Showing posts with label beaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beaver. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2015

May 2015: Raptors

Step unit over the barbed wire into the Cartier Slough Wildlife Refuge

I have an addictive personality.  When I find something I like, I tend to do it all the way.  Seems that bird watching is something I like.  Housekeeping is something I don't like.  I do more bird watching than housekeeping.

I had a few hours today between a faculty meeting and a rehearsal and the weather cooperated with me.  The rain stopped just as I was ready to go out looking for birds.  I discovered another wildlife management area about twelve miles from my home.  It's called Deer Park Wildlife Mitigation Area.  It was put in this part of Idaho as part of the greater Palisades Reservoir Project.  I don't know how that works but apparently they had to take care of things that would be displaced with the filling of the reservoir.  Something like that.  So they made the Deer Park WMA.

Deer Park is a WMA divided into three sections.  One section is north of the road by Beaver Dick Park, another section is out on the Archer Highway at Twin Bridges and the other is west of the North Menan Butte.  We call it the Butte, but it's really a volcano.  Buttes are actually sedimentary features.

I didn't have a lot of time today, and I discovered that Deer Park is mainly a walk in preserve.  I did a little walking in, but I didn't really have time to walk very far.  It turned out that this trip was mainly about raptors.  I talked the Hot Chick into taking a drive with me and so we went.

The section of Deer Park I was able to go to was steppe land adjacent to a marsh.  I walked through the marsh to the Butte Slough and saw a couple of turkey vultures circling.  That's always a cool sight, but it usually means that something is dead or dying.  Unlike other raptors, vultures have a keen sense of smell.  Most other raptors have a keen sense of sight.

Turkey vulture circling above Butte Slough

I headed back to the car and kept hearing a hawk calling.  I looked around and finally found it at the top of a cottonwood tree.  It kept calling and I kept waiting for it to fly and come my way.  Finally it did and it was a spectacular red tailed hawk.

Red tailed hawk in a cottonwood

In flight

There was another hawk flying near there, but I haven't identified it yet.  I got a few pics of that one as well.

Unidentified hawk

As we headed down the road to other access points for Deer Park, I saw an osprey with a fish or a small mammal, sitting on a piece of farm equipment.  Had to stop for that too.

Classic osprey look

Every time my camera focus beeped, the osprey would look toward me.

As we drove off, about a hundred yards from the osprey was a large raptor.  I haven't identified it yet.  I'm reluctant to call it a golden eagle because I don't think it was big enough even though it resembled one.  It may have been a marsh hawk.  It may have been another kind of hawk.  I'll let you decide until I can identify it for real.

Large raptor

Don't know what kind it is

We drove past all the access points for Deer Park and turned down a road for a turnaround.  The road crossed over a very old dam on the slough and as I stopped before the dam, I looked out my window and saw a commotion of birds near the water.  They were having a feeding frenzy on insects right at the waters edge.  I later identified them as American cliff swallows.  There were hundreds of them.  They were quite beautiful.

American cliff swallows

I added two pictures because I liked them so much

As we were heading home, I took the Hot Chick to see Cartier Slough.  I got out a couple of times and crossed the fence to see what I could see.  The first thing I saw was that same wildflower I saw last time.  I decided to identify it this time, however.  It is Gooseberry Leaf Globemallow, Sphaeralcea grossulariifolia.

Gooseberry leaf globemallow

Further in, there is an access point across a small concrete dam.  I went in there and walked for half a mile or so along a dike.  As I walked in I saw a wild iris in bloom.  This time the wind wasn't blowing and I was able to get a good shot of it.

