Category: Photography
Turtle Release
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A Photo of Me!
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If you’re wondering about the black thing on the turtle’s back, it’s a radio transmitter. This gravid female had been captured the night before and given an ID number, weighed and measured, and fitted with a transmitter. Then, she spent the night in my car. This photo was taken right before she was released back into the lake the next morning. Then, over the next few days, her radio frequency was monitored each evening in the hopes of finding her out of the water and laying her eggs.
Songbird Hospital
I learned about the Songbird Hospital about a month ago, when I found a young crow in distress near where I park my car at home. In checking the SCWR website, I learned about the Songbird Hospital, and since crows are technically songbirds (taxonomically, if not based on the aesthetic merits of their songs :D), I decided to take him there. Well, turns out that he had a severe parasitic infection, and didn’t live through his first night at the center. The silver lining for me, though, was getting in contact with the woman who runs the Songbird Hospital (her name is Veronica).
I expressed an interest in doing some volunteer work there, and it turns out she is desperately in need of people to help out, so I’ve started helping her out feeding baby birds, and doing whatever other things need to be done at the hospital (things like sorting out mealworms, and setting up aviaries). Mostly, what I do is go from enclosure to enclosure in the main hospital room, and shove mealworms into the eager little gaping beaks of baby swallows, finches, flycatchers, thrushes and woodpeckers.
Considering how much I love birds, it’s not a big surprise that I really enjoy helping out with the songbirds.
Baby bluebirds, and a robin (the robin is the large one center front):
Black phoebe:
Northern mockingbirds:
Female Bullock’s oriole:
Ash-throated flycatcher with the bluebirds and Pacific-slope flycatchers:
Biology Field Trip
Here are some photos from a field trip that I took back in April to the Fairfield-Osborn Preserve in Rohnert Park, a nature preserve that is owned and maintained by SSU. It was a field trip for my Diversity, Structure and Function class, a class which gave a systematic overview of the whole range of life on Earth, from bacteria through plants and animals. I love this class! 🙂
For our field trip, we just went out to the preserve and tried to identify as many different organisms as we could, armed with all the knowledge we’d (hopefully) gained during the course of the semester. Here are a few of my favorite things that we saw that day:
Western Fence Lizard (Sceloporus occidentalis)
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Spring Break Fun!
We went to Safari West on Wednesday, and it was a great day. I took a bunch of photos, and it was nice to have the camera out. It had been a while since I’d done any photography, what with being so busy with school.
At the park, we were given a walking tour, and then a two-hour tour on the safari truck, where we drove through the park, which has been arranged to have the animals in as natural a habitat as possible, and the truck goes into the “enclosures” (some of which are several acres large). It was a really cool place, and best of all we got in for free, because the woman who gave us our tour is a member of the Bio Club.
Here are a few of my favorite photos taken at the park:
A ring-tailed Lemur (pregnant, maybe?):
A whistling duck – these guys were so cute, all of us loved them:
Cheetah (and no, we didn’t go in this enclosure):
East African Crowned Cranes:
Cape Buffalo:
White Rhinoceros:
Chapman’s Zebra:
Not sure what these are, but they’re pretty:
On Thursday, a bunch of us went tidepooling at a really pretty little secluded beach just south of Bodega Bay. We had to walk a half-mile to get there along a poison oak-infested trail (and of course, it was harder work going back up on the way back to the car at the end of the day), but it was totally worth it. It was a great beach, and we got there about half an hour before low tide, so we had plenty of time to explore the pools, looking for invertebrates. Here are a few photos taken at Pinnacle Gulch:
Sea Star (although I still think of them as Starfish):
My son and Kate from Bio Club:
Anemone:
Bat Star:
Kate and a big crab:
Bodega Bay
Then, we went to the beach for a while, via the Bird Walk – a trail of about a mile (I’m guessing; maybe less, maybe a bit more, but probably less) which runs alongside a creek that flows into the ocean just south of the bay. It was a great day.
Doran Beach:
Marbeled Godwit:
The Bird Walk:
Doran Beach:
Breaking waves:
Ring-billed Gull:
Heerman’s Gull:
Marbeled Godwit again:
Parasailers: