Virginia creeper makes up a large percentage of the undergrowth on our property in summer. Our neighbors across the street have a large grass lawn. So the does stash their infants on our property and cross the street to eat grass. Eventually the fawns get hungry and start bleeting and walking around. So for the first couple weeks, they are trivial to find. After that they get better coordinated and super fast. On the doe’s signal they fire the jets and disappear.
Last edited by j44ke; 05-31-2022 at 09:17 PM.
They tend to pause at the center of whatever trail or MUP they’re crossing, on many occasions I’ve bunny hopped or swerved dramatically to avoid rolling over them. The male in the photo I posted was bleeding all over his head. I wonder if the female did that or if there was another male he fought off?
Solitudinally challenged
51BFFE75-A5B8-44FE-A93E-B9600C1F009D.jpg
As seen at the elk sanctuary. Is sanctuary the right word?
Mike
Mike Noble
I kept hearing a doe in the woods fffffftt-ing, which usually means she's unsettled about something. And she kept doing it. So I walked into the woods, and a ways in, she jumped up and raced off. Then a vulture took off out through the trees. I thought hmm maybe the fawn has died. Instead I found this.
We have Cooper's hawks, Red-shouldered hawks and Broadwing hawks all nesting in the vicinity. I'd put my money on the Cooper's hawk given the agility required to snatch a Pileated woodpecker off a tree.
Last edited by j44ke; 06-06-2022 at 06:55 PM.
Solitudinally challenged
/\ Wow! Grippy tyres!
I have, as predicted, become just another “old” person challenged by technology.
Solitudinally challenged
3298DB4E-A280-4D7B-BC90-9771B43BBBBA.jpg
Let’s see if I can fuck this up.
Solitudinally challenged
Last edited by j44ke; 06-16-2022 at 07:51 PM.
When it’s mid-June and the temps are still in the 50’s in the morning.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Bookmarks