#311
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water.
was at Ferguson Lake above Imperial Dam above Yuma on the 'Colorado' Volcanic debris/dirt 3 mosquitoes in the 'wash' on the banks of.... THREE from 6 to 10PM. non-lethal. back of the wash is a 'geocline' with 6-7 silver mine digggings around 1890-1910. MINERS cut all the trees for heat, ate every animal walking by, the ecosystem and I assume the mosquitoes. No snakes. Up on the divide off 40 in the Ocala NF..... The great tail grackles of the Sea of Cortez Nelsoni tribe speak the same whistle language as Fla's boat tail grackles but more intricate, melodious. Very friendly. Took several casual attempts over a few hours to insert Fla BTG whistles into the local Nelsoni dialect. Very smart. Not many cyclists outside of Yuma. haven't been to Feenix. Hereat Blythe before Baja, landlord sez had a 128 degree day last summer. |
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#312
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kolldata wrote:
water. I was at Ferguson Lake above Imperial Dam above Yuma on the 'Colorado' Volcanic debris/dirt 3 mosquitoes in the 'wash' on the banks of... THREE from 6 to 10PM. non-lethal. Back of the wash is a 'geocline' with 6-7 silver mine diggings from around 1890-1910. MINERS cut all the trees for heat, ate every animal walking by, the ecosystem and I assume the mosquitoes. Mosquitoes is why we have cliff and bank swallows along these slowly moving rivers. We also had swifts until the anti Dracula folks put netting over the tiled roofs in town, there where SWIFTS AND BATS RESIDE. Since then there are no more white throated swifts in Palo Alto. No snakes. Up on the divide off 40 in the Ocala NF... The great tail grackles of the Sea of Cortez Nelsoni tribe speak the same whistle language as Fla's boat tail grackles but more intricate, melodious. Very friendly. Took several casual attempts over a few hours to insert Fla boat tailed grackle whistles into the local Nelsoni dialect. Very smart. Not many cyclists outside of Yuma haven't been to Feenix. Here at Blythe before Baja, landlord sez had a 128°F day last summer. I haven't met many bicyclists who have time to observe bird-life. -- Jobst Brandt |
#313
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#314
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downwind dude....
my observation on the Wright Bros- bicycle riding aside a levee gives opportunity for matching speeds with wading birds. WD land airplane style flaps down giving low speed landing impact. recent hubris at Sea Kayaker bears around education via other people's mistakes, two printed were beauts. sound advice was broadening the trip plan beyond 'we gonna land at Bougainvilla at 3AM' to include nature observation, a good lunch, ..... thus avoiding tunnel think, adding comprehension of route in real time to the intended impact zone. raining at Blythe, better check the rivah |
#315
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On Dec 21, 6:11*pm, wrote:
I haven't met many bicyclists who have time to observe bird-life. I will stop whenever I can to observe hawks in flight. And on our coast-to-coast trip in '03, I added well over a dozen species to my life list, although I don't claim to be a very devoted birder. My favorite find was a hawk owl, unmistakable even though a bit out of its range. - Frank Krygowski |
#316
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On 12/21/2010 5:15 PM, A. Muzi wrote:
I haven't met many bicyclists who have time to observe bird-life. Right. When you want to discuss cows, I've seen more than a few while riding. Just down the street: http://www.danecountydairy.com/dairycows. -- Tºm Shermªn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
#317
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On Dec 21, 3:11 pm, wrote:
kolldata wrote: water. I was at Ferguson Lake above Imperial Dam above Yuma on the 'Colorado' Volcanic debris/dirt 3 mosquitoes in the 'wash' on the banks of... THREE from 6 to 10PM. non-lethal. Back of the wash is a 'geocline' with 6-7 silver mine diggings from around 1890-1910. MINERS cut all the trees for heat, ate every animal walking by, the ecosystem and I assume the mosquitoes. Mosquitoes is why we have cliff and bank swallows along these slowly moving rivers. We also had swifts until the anti Dracula folks put netting over the tiled roofs in town, there where SWIFTS AND BATS RESIDE. Since then there are no more white throated swifts in Palo Alto. No snakes. Up on the divide off 40 in the Ocala NF... The great tail grackles of the Sea of Cortez Nelsoni tribe speak the same whistle language as Fla's boat tail grackles but more intricate, melodious. Very friendly. Took several casual attempts over a few hours to insert Fla boat tailed grackle whistles into the local Nelsoni dialect. Very smart. Not many cyclists outside of Yuma haven't been to Feenix. Here at Blythe before Baja, landlord sez had a 128°F day last summer. I haven't met many bicyclists who have time to observe bird-life. These small squawky ones chase me off when I pass the nesting grounds in spring. I flushed a pair of geese out of the ditch one time. In the same place, a hawk soared over my head another day. A small one followed alongside for a ways one day (what a flying trip!). The (same?) hawk regarded me one day as I rode past it standing on a fencepost... |
#318
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, wrote:
[snip] Left profile: http://i52.tinypic.com/2v9udr6.jpg Right profile: http://i53.tinypic.com/2cgd7ht.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
#319
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, wrote:
[snip] Ho-hum, just another trio of great blue obstructions flapping off in the distance and landing on the dead trees sticking out of the reservoir. Except that they flap kind of funny and don't look quite right. Maybe the camera will confirm what I suspect? Yes, they're bald white obstructions: http://i56.tinypic.com/2z811qr.jpg http://i56.tinypic.com/bi2b0w.jpg http://i56.tinypic.com/t96wew.jpg http://i55.tinypic.com/2q0lutk.jpg They only come closer when I have no camera out. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
#320
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On Feb 20, 11:01*pm, wrote:
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:48:12 -0600, wrote: [snip] Ho-hum, just another trio of great blue obstructions flapping off in the distance and landing on the dead trees sticking out of the reservoir. Except that they flap kind of funny and don't look quite right. Maybe the camera will confirm what I suspect? Yes, they're bald white obstructions: *http://i56.tinypic.com/2z811qr.jpg *http://i56.tinypic.com/bi2b0w.jpg *http://i56.tinypic.com/t96wew.jpg *http://i55.tinypic.com/2q0lutk.jpg They only come closer when I have no camera out. They're fairly thick on the ground in Nova Scotia for some reason. I suspect the local chicken industry, but they also love the salmon and trout. I was dive-bombed by one once while riding in Cape Breton. Still, magnificent birds. |
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