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The Puppies of Monteverde – May 2022

Monteverde is a generally wonderful place to visit. Up in the mountains, it’s a small town that has a lot of charm, with a lot of incredible cloud forest habitat preserves. We’ll be writing about it more later. It’s esp. popular for birders looking for resplendent quetzals, which is why we were there.

For this leg we rented a small cabin that had some quirks but worked fine for us. There were a few cabins but we were the only ones out there, and there was a nice patch of woods and a small orchard the cabin was next to. The cold mountain air was a massive relief after a long hot stretch in the Papagayo peninsula with daily rains keeping the humidity high.

After we’d arrived at the cabin and gotten the luggage dragged into the cabin, Haley and I checked out the woods for a bit. We spotted a Blackburnian warbler pretty quickly(!) as well as spotting interesting birds like a red-legged pigeon, white-tipped dove, and a yellow-faced grassquit, and also there were leafcutter ant nests.

I went out again later to look at the leafcutters (so cool) and while I was out there, a curious, but shy puppy came over to check me out, keeping a fair distance. I sat down and tried to get them to come closer but they were much too shy, and they ran off. I went back to admiring the leafcutter ant nest – super fascinating, per volume they are a top herbivore in many Neotropical forests (though technically they’re fungivores, the leaves are consumed by the ants’ fungi in their gardens). We could wax rhapsodic about these ants for a while, but since this is a story about puppies there’s less ant-talk here.

After a few minutes my puppy friend was back, but he’d brought his brother with him! The new puppy was a bit more brave and got closer before running off, and then wandering back again. They came closer but still kept a fair bit of distance, so I went into the cabin and grabbed a couple handfuls of peanuts out of a jar of peanuts we’d bought in Liberia.

When they saw me come out, they came back towards me, curious, I sat down, and I began to toss them peanuts (which it was clear they’d never seen before). They didn’t eat them at first, but it didn’t take long before they found that they quite liked them, they were eating out of my hand soon, and after a bit of time they were crawling on me and letting me pet them. They were fairly young pups, but old enough to be out exploring the world, and very fun.

Our new friends learning about peanuts

I went and got Haley and we both were enthralled with these little guys, they were just the sweetest.

First Contact
Awwww
Pulling on my hat-string

We played with them for a good while, eventually wandering back into the cabin and leaving the puppies outside to hopefully wander home.

The next day we drove out to the Cloud Forest Reserve, found a few quetzals (yes!), ate at Stella’s (more on this later), and were heading back down the dirt road to the cabin when the puppies spotted our car, chased us down the long driveway, and were very, very excited to see us again, especially since I went in and got more peanuts for them.

Our pals would sometimes find us as we were getting ready to go out, which was a happy event, though also we had to be very careful not to hit them with the car as we navigated a long narrow driveway with poor visibility. We took to just taking them in the car with us down the driveway and dropping them off near their home, a house across from the end of the driveway.

At a certain point the dogs got collars and the more curious of the brothers was tied up. I worried that this was a result of us dropping them off, though also the dog was playing in the street a lot where there were occasional cars and trucks.

For the last few days we still got one pup who visited (why tie up only one dog? we will never know), and there’s really very few better welcoming committees possible than a happy puppy who is thrilled to see you. Every time they came to visit this was a both a happy event and a photographically significant moment.

Eventually it was time to go, the dog came by one last time as we packed and we played with him as we loaded the car. Here’s our last photo of the pup as we were saying good-bye.

May 14, 9:30 AM, good bye sweet puppy

Once the car was packed, I put the dog on my lap, and we drove down the long driveway back to his home. Once we got there, I dropped him off by the gate and told the owner in Spanish that their perrito was very adorable. He was a pet of a family with a young kid, who saw the dog and happily exclaimed, “puppito,” we waved, and headed out on the long hard drive down the mountain and on to Tárcoles.

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25 Days in Costa Rica May 2022 Part 1: Liberia, Playa San Juanillo

If you just want the photos, here’s the 2022 Flickr album.

In May 2020 we went to Costa Rica for 25 days. We rented a 4×4 and drove on narrow mountain roads with fresh rockfall on the road, where guardrails are rare, and the indicators show the few guardrails that existed had failed, we forded streams, ate at little roadside restaurants in the middle of nowhere where no one spoke English, sought out and found the resplendent quetzal, went hiking in the mangroves with high rubber boots to wade around, waded through mud trails to find a royal flycatcher, good several boat birding tours to see spent time at many elevations to see different species, our count of birds with a photo id coming into CR was 523, flying home it was 607 – 84 new bird species. We’ll be going over all that and more in blog posts.

In April of 2022 I’d been very busy for months, I’d been in a major work project moving a complicated banking compliance app into a new company. We booked vacation for a long hoped for trip to Costa Rica after that. The job was fully remote so we arranged that we would extend our time there by staying at places with good network and working for some of the time we were in CR, and we pushed our time out to 25 days with a plan to work many of the weekdays.

While all this was going on, out of the blue I got a call from a recruiter w/Apple about a very promising sounding job, interviews went well. After I got an offer we mentioned the vacation, offered to work remote out of CR, though in the end they didn’t want the new guy immediately taking the work laptop out of the country, so I had 25 days completely off.

We really want to visit a lot of Latin America, but we especially like Costa Rica, We’ve been to CR twice before:

2015 Flickr album

2017 Flickr album

We really liked every visit to Latin America so I’d been practicing daily Spanish

Practico todos los dias
Hasta luego, Gus!

We bid the pets and kids goodbye and got a ride to the airport Hilton, that left us staged to i so we could Below are our bags packed and ready to drag to the plane to fly to Liberia, Costa Rica. In the weeks before this we’d bought jungle clothes and other performance gear, as well as a lot of mosquito repellent. We over-packed clothes, really, only wore about 20% of the clothes we brought, but it was impossible to know which 20% was the stuff we’d want. We’ll be going over cool tools and good things to pack in another post. Camera is the lower right front.

25 Days Worth of Stuff

We bought a copy of The New Neotropical Companion which we’d been reading for a while before the flight. We got to read it for the full flight which was excellent. I still like paper books, and reading books on planes is great, noise canceling headphones with a nice long stretch of pure book is so good. We’ll have more to say on this book later.

If you are an amateur naturalist visiting the Neotropics, this is the book

With a new route from Austin to Liberia (which is both a country in Africa and a small city in northern Costa Rica with an international airport). The direct flight was only about 3.5 hours. It wasn’t long at all before we were heading down into Liberia.

Plane coming down, Costa Rica coast

We flew into Liberia, spent a night in Liberia near the airport and started in the Nicoya peninsula at San Juanillo beach. The view from our room really is stunning.

Rio Rosario at San Juanillo beach feeding into the Pacific
Enjoying tide pool time with the big camera. The tidepools have many tidepools with hermit crabs, sea hares, anemones, sea urchins, gobies, etc. 
Thanks to looking up every insect species in iNaturalist, I found out which beetle was called the “burning blister beetle” and avoided those ones.
The evenings were very pretty as well.
The Panopticon Shower was difficult to handle mentally

The room was nice, had good power, good network, though the shower whose interior was visible to anyone in the room was simply wrong.

The coast really is stunning.

We took a trip out to Ostional beach where the sea turtles nest. Last time we were there we saw a huge arrival of turtles nesting:

Turtles At Ostional
https://www.flickr.com/photos/somebachs/37026142183
Olive Ridley Heading In
https://www.flickr.com/photos/somebachs/37664605892

This year the last nesting was last month so no turtles, but still it is a lovely beach, and we saw a few interesting things including some unexpected leaf-cutter ant drones. I have a lot of ant photos on the phone.

There was a very sweet dog at the beach who followed me around and when I leaned over to get photos of a leaf cutter drone, the doggo went in for a cuddle and tried to lick my nose.

Sign on the Nosara coast. Up to this point we hadn’t seen any crocodiles, though we kept looking.

We saw tons of turquoise-browed motmots, absolutely stunning birds. They actually use their beak to strip off feather strands to make that paddle shape on their tail which they swish back and forth to draw out insects.

Lots of howler monkeys here too, I love to hear their calls during the day, though at dawn they’re a bit less of a treat. This is a howler mom with her baby that was in a tree just outside our room in San Juanillo.

This is variegated squirrel, a Central American species that will eat fruit, I was really surprised to see them eating bananas and papaya, but they’re a tropical squirrel so it does make sense that they’d adapt.

A collared aracari, a cousin of the toucan, taking flight. A pair of these were nesting near our room!

Aracari cleaning out the nesting cavity
Roseate Spoonbill

Last year we spent half a day in Corpus Christi looking for roseate spoonbills, they’re fascinating and very striking birds. We happened upon this one in Nosara, a very neat find. They use that beak, swinging it back and forth under the water to stir up crustaceans, mollusks, and things, similar to an avocet, and we got a nice look at this one doing this behavior which was very cool to see.

Inca Dove

Inca doves have a range that extends up to Austin, but are much more common down here. The common name “Inca” makes no sense at all, since the Incan Empire was in Peru & surrounding areas of the Andes where none of these doves are found, but they’re still very pretty.

May is just at the start of the rainy season, so we saw a number of land crabs making their way across the roads towards the ocean. They live in burrows in the dry season, but the rain fills those burrows so they wander around. So far we’ve spotted four new crab species including this one, which is something of a personal triumph.

Cinnamon hummingbird

A curious white-throated magpie-jay dropped by our balcony to peek in the room for a sec. Not so many corvids down here, so these are always a treat to see.

Yellow-green vireo

We spotted this yellow-green vireo collecting nesting material while we were eating breakfast, new species for me. Looks a lot like a red-eyed vireo, tbh. In the first three days we’d seen four new bird species – this one, a yellow-headed caracara, a rose-throated becard, and the turquoise-browed motmot. We’ve been to CR twice before and been to this area before, so 4 new bird species is pretty good. We’ve also added three new Lepidoptera species, four new crab species, a number of new species of insects, and tide-pool dwellers.

Black spiny-tailed iguana 

Our first stay was for this period was a few days at Playa San Juanillo, very pretty. It’s not the birdiest place, but it’s very lovely on the coast.

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Corpus Christi Birding Festival, Choke Canyon State Park on the Upswing – Apr. 2022

Last year in 2021 we visited in Corpus Christi during a fallout. We saw a lot. ⬅️ That Flickr album just scratches the surface, we had 50 bird species observations in two days, but the birds also were so abundant. The conditions that caused all those birds to be in Corpus are called a fallout, and this year we learned more about them in sessions we took at The Birdiest Festival in America. We learned from and really enjoyed the sessions, we did bird walks with local guides who were great at spotting things, knew the diverse species well, and chatted about habitats, field marks, etc. which was great, and this year David Sibley did the keynote. I was a huge fan of every guide we went out with, and was grateful to them, they always had interesting things to say and had a lot of experience. We arrived in Corpus on Apr 19th left Apr 24, perhaps merits more than one post – there was a lot.

At the Botanical Gardens where the festival was set up, we saw tons of roseate spoonbills. I observed them feed by swinging their spoon bill back and forth for a long time. To the local birders these were just a common bird barely worthy of note.

This year we were there for five days, but the winds were strong and helping to push the birds onshore. So while there were birds, there were fewer and what we saw was less diverse. Between five days of birding that includes both Corpus and Choke Canyon near San Antonio we got photo ids of 31 species. The winds were blowing up from the southeast, helping the birds in their difficult migration. Less fun for birders, but a very good thing for the birds. We learned about migration a lot, and it turns out that in fallouts not all birds make it to the shore. Those that do land hit the ground immediately since they are exhausted from the fight to make it ashore, making them easy to observe, but not all make it.

La Mexicana on S. Padre Island Dr. was a great panderia and had cheap, delicious breakfast tacos

We wound up booking more workshops than birding tours this year, which worked out well for us – the winds weren’t great for birding and folks going out weren’t finding a lot on field trips. We looked at the tours and there are some Haley would be able to manage, so maybe in future years we’ll do some, but really all the workshops were excellent.

Atomic Omelette

The first workshop we did was with Cameron Cox of ABC/Avocet Birding Courses. This might have been the best preso we saw, it connected a lot for me and Haley said it was the same with her. He went through a long list of warbler species going over details of size, call, position in canopy, behaviors, and migratory route. He showed how you could use a warbler’s tail length/body style helps get a sense of how far their migration route’s length. There was a lot there that connected my own experiences of seeing different warblers in different contexts.

The next preso was Hawk Watching 101 by folks with Corpus Christi Hawkwatch. Identifying raptors by profile high in the sky’s not easy, and these folks do id and get counts during migration when there can be thousands of birds in the air. We had planned to go out to Hazel Bazemore at some point after this talk, which we were even more motivated to do after this talk. Dane and Libby Ferrell were great and all the hawk watching folks were really interesting, it felt like an honor getting to talk to these folks really. Their work’s primarily volunteer work, it’s really challenging, but their population tracking data is really valuable for conservationists, biologists, ecologists, etc. They talked a lot about tips for identifying raptors in flight. I’d been less inclined to id hawks/raptors in flight before this since it’s pretty challenging, but since then we’ve been putting what we learned to use. When we were in Costa Rica a couple weeks later we were scanning the skies looking for king vultures and identified a number of other raptors.

Hawk-watching basics
Harris’ Hawk

We drove around Corpus and by getting slightly lost we made it out to Mustang Island where we saw a lot of shorebirds. There we saw our first reddish egret, a lifer, and such a neat bird.

Reddish egrets can look like a white morph little-blue heron, but they have very distinct behaviors
Black skimmer with spoonbills!

We did a Nature Photography course with Stephen Fisher that was really fun. We didn’t learn a lot but it was fun to discuss, and interesting to see how some shots are set up and what goes into some of the more challenging types of things to get photos of, and we got on well with the instructor. We made a few contacts with him and a few other folks we’d like to catch up with when we’re next out there. We met some folks who know some nice ways to spot whooping cranes.

Butterfly displays at the South Texas Botanical Gardens and Nature Center

We went out between and after sessions and found a lot of birds.

Lots of purple martin houses
Indigo Bunting

Blucher park was esp. productive, and Rose Hill had a lot of warblers as well as some orioles and tanagers.

The final presentation was “The Resilient Whooping Crane: Challenges to Recovery” by Dr. Liz Smith by a whooping crane liaison who was brilliant. The story of the work they do to help preserve the habitat these birds need is very interesting. We talked to a few folks after this session and others, and are making plans to visit in Jan or Feb 2023 to see the whooping cranes.

We met a lot of birders who were interesting to talk to at the festival, talked to a few rangers about things to do in Texas, and are thinking about doing some other the other birding festivals since this one was really good.

Whoah, it’s David Sibley!

I got a copy of What It’s Like To Be a Bird for my birthday, I loved the book – it’s fascinating and has excellent illustrations. I sent copies to my mom and sister as Christmas presents, they both really liked the book. Sibley’s keynote discussed this book, and we got our copy signed. We’ve re-read What It’s Like To Be a Bird a number of times, the art’s great, and the contemporary research described is fascinating. His keynote tied into this and I really was enthralled, things like bird vision are really fascinating. At the book signing I perhaps a little overwhelmed so I stammered and mumbled when I met him, trying to explain that I’d gotten the book for my birthday and liked it so much I bought two copies for my mom and sister. I also asked him to draw a bird. He wrote “happy birthday,” but he drew a bird for me, and he was very nice.

David Sibley drew a bird for us!

Traveling to Hazel Bazemore we hoped to find green jays, but didn’t spot any. It was hot and quiet when we were there. We visited the hawk watch area, and Haley and I both counted raptors when we spotted them, which was fun. We did see a collared peccary at Hazel Bazemore which was very cool.

On the drive back to Austin we went by Choke Canyon State Park near San Antonio, and that place was lit. We saw green jays, white-tipped doves, and a lot of other nice finds like groove-billed anis, caracaras, vermillion flycatchers, et al.

This golden-fronted woodpecker cis a lose cousin to the red-bellied woodpecker

This was a great visit, we saw a few long-hoped-for birds, the vermillion flycatcher and crested caracara were pleasant surprises, and scissor-tailed flycatchers were always fun.

This trip was just before we left for Costa Rica. We took a couple days off work for workshops, which was great since the workshops were excellent. We met a lot of folks who were really enjoyable to talk to, birders are chill in general, and we learned a lot.

We saw ten new species of birds, including the green jay, white-tipped dove, mottled duck, Couch’s kingbird, Eastern kingbird, reddish egret, et al.

Some year we want to hit the Rio Grande Valley Birding Festival as well as seeing the whooping cranes as they overwinter in Corpus.

Still amazed every time I see a roseate spoonbill tbh.

American Avocet – lots of these around, this photo was taken at Hazel Bazemore
Least Grebe
White-faced Ibis
Curve-billed Thrasher

This was a quick trip before the big Costa Rica trip, but it wound up being pretty big as well. The workshops we did were all top notch, we met a lot of interesting folks and make some contacts with people for future visits. We got photos of 31 bird species, a jumping spider, and 4 insect species including one Lepidoptera I’d been looking for for years (Pyrgus oileus).

Pyrgus oileus

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Oregon Part 2: Portland, Sauvie Island, Ridgefield NWR – Fall 2021

Our time in Cannon Beach was good, the coast there is gorgeous in the Fall. The weather was cool, there was some rain, but we were prepared for this, and it was still nice to be out in since it was dropping into the high 40s low 50s on the colder eves while we were there. Right when we left it got colder.

It got really cold the day we left.

Our hotel was fine, the main goal there was mostly to avoid contact with people and this was easy. We spotted a western scrub-jay outside the hotel and got a phone photo right away that was good enough for an id. But the hotel had bathrooms with motion sensing lights that turned on automatically when we got up to take care of business early in the morning.

iPhone bird lifer – nice

We found a great food truck complex that we went to most nights, we love our local food trucks, and there are a lot of food truck places in Portland that have nice seating and things.

On one of our evenings we went out to Powell’s and picked up a field guide to fungi since we were both learning more about mushrooms, and picked up Logicomix, a graphic novel that’s a bio of Bertrand Russell I finished on the flight home. It touches on Gödel, Turing, Cantor, and goes into more of Bertie’s life and career which I found very interesting.

We spent a long while in this part of Powell’s City of Books

The Columbia is a huge river that runs through Portland. Just to the south is an island, Sauvie Island, just south of Portland that we first headed out to. Our target bird was the sandhill cranes wintering there.

end of a trail at Sauvie
The graffiti was with us

Sauvie Island is a fairly large island. We drove around it along the main road the followed the shore, and it’s generally really lovely. It’s got a lot of farms, they were growing tons of pumpkins while we were there. There are various wetlands dotting the island that fill with vast numbers of Canada geese.

The skies are regularly full of giant streaming flocks of geese. Their populations are doing quite well and the rich and wet marshy habitats on this island are perfect for them. They’re also great crane habitat.

We stopped early on to look around at one path and managed to accidentally flush a barn owl which flew right past us – super cool!

We kept an eye out for Sandhills but didn’t spot any for a while, though we saw a lot of raptors, shore birds, and lots of sparrow species, but mostly golden-crowned sparrows. Light was not ideal for photography for most of the morning, but the clouds lightened up over time and we got plenty of pics good enough to identify the local birds.

We used eBird and iNaturalist to look up hotspots and places with observations of sandhill cranes, and found a spot called Raccoon Point which was a great overlook where we spotted sandhill cranes, tundra swans, a bald eagle, and other things.

A number of local birders knew the spot, chatting with them we discussed other spots to visit. Virtually all recommended Ridgefield, so we put that on the top of our list.

We liked Ridgefield enough that we made fan art.

The next day we headed out to Ridgefield NWR in south Washington. Ridgefield is a wildlife refuge, not a park. Wildlife refuges are effectively land set aside to protect duck, deer, and other wildlife populations for hunters, but they’re still generally good for birding. There was duck hunting going on in some areas, we could hear the noise, that part’s not my favorite, but even with that, this place was great for lazy birding.

One of the problems with birding in many areas of the US is that many outdoor areas draw a lot of people, and each big lumbering ape wandering around out there is seen (rightly) as a threat by most local birds. If any person brings a dog off leash then that’s an even worse threat, and most birds will leave.

At Ridgefield you drive in a very large loop using your car as a blind. Birds and wildlife are far more threatened by a loose person or a loose dog than they are by any car or truck. As a result there are a lot of birds in ponds and marshy areas hanging out near the driving path that would be long gone if anyone exited their car. Happily, exiting cars is forbidden. There were a number of cars like our making a very slow loop with a bit telephoto lens leaning out of the driver side window and binoculars peeking out of the passenger side.

There’s one very nice small footpath where we spotted the brown creeper and the downy woodpecker above, and also spotted a red-headed sapsucker, song sparrow, hummingbirds, red-winged blackbirds, etc. Also at the bathroom here we found this:

The Sandhill Crane Gang are widespread across Oregon and Washington
Bye, Ridgefield

Along the drive there were really nice views of tundra swans, buffleheads, sandhill cranes, deer, elk, rabbits, and many species of duck.

We looped it twice and Ridgefield slightly late to go back to Portland, pack, and stage next to PDX to fly back to Austin.

After that trip, the company I was working for was acquired and I became very busy. The next trip we took was to Corpus Christi for the Birdiest Festival in America late Apr. 2022, which we’ve got a post about in the queue.

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Oregon Part 1: Cannon Beach – Fall 2021

Nice views for much of the flight into Portland

Flying into Portland you can see there’s a lot of wild spaces in Oregon. Lots of forests, lots of habitats, and lots of microclimates. Once we were on the ground we hit the visitor center to learn a bit more about Oregon. The welcome center guide was a former Austinite who’d moved there and we had a nice long chat about various national parks, birding spots, and other things, and got info about Cannon Beach where we were heading after a night in Portland. We also got a recommendation for lunch, a Vietnamese place that was excellent.

Our first night there we walked the streets of Portland downtown near Broadway and Main. It wasn’t the most affordable city, but we enjoyed Portland a lot, even in November when it’s mostly gray. The Columbia river is a huge waterway with a number of shorebirds nearby, not far out of town there’s Sauvie Island which was a good spot to find sandhill cranes, and a bit further out in southern WA, there’s Ridgefield NWR – more on those later.

In Pioneer Square transit mall there’s a great breakfast food truck with a long line.

Strong recommendation on the Yolko Ono, props to them for Smells Like Protein Spirit

The next morning we drove out of Portland and onward to Cannon Beach, a very popular coastal town. We left with a loose schedule and a plan to stop and look around if we saw anything along the drive that seemed worth stopping for. We stopped at various spots along the way at scenic points, and wow is Oregon full of lovely scenic points and neat things:

There’s a stop right near Arcadia Beach that’s got a trail that follows a fairly strong stream/small river down to the ocean. Not a lot of wildlife, but just being among the ferns, mosses, and fungi was cool.

It was quiet when we checked into our room in Cannon Beach, Nov. is the off-season, but even with that there were still a fair number of people out at Haystack Rock and the beaches of Cannon Beach tended to have people walking them early, usually with loose dogs further driving away the wildlife, and the occasional eagle-chasing maniac.

Cannon Beach was still amazing. There were Roosevelt elk and white-tailed deer wandering around town, sometimes blocking traffic. The area is in the middle of a very wet conifer forest habitat hitting the Pacific, so it was full of life even in mid-November.

No, seriously, there were Roosevelt elk all over the place

On our first morning, looking back from the patio we spotted a bald eagle nearby, we saw black oystercatchers wandering nearby, and saw tons of gulls, especially where Ecola creek fed into the Pacific.

The first morning’s view from the patio
Black Oystercatchers were a target bird we saw from the patio
Gulls, dramatic coastline
Eagle stealing from gulls – we saw them engage in this behavior several times
Eagle-chaser here was bothering the poor bird. Don’t be this guy.

I worked remote a bit at the start of Cannon Beach, we took walks on the beach after some meetings which was nice, and in our free time we took some time off to go see things.

“Chaos Elks, +4 attack!”

We used Cannon Beach as a base and drove up and down the coast to visit different sites. While looking around we saw a Douglas’s squirrel, eastern bluebird, the shipwreck of the Peter Iredale, and spent a lot of time out in the cool wet forests full of moss, ferns, and fungi.

A new species of squirrel, and an eastern bluebird were both great finds. One bird I was hoping to spot up north was the golden-crowned kinglet. In Austin the ruby-crowned kinglet is a winter visitor. We found a few ruby-crowned kinglets.

Their cousin, the golden-crowned is much less common, but Oregon was a good place to find these, and happily we did at Fort Steven’s State Park!

We wanted to find one of these for more than a decade, really

The golden-crowned kinglet was very nice, and the coast overall was amazing to behold.

Haystack Rock an iconic part of Cannon Beach

At the right time in the spring you can find Tufted puffins nesting on Haystack Rock, and apparently local birders bring out spotting scopes to let folks see them. No harlequin ducks or puffins when we were there, guess we’ll have to come back.

Art inspired by the trip.
… and more art inspired by the trip

We spent most of our days there driving north or south to see the rest of the coast. We made it up to Fort Stevens State Park, where the shipwreck is off the coast and there’s very good birding, and drove south once very slowly seeing nearer things, and once going all the way down to Tillamook where we saw the cheese factories. In Garibaldi nearby there was great birding, we saw mergansers, buffleheads, surf scoters, and other weird ducks. The Oregon coast is full of scenic vistas.

Cannon Beach is a little touristy, a little pricey, and even in the off season it was much too crowded for my tastes, but it worked well as a base camp, and it really was a very cute town in a gorgeous setting. We found a place called Corbin’s in Cannon Beach that was a small family run restaurant that was something of a farm to table place, the fresh mushrooms and literally everything they made were extremely good, and we made reservations for the next night to come back once we found it.

We also went to Pig’N Pancake, all day breakfast menu – it’s paradise.

Pig’N Pancake is an all-day breakfast place – we became superfans

The Oregon coast’s beautiful old forests growing right to the edge of their rocky shore were truly wonderful to visit and explore. We drove back to Portland a little later than we’d first planned since it was hard to leave the coast.

Probably not haunted
“whoah, hold on, let’s just stop here for a sec.”
Last photo taken along the coast before we drove back to Portland
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San Diego, Oceanside – Fall 2021

In 2021 in the fall we took a trip to California visiting San Diego and Oceanside, then heading up to Oregon to visit Portland and the coast near Cannon Beach. My job at the time let me work fully remote, there was no Austin office, and we took full advantage of our location independence. On this trip we took some days off and other days I’d work in a hotel room or some place with a decent network connection. While I needed quiet for calls for various meetings, that was usually easy, and for this I was writing a bunch of Java code where it part adding Hibernate models/db updates, and then was mostly glue code tying together services.

The view from the room in San Diego

We landed in San Diego airport (SAN), got to the car rental, and they only had one car left, a Mustang coupe. It had a V8 with a lot of torque, the exhaust note was tuned, the manual said it had a limited-slip diff, and the low center of gravity and grippy tires would have made it fun to go fast in, in theory. We were not every gunning it anywhere on the unfamiliar, crowded, narrow streets in downtown Dan Diego. It was an adequate car, but was too low slung, overpowered, had poor rear visibility, and had poor fuel economy. The car did have endless torque, but driving was primarily slow crawls on some traffic-filled space, like downtown San Diego, the I-5, and PCH, often crawling up to around 35 or 40 MPH, followed by braking. There’s a pop-cultural dream of driving Mustang around Southern California, but the reality is that a Subaru would be my preference.

San Diego was beautiful. Working from the hotel worked fine. We could walk to a marina from the hotel and I’d do that sometimes on work breaks. There was also a park nearby with various bird species in the trees, and on the weekend we drove out to a few great sites in Chula Vista and Point Loma.

The camera bag picked up some sand patina at Point Loma

There were huge numbers of corvids in San Diego county, lots of ravens and crows. We got a few good looks at northern Harriers and watched them hunt. We also spotted a couple white-tailed kites – so cool! Ospreys too, lots of raptors at the coast near Chula Vista. The birds were great, the weather was always perfect, easy place to spend a day mostly outside. We also went out to Point Loma for a day, which was a truly beautiful place, lovely coasts.

Southern California sunsets are usually magnificent
Point Loma’s cliffs were really interesting

We were thinking about either moving back to CA or getting to OR – TX has many flaws that grow worse, but the new job ties us to the Austin office for a while, so we’re not going anywhere for a while. San Diego does have perfect weather year round, has a wide diversity of bird specie, San Diego county has one of the top species counts in the US, and it’s also a horribly expensive place to live since way too many people know it’s a year round mild Mediterranean climate paradise with lots of great hiking trails so you can go out on a nice hike pretty much any day you’d like.

Night view from the room

While birding San Diego we saw a few new species, like brants ( very small goose, unexpected find, neat), Brandt’s cormorant (been looking for a while), and black oystercatchers (been looking a while, nice to find). We saw a few local things like California towhees, finally got clear photos of northern harriers, and saw a lot of western gulls and ring-billed gulls. We worked on improving our sparrow and gull id skills the whole time we were on the west coast, and I know the field marks to check for at this point. While I was there I could id the main species by their field marks and knew which were interesting to take photos of to check/look up ids. In Austin I rarely see gulls and it’s been long enough now that I’d look things up at this point.

