When I was a kid, I once saw a bear cub and many times I saw bear tracks at our farm. The Dept. of Conservation said bears didn't exist in MO. Here we are in 2022 and they are all over the state reproducing - along with cougars and elk.
I thought bears and bobcats were in NJ.
I've never seen a badger in MO but they are supposed to be here.
I haven't seen a bear or mountain lion in many years but the latter were photographed 20 minutes from here and bears were sighted 10 minutes from here.
I never saw mink in Missouri till they...
This is a little off topic but with the prevalence of HPAI around here, I thought I would mention it. Earlier this week I was on my way home and saw what I thought was a red-tailed or other species of hawk dead on the side of the road just a quarter mile from my house.
Since I had never seen a...
I haven't been on here for a couple days, but I just saw this and looked it up in the Peterson guide. They are more of a Canadian species but are casual visitors on the Atlantic coast south of Maine. That could be due to the weather now even though they are permanent residents throughout their...
Even if it was an old injury, you should be able to see if it is genetic (a tail that is tapered and with fur all the way). An injury would be an abrupt stub with no fur on the very end.
Cool, what species?
What do they eat this time of year?
We only have the ruby throated.
But I've spent a good bit of time in Costa Rica where they have 52 species of hummingbirds. I find that amazing.
Jealousy here.
It was just a couple degrees above freezing here this morning as it will be tomorrow. I see a couple green sprouts here and there and daffodils are about to pop. Bottlebrush is a long way off for us.
I do plan on planting some alfalfa, clover, peas and radish for the chickens...
Eastern birds seem not to like milo - at all.
That is the seed that is always left in a feeder from lower priced wild bird mixes.
I had a dedicated cardinal feeder with safflower. They seem to be the only species that like it.
I didn't check the book. I just don't remember seeing it listed. That used to be my bird bible.
Maybe we don't have enough open territory here or some other reason they aren't attracted to our environs. Where I live is mostly populated by woodland favoring species. We do have a big wetland...
I've watched for them but never had a redwing on a feeder here. I thought with their diet they would but they seem to prefer more open territory than my wooded place affords.
My daughter went to Iceland for a couple weeks last year hiking to glaciers, hot springs and to the puffin colony.
I'm extremely proud of her. She's always off to a new adventure. Next week she's off to Peru for 2 weeks hiking the magnificent Salkantay trek to Machu Pichu that will take her...
A couple points I found most interesting in the UN biodiversity report signed onto by 109 nations noted that some nations were harder hit than others.
Small Island nations wanted more in the report. The United States wanted less. :eek:
The report’s 39-page summary highlighted
five ways people...
This is the study authors'
One Sentence Summary: Cumulative loss of nearly three billion birds since 1970, across most North American biomes, signals a pervasive and ongoing avifaunal crisis.