For a slideshow of 160 photos, click on this link to my Kodak Gallery.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Australia – A Teaser
Here are just three photos from my recent tour to Australia.
Gang Gang Cockatoo. It has an amazing, floppy crest that dangles over the forehead.
Superb Fairywren, a common, yet stunningly beautiful bird of weedy patches, hedges, yards, and parks.
We took a pelagic birding trip out of Sydney one day and saw several Wandering Albatross, with the longest wingspan of any bird in the world.
For a slideshow of 160 photos, click on this link to my Kodak Gallery.
For a slideshow of 160 photos, click on this link to my Kodak Gallery.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Catching Up - Brazil Butterflies & Birds
These are the photo sheets from the Butterflies & Birds tour I led to Cristalino Jungle Lodge with Jim Brock this past August.



Sunday, August 31, 2008
Try Not To Step on the Baby Lizards
This adult female was nearby, perhaps the mother. There are also baby Desert Spiny-Lizards and Mediterranean Geckos about.
This is one of at least three territorial Fatal Metalmarks.
Not too many dragonflies call the yard home, but this Flame Skimmer used the hummingbird feeder stand as a perch to catch the many insects pollinating my Whitebush, Aloyisa gratissima.
And yes, there are birds. There is a very dominant immature male Rufous Hummingbird who OWNS the two feeders visible from my bedroom/office window. We have 10 feeders in the yard, so the Anna's, Costa's, Black-chins and Broad-bills have plenty of food. It's nice to have five species in the yard. Migrant MacGillivray's and Yellow Warblers are in the yard today, and Purple Martins are flying over every evening.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Cristalino Jungle Lodge Butterflies & Birds and Disaster on the Computer Front
Jim Brock and I led the WINGS tour to Cristalino Jungle Lodge from August 15-23. With the exception of the doomed day of August 19, it was a great tour. What happened on August 19? On that day my iBook hard drive gave up the ghost. It froze, a whining fan sound appeared, and I had to force the power off. I tried booting it several times, and it did come on a couple, but then it was extremely slow and would freeze when I tried turning it off. Not good. Meanwhile, 4650 miles to the NW, on the very same day, someone kicked in my back door and ran off with my iMac desktop computer. They also took my USB Transceiver (which I had bought because the older iMacs had a horribly weak antenna), Yamaha P60 electronic piano, piano stand, printer, about $10 in loose change, 108 music CD's, and 8 pieces of frozen Upper Crust pizza (with pepperoni, olives, and anchovies) from my freezer. That sums up to about $4100 worth of stuff they could probably sell for $200 if they're lucky. How many hits of their elixir of choice would that buy? Meanwhile, I lost 2 years of data (my backup habits weren't very good) and a year's worth of photos. I managed to save all my contacts and e-mails, magically.
Meanwhile, we enjoyed some 350 species of butterflies, maybe 250 species of birds, and had a great time in Brazil not worring about anything at all. A sampler:

Red-fan Parrot behind the Floresta Amazonica Hotel in Alta Floresta.

Croesus Eyemark, one of the commoner species that occurs in little groups in the understory.
Meanwhile, we enjoyed some 350 species of butterflies, maybe 250 species of birds, and had a great time in Brazil not worring about anything at all. A sampler:
Red-fan Parrot behind the Floresta Amazonica Hotel in Alta Floresta.
Croesus Eyemark, one of the commoner species that occurs in little groups in the understory.
Soltau-Liberg Private Tour
I did a private tour of three days locally for a good friend from New York City and his friend from San Francisco August 7-9. We had a great time. I'll post just one picture here of a Sonoran Mountain Kingsnake, but on this day (August 8) we saw: Black Bear, Spotted Skunk, Tiger Rattlesnake (3 within 100 yards of each other!), 2 Black-tailed Rattlesnakes, and a Mountain Lion. And some great birds, such as White-eared Hummingbird, Buff-breasted Flycatcher, Montezuma Quail, Spotted Owl, Thick-billed Kingbird, and Five-striped Sparrow. What an amazing day.
Bugging in Montosa Canyon
I was home for a short time between tours in late July and early August. One of the first things I did was to join Philip Kline, Eric Eaton, and Margarthe Brummermann for a day of bugging in Montosa Canyon south of Tucson on July 31. We saw about 50 species of butterflies, and many beetles, wasps, grasshoppers, etc. Here's a Glover's Silkmoth that Margarethe found while admiring a cactus.
Oregon: Birds & The Bard

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