Wild iris

a stand of them

And another one

This was there too

Finally, as I walked out, I noticed a V-shaped wave travelling across the water.  I looked at the point of the V, expecting a duck but just like yesterday, I ended my day with a beaver.  Turns out there are beaver all over the place.  I suppose it's fitting because Cartier Slough is next to Beaver Dick Park.  Richard Leigh was a colorful, local trapper/mountain man.  His nickname was Beaver Dick.  Turns out there are many things named for him and his wife all through this area and in the Teton Range.  Fitting that there would be lots of beavers near his park.
Another beaver
As addictions go, this is a good one.  I've really enjoyed spending time at the wildlife refuges in the area.  They are so close I don't have to plan a big trip to go out to see them.  Just grab the camera and hop in the car and drive ten minutes.  This is a great part of the country to live in.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

May 2015: Cartier Slough Wildlife (again)

Abandoned piece of farm equipment from the homestead days.  I imagine there are critters that make their home here now

Last Tuesday, I just drove around the flanking road of the Cartier Slough as a fact finding mission,  I then went home and researched the place and discovered there were about a mile worth of trails through the Wildlife Management Area.  I also discovered there is another larger Wildlife Mitigation Area called Deer Park just sought of the Cartier Slough.  Guess I'll be going there next.

Yesterday (Wednesday) my boys were both playing with friends and the Hot Chick was playing with her quilting friends which left me as a lone man at home.  That wasn't working for me, and since we had a break in the monsoon, I decided to go back out to the Cartier Slough and hike it a bit.

The Cartier Slough used to be a homestead, and the trails through it are the remnants of the old wagon roads.  I parked next to the first parking area and climbed the wooden steps over the barbed wire fence and entered the Cartier Slough Wildlife Management Area.

At the abandoned piece of farm equipment, I headed to the right on the spur trail and walked toward the water.  When I had gone about a hundred yards, I saw a willet, and then another and another.  They began squawking noisily and flying around frantically.  One was sitting on a fence post immediately in front of me and kept opening it's wings and squawking, trying to intimidate me.  I had obviously found their nesting area.  Then the birds started dive bombing me.  Definitely the nesting area.  I stopped where I was, didn't go any closer to where nests might be, stayed long enough to snap a few photos and then slowly made my retreat.  I will say that when they dive bombed me it felt an awful lot like being in a Hitchcock movie.  It was a little scary and a lot exhilarating all at the same time.

As this was playing out, a large hawk flew by with nesting materials in it's talons, completely unconcerned by the old man bugging the willets.

The sentry

Hanging out

Trying to intimidate me

Then they started dive bombing me

It was hard to get a clear shot

This guy was unconcerned 

As I beat my return out of the willet area, I saw some bleached bones the porcupines had not found yet.  Probably a deer.

Bones

The old wagon road

As I passed along the old wagon road, I noticed there were spur trails all along heading from the steppe to the water.  I imagined the wildlife was going to be closest to the water so I headed that way and walked parallel to the road but closer to the slough.  Several times I pushed through a break in the willows and went right to the waters edge.  I saw a wildflower I have never seen before and have not yet identified.  I also saw four beavers swimming.  One of them was courteous enough for me to get close enough to take a few pictures.

Unidentified wildflower

Closeup

Best beaver picture

Cartier Slough

Same location, opposite direction

In between storms

I headed along the path and was headed to a marshy area where I felt sure to be rewarded with some great blue herons, all the while not noticing the sky was beginning to darken.  I was about a mile from my truck at this moment.  I happened upon a wild iris and was excited to finally get a photograph of one.  I had seen wild iris at a Father and Sons Campout many years ago, before I started photographing wildflowers, and had wanted to get a picture of one ever since.  I finally had my shot, or so I thought.  As I was photographing the iris, I had my first indication that the weather had changed.  I was so intent on getting to the end of the trail I hadn't looked up, only at trail level.  I was also watching closely for moose.  I didn't want to surprise one of those all alone on the trail.

The wind had picked up, making it impossible to get a clear shot of the iris, and the rain started again.  I turned around at the iris, not making it all the way to the marsh where I hoped to get a picture of a great blue heron.  As I hiked out, the weather became less friendly all the time and I tucked the camera into my shirt and beat a path to the truck.  The sky was spectacular.  I'll be back at the Cartier Slough.  Really enjoyed my time there.

Sunset through the steppe


The sky was spectacular

Golden hour lighting through a rainstorm