Oceanside, so pretty

After a few days we moved on to Oceanside in south San Diego county. I used to visit Oceanside as a kid, since my great aunt Clara lived down there. It’s changed a lot but still is familiar to me in some ways, and it’s really lovely little beach town. We saw our friend Katinka in Oceanside and got to visit for a few days. It was great to see her, and Haley and Katinka went out during the days while I worked. We went to a few tide pools together that were very good.

Sea Hare
Anemone

For dinners we found an Indian place that had N. Indian and Nepalese food that was great, and we visited some taco places and other things that were good. The breakfasts at the Seabird were glorious.

On one of our days in Oceanside I worked out of this library and it was pretty nice.

We also saw a lot of black phoebes (a bird of the western US though I’ve seen them in Costa Rica and Peru as well – neat to see), along with the Say’s phoebe, standard shore birds, and huge flocks of corvids, mainly American crows and ravens. I am a giant corvid fan so the giant murders of crows in the sky were awesome to see. We went out to a rocky breakwater-type-thing at the beach where California ground squirrels were residents, didn’t find any, we looked it up and determined that they were hibernating. The beach near the breakwater was nice and from there there were a lot of trails along the coast.

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The pier at Oceanside

We eventually wound up in Santa Ana near John Wayne Airport, where the ponds nearby had a big flock of Canada geese, and I spotted a white-crowned sparrow, and a savannah sparrow right outside the hotel lobby near the airport. We returned the Mustang, glad to be rid of that car, and flew off to Portland, Oregon.

Window seat view flying into PDX
Categories
Art Blog Post

Recent Art

We started this blog as a sort of travel blog for ecotourism and local naturalism things, and also a place to dump art. The quarantining for the foreseeable future did dampen the interest in parts of that.

I’m still practicing Spanish since one day we’ll heading back to C. America and S. America. I’m on Duolingo streak – day 55. I’m glad to be able to keep my eye on some long term goals that I can work on these days to help remind that while current events are grim, the times will change.

In the last week I spent a lot of time playing Pokemon Sword on the Nintendo Switch. It’s a really nice game if the little Pokemon RPG world is familiar enough to you.

Because of the Nintendo time I traded off Photoshop time. I see them as very similar things, but I think Photoshop is a little more fun as a video game since it’s much more open ended. Also in the end you have an artwork, though that’s a side-effect of playing in Photoshop.

The Three Graces

These are black-necked stilts. They’re somehow both beautiful and ridiculous, a rare combination to pull off. With the tuxedo, white eyebrow soft, and long pink legs they look like they could come out of a Seuss illustration, but they’re also very graceful sandpipers that are wonderful to behold. They’re all over the coasts but like the shallow parts of quiet wetlands. They like flat calm shallow waters with mud to dig for snails, worms, and crustaceans. They are in the same family as avocets and inhabit similar habitats to those avocets like – we see them together sometimes.

line art
Crow Siege

I’ve been drawing a few corvids lately for no apparent reason 🙂 I don’t know that I love this specific kind of crosshatching, but it fills the space. I was building things up for shading but didn’t create a lot of contrast here, but it was an exercise I learned from.

Angry Crow

The expression here works with the medium I think.

Categories
Blog Post

2020 March Mammal Madness

The best part of the year is coming soon! March Mammal Madness is a public science event in which a group of bio profs and grad students run a “who would win in a fight” March Madness style contest with (mostly) mammals.

The mammals do a sort of battle in a live narration that goes down on Twitter. (You can also follow on Facebook, though the action is really on Twitter.) There’s a strong D&D vibe as they narrate the encounter, conflict, and resolution (which doesn’t always involve violence). Instead of citing the rule books, they cite papers to describe behaviors, etc.

The bracket has 64 (mostly) mammals, except over the years more non-mammals have joined the brackets, and there often is a mythological creature as well. 2015 had a mythological monsters bracket that resulted in a werewolf biting a yeti, creating the were-yeti.

Filling out the bracket is always interesting. They pick out interesting and weird species like Thalassocnus, the sea sloths to research, and since the folks running MMM are science educators they share knowledge about their behaviors, habitats, and related things. In previous events we learned interesting things about mouse deer, pygmy hippos, tenrecs, African crested porcupines, et al, and this year will surely have many interesting species.

In the tweet above, check the whole thread, follow the accounts listed, and on the dates listed you can see what’s going on with the amazing world of Twitter science games which are both educational and fun, and which will be revealing #2020MMM combatants. We esp like #TrickyBirdId which often really is really pretty tricky, though you can always guess red-tailed hawk and have a 10% chance. And tonight they’ll be revealing three combatants.

Follow Katie Hinde on Twitter and check there for the latest updates, and check this blog post to find other updates and the bracket when it’s available.

http://mammalssuck.blogspot.com/2020/02/march-mammal-madness-2020.html

Also watch the #2020MMM hashtag as March rolls along.

The event brings in a lot of SciComm folks on Twitter, and the fans with their mix of fan art, trash talk, interesting facts, and banter add a lot of fun to MMM.

We made this poster for #2017MMM. Still pleased with “Megafaunal bearmageddon”

Stoats as a Measure also looms large – we even made a comic on the topic.

see also: https://princesspricklepants.com/2019/02/02/princess-pricklepants-presents-stoats-as-a-measurement-delightful-details/

Follow @radiationmouth, @NatickBobcat, @little_jems, @PPricklepants, and keep an eye on whatever accounts crop up related to combatants. @teamBatToilet was cracking us up last year.

Categories
Blog Post

The Best Animals Ranked Mostly

The question of ranking animals by rank must first be answered by answering the question “what is the best animal.” The answer is, of course, hedgehogs. These tiny creatures are the pinnacle of evolution’s current non-teleological progress, a natural process with no goal which reaches its perfection in hedgehogs. Their weight to prey ratio, combined with scientific measures of their ferocity, adorability, and quilliness all combine to give hedgehogs the only bestness score of 100 – off the charts. Thankfully, we live in a world where everyone’s aware of the hedgehog’s magnificence, so at least this is an uncontroversial and natural choice.

Where things get tricky is considering which animal is second best. No primates – too obvious, no quills, and an almost unnatural over-intelligence that’s a danger to the poor things. Not even a mammal, really – the best animals after hedgehogs are birds, where the best bird is the hummingbird.

How this comes to be is based on the Pricklepants scale, explained here:

It seemed a stretch at first, but the data all fit. Hummingbirds are the best birds, and kinglets, well:

Hummingbirds and kinglets are both really excellent birds and both always a happy delight to see.

Emus: creepy

Parakeets
Parrots: too many branches in front of them, poor lighting

This leaves all the other animals besides hedgehogs and birds, a domain of science still in its infancy. There it is clear that mustelids are excellent, but fish are also good, and it is possible that invertebrates very well may be better than mammals (save hedgehog), the debate shall continue, and whether some mammals (say, a stoat) might be better than some birds (such as a brown headed cowbird.) But the current best animals from the hedgehog to the ostrich are still nicely sorted.

Categories
Blog Post

Peru’s Biodiversity: A Unique Treasure

We were pretty excited to visit Peru, since this would be our first trip to South America. Peru is a very unique place with amazing biodiversity. The unique biodiversity comes from a mix of its situation near the equator, the Humboldt current bringing Antarctic waters near the coast, the massive Andes running through the country and dividing things up between the dry coast and a lush Amazon basin.

The Humboldt current runs up from Antarctica bringing cold water and keeping surface temperatures of the Pacific very low, while carrying in abundant fish, nutrients, and sea life. Off much of Peru due to the very cold water temps and effects from the Andes there is a very limited water cycle, very little rain, and a terrain with arid land and deserts on the coast. In Paracas National Reserve there’s been one day of rain in the last 60 years.

At the same time the water coming up from Antarctica is rich with life and full of nutrients which supports a large fish population and a large shore bird population.

In the Andes the mountainous areas have unique biomes, a unique and a fascinating cultural heritage. The sheer scale of the ancient Incan terracing throughout the Sacred Valley is vast and really astounding to see.

Across the Andes, the Amazon has its own massive water cycle, massive biodiversity, and a lot of unique wildlife.

The continent of S. America was once connected to Australia along with Africa as Gondwana, breaking up around 150 million years ago with life on each continent branching out. Once separated, the mammals on the continent were marsupials and oddballs like Xenarthrans, whose living members include anteaters, sloths, and armadillos. They evolved in a geographically isolated continent for > 100 million years.

Central America eventually cropped up as a bridge around 3 million years ago causing the Great American Interchange. Armadillos, opossums migrated north, while migrants from N. America include squirrels, bears, wild cats, foxes, rodents, etc. Interestingly, ancestors of the guinea pig, capybara, coati, llama, and alpaca, all distinctly S. American creatures, migrated down at this point.

Since we’re never visited S. America, getting the chance to see llamas and alpacas was something really interesting for us. The llama is a domesticated guanaco. The wild guanaco’s camelid ancestors migrated from the plains of N. America to S. America around 3 million years ago. N. American camelids also crossed the Bering Strait and evolved into camels in Asia. There were still camelids in N. American until the end of the last Ice Age(!).

S. America also has primates, which showed up somehow around 40 million years ago. While the evidence is scant, the best theory for why there are monkeys and other primates in South America is that they crossed the Atlantic from Africa, island hopping at a time when sea levels were much lower and the distance between continents was shorter. Monkeys beat humans to the new world by around 40 million years. Personally I think we should should change Colombus Day to Monkey Day.

naex: Cochahuasi Animal Sanctuary 

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