Oct 22
Enough for Now
Posted: under Water, Weather.
Tags: beauty, photography, rain, Weather October 22nd, 2009
Last night we got another three inches of rain.
Oct 22
Posted: under Water, Weather.
Tags: beauty, photography, rain, Weather October 22nd, 2009
Last night we got another three inches of rain.
Oct 20
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Water.
Tags: beauty, grass, native plants, photography, prairie restoration, rain October 20th, 2009
An introduction to some more of our “big” grasses, now flowering beautifully after the rain. Two are climax tallgrasses, and one is (in my opinion) one of the most beautiful grasses in the country and deserves to be used more as a landscape accent.
Meet Lindheimer Muhly (Muhlenbergia Lindheimeri). All the Muhlys are pretty grasses; some are more striking than others, but Lindheimer Muhly is the queen of the lot:
Oct 19
Posted: under photography, Water.
Tags: beauty, natural water, photography October 19th, 2009
I came home to find the creek running clear…
Sep 27
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, butterflies, native plants, photography September 27th, 2009
Though we lost the two planted cypresses to the drought, and some of the water iris we’d planted in the “swamp”, this one survived and is now coming back up from the corm.
The water here is about an inch deep–this is an overflow/seep channel off the main creek; 8.5 inches didn’t put more than a flood pulse through it, but the final 1.5 inches left this wide shallow pool…and a brave little iris.
Sep 25
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Water.
Tags: beauty, native plants, photography, prairie restoration September 25th, 2009
Altogether, we’ve had 10 inches of rain since the big rain started. Though it’s too late for some things, others have recovered well.
The yellow flowers are two-leaf senna, and the pink is the rose-oxalis that usually blooms in the early spring.
Sep 18
Posted: under Land, photography, Plantlife, Water.
Tags: beauty, insect, native plants, observation, photography, Weather September 18th, 2009
The water that didn’t run off soaked in; it’s amazing that in one week it’s turned so green. The darker streak in the middle distance is the grass waterway when it rains and right now is just dry enough to walk on in regular shoes.
Sep 12
Posted: under Water, Weather.
Tags: photography, Weather September 12th, 2009
…means plenty for wildlife to drink. And plenty for us to rejoice over. And me to wade in, while going out to take pictures of this bounty. Here’s a view of the near meadow…you can compare it to the July 6 picture…
Sep 08
Posted: under Activities, photography, Water, Wildlife.
Tags: Activities, photography, water resource management, wildlife management September 8th, 2009
One of the main activities for wildlife managers in Texas is providing supplemental water for wildlife. Where natural water supplies are abundant and unpolluted, supplemental water may not be necessary, but drought years come to all regions, and wildlife suffer if they do not have access to a reliable, safe, supply of water.
In a drought summer, with all natural water gone, deer made regular use of this small, three-tub water on a rocky knoll. Because of its small size, this waterer needed daily filling through the summer. A small solar-powered pump in the lowest tub circulates the water.
When considering water for wildlife, it’s important to set up a system for reliable (constant) water that is safe for wildlife to use and is provided in containers that allow access by a wide range of wildlife. This means thinking about the water source (rainwater, well water, stored surface water), water quality, and the shape, size, and location of water presentation.
Aug 31
Posted: under Activities, Wildlife.
Tags: Activities, Animal behavior, photography, reptile behavior, wildlife management August 31st, 2009
Several times in the past couple of years we’ve had to get a turtle out of the fence. The horse lots fencing is pipe with welded-mesh cattle panels welded to the pipe–so there’s a pipe at the bottom. Good safe horse fence, but not easy for turtles to maneuver through/around and turtles don’t seem to have the idea of paralleling a fence to find a gap.
So yesterday evening, shortly before dark, the horses were acting freakish in the barn and south barn pen, and Richard spotted a good-sized turtle. I came out with the camera and first saw this:
Aug 26
Posted: under photography, Water, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, bird behavior, observation, photography August 26th, 2009
Some of the birds on the place usually stay away from the house, but in this severe drought we have the only substantial water (the creek’s dry at the south end of town, a mile downstream–and probably beyond that, too.) In the past week, with a slightly decreased workload, I’ve been out looking for migrants in the back yard–hearing more different songs. Today I was lucky enough to photograph this gorgeous male summer tanager: