This week's wildlife highlight: two American
Woodcocks, sitting right on a gravel NFS road, convinced they were invisible.
I was driving slowly, so braked hard as soon as I saw them. They stared at me for a bit, perhaps wondering why I'd stopped (cuz they're invisible), then suddenly flew off, straight down the road in my direction of travel, then they hunched down again. Next time, they flew off to the side.
Got great views, both times.
They're a very cool,
very Geeky bird species.
Their eyes are on the sides of their head, and they can
not see
directly in front of them. Think about that... they fly semi "blind".
The Spring mating display of the males is an auditory treat (occurs at dusk), and worth seeking out a bird club to go on an outing.
owl said:
I'm sure you know hummingbirds are carnivorous, they eat insects and ants as well as populate flowers. Interesting creatures. The rocking animal at night may well have been a cow, they love to rub against things.
I like all birds who eat bugs.
Ah, good point about cows... except this was about 10 miles into the Ottawa NF in northern MI.
I have lived in ag areas, and experienced cool cow neighbors.
Dingfelder said:
Tell me what you're looking for and how. It's such a wide world.
Thanks Ding for your helpful post!
I did some research, and it sounds like
lentils are a good beginner sprout, so I bought a bag last shopping trip.
I'm tentatively planning to use one of the smallest sized DollarTree cereal canister (semi-opaque).
Haven't had the time/opportunity to do so, but my tentative plan is to start one while in town, overnight in town, then thoroughly wash in the morning at either the Library or gas station. Allegedly the most intense (smelly/messy) rinse/wash must be done after the first night, then the next ones are fairly light/simple.
I'm just going to do a small quantity (~handful), to start with.
Apparently a key is to inspect each seed and choose just the non-broken ones.
Does that make sense?