and April 11 at 2 p.m.
“Due to the serious nature of this incident, a reward of up to $5,000 is offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the individual or individuals responsible for this criminal act,” said Yellowstone National Park Superintendent Dan Wenk.
The wolf was one of three known white wolves in the park. She lived to 12 years, twice the age of an average wolf in the park, and had a broad range that extended from Hayden Valley to the Firehole River area to the northern portion of the park. As the alpha female for over nine years with the same alpha male, she had at least 20 pups, 14 of which lived to be yearlings. She was one of the most recognizable wolves and sought after by visitors to view and photograph.
Not my pict, but here's a lion eating a neighbors pet goat yesterday in the middle of the day. The neighbor took the pict from inside their house
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...34f2f5b532.jpg
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edit- no idea why this pic is pio'd
also -bring back the tags
also a really cool program we watched the other day on mtn lions around Jackson/Grand Teton
http://channel.nationalgeographic.co...rs-undercover/
while I know they are all around us it gave me the chills to see footage of a lion around cache creek trails.
They found one of Frostbite's cached deers basically right next to probably the most popular running and biking trail in Jackson last summer and have wildlife camera footage of it.
Saw a total of six grizzlies (two mothers each with two cubs) while riding the chairlift at Lake Louise ski area last weekend!
https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4240/3...6ff8c2e2_h.jpg
First time browsing this thread...Had an elk get taken down less than 100 ft behind the house. Watching the rest of the neighborhood feasting on it from fresh through bones was amazing. Cougars, magpies, coyotes, jays, golden eagle (at first I thought it was a vulture, huge!), tonnes of bugs, beetles, etc. Sucks that the trail cam didn't work the first two night when the mtn lions were on it. The first night I noticed something out of place under a tree up past the elk. Never noiticed a rock under that tree...twas a cougar waiting for it to get dark enough to feel comfortable coming so close to the house. I didn't realize the elk was there as it was behind a bush between me and the house.
Second night I went out around 3:30 am. So dark the night vision scope wasn't showing much...took the Maglite out and slowly move the beam to the carcass...and a BIG freaking cat was on it having a late night snack. Coyotes were just over a little rise yipping and barking very annoyed that their dinner was being eaten.
Attachment 208883
Saw a little fisher eating by the side of the Truckee river this morning.
Wife: What do fisher's eat.
Goat: What do you think they eat.
Wife: I don't know, I've never seen one.
Goat: Fish
Turns out fishers don't eat fish. They eat pretty much anything else.
Guess what, pine martens don't pines and wolverines don't eat wolves. Adam got the names all wrong.
Like grass thru a goose.
Took off the top row of chickens like scum on a Louisiana swamp.
One of my neighbors got this pic of a lion eating a raccoon it had just taken down. Haven't seen one around my place...yet.
https://d1sdegrcg1ah5f.cloudfront.ne...1&d=1503151366Attachment 210767
here's a fatty bear man from earlier this summer- bear equivalent of genghis khan perhaps?
he almost looks fake
Attachment 210886
He's huge! - friend of mine & I were hiking Darby early a few weeks ago and encountered a grizzly on the trail. He was young, and not with sow anymore thank god, and unconcerned about us. It was still unnerving to be that close (maybe 8-10 yds) and he was big enough to do damage. We had bear spray and were ready. After that, I have no desire to encounter a larger bear.
What shocked me on the hike down was how many people don't carry bear spray.
I agree. I have never seen a Griz. want my first sighting to be bincoular distance.
A couple of kids in the Winds asked me if my bear spray was oxygen. Totally unconcerned with bears. I'm the opposite.
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In the 25+ years working in the woods of the interior of BC, I can count the near meetings with griz on two hands. I have never had a bad encounter with them. Keep my head up, read the terrain and act unthreatening when encountered. This includes sow with cubs, and having a (trained) dog usually at my side. Black bear have caused me way more angst than griz. Admittedly a sample of one, but encountering a griz is not one of my phobias. I do take extra care when hunting, on the coast and/or near salmon streams. Oh, and bear spray is limited effect on griz - 50/50 chance you just piss em off. Knowledge of their sensitive terrain, avoidance, and poise/presence of mind when encounter occurs are your best defence.