Sunday, February 1, 2015

Buttercups

Wild buttercups. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Now that winter is completely here, I am (naturally) looking forward to spring. The wild flowers, the birds, the warmer weather and sunny days! And I am looking forward to being able to enjoy those sunny days without melting like I did while I was cooking a human inside me. 

Oh the possibilities! 

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Bahia Grande: Texas coastal prairie and wetland. Teresa Shumaker photo.
 When we first moved down to the Rio Grande Valley, I spent as much time as I could exploring the new parks and places. One special place was the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge and its Bahia Grande Unit.

The Bahia Grande Unit is only open to the public by bus tour. It consists of a restored wetland and coastal prairie. Flatlands are dotted with tall yucca plants and paddle cactus. Having everything so low to the ground makes the sky huge and humbling. Sadly, on this trip it was grey and foggy.
The endangered Aplomado Falcon sits on a nest box provided for these birds to help recover their numbers. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Meadowlark on a Yucca. Teresa Shumaker photo.

Great blue heron. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
More prairie land and the Laguna Madre in the distance. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
 One of the exciting parts about this wildscape is the potentially dangerous animals you could run into. Rattle snakes, scorpions, hogs and peccaries will make you cautious, but then there are these interesting animals called Nilgai. Although they are not dangerous, per se, they are humbling in their size.
Nilgai are the world's largest antelope and these photos don't adequately portray how big they are. They could easily look a seven-foot tall man in the eye.
Naturally, this species is found in India, but the King Ranch (a big game ranch in south Texas) brought them to the state for sport hunting years ago. A few escaped and this habitat — sans their natural predators, the tiger — was perfect for them to flourish. Although they are feral, they do not cause as much destruction as feral hogs. The biggest threat they offer to humans is being hit by a car. Their size and height can cause a lot of damage to a vehicle and the passengers inside.
Nilgai (pronounced neil guy down here). Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Nilgai. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Female Nilgai with her young. Teresa Shumaker photo. 


Male Nilgais are a blueish/grey coloring. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Don't play with your food!

Great Kiskadee eating a dragonfly. Teresa shumaker photo. 

Unless it is the only way you can eat it.

I caught this photo after a hike around Estero Llano State Park. I was taking a break with my birding friends on the wetlands deck when this kiskadee kindly landed right in front of me off the deck to eat his lunch. I agreed with him that it was a good time for a snack and ate my lunch, too.
I look forward to no longer being pregnant so I can hike more. This year my ability to go out and explore the outdoors has been critically hampered by my inability to be in the heat and quick exhaustion. Plus, once the baby is born, I will have a tiny little birder I will need to take out and show everything! Soon! She is due Jan. 24 and I cannot wait to meet her.

Estero Llano State Park boardwalks and wetlands deck. Teresa Shumaker photo.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

A little-loved bird

Great-tailed grackle. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Great-tailed grackle. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
When I was first moving away from Texas, I knew I would miss the mockingbird's song. (Yes I now know mockingbirds are elsewhere, but they are very common where I grew up.)
But when I returned to Texas last year, it was the great-tailed grackles that I realized I had missed too. These birds are everywhere in South Texas and most people dismiss them as one would any overly abundant animal.
But I get quite a bit of amusement watching these fussy birds work out their tiffs and sing their litany of songs.
These birds are rarely quiet, but boy do they have a range of sounds they can make. From typical bird chatter, squawks and squeaks to strange metallic and electronic buzzes and screeches. I cannot count the amount of times I have heard a strange sound, stopped to look for the source and realized it was a grackle.

The Cornell Lab has some recording of grackle sounds, but it doesn't have much in the way of their mechanical noises. Go here to check it out: http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Great-tailed_Grackle/sounds

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Up-Close with Raptors

A close-up of Harris's Hawk, held by raptor expert Bill Clark. Teresa Shumaker Photo. 
I had the wonderful privilege of going on a raptor trapping trip with the local Audubon Society last month. Bill Clark, an expert at trapping and banding raptors, gave us an up-close look at his job. Although the weather was cold, overcast, and windy (not the best weather for catching raptors) he was able to trap a juvenile Harris's Hawk and a male American Kestrel. Here is a photo essay of that trip. 
Bill Clark with the Harris's Hawk. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
When Clark catches a bird to band, he measures the bird and takes photos of field markers for future identification. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
One field marker - the inside of the wing. Teresa Shumaker photo. 
Look at that sharp line on the top of this birds head. Gorgeous. Teresa Shumaker photo. 


Another important area of filed markers is the coloring on the tail. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Here is Clark with the American Kestrel, a very small falcon. Teresa Shumaker photo


Such a gorgeous bird. Look at those tell-tale black streaks on its face. All falcons have a variation of this black marking. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Banding the leg. Teresa Shumaker photo. 


Afterwards, we went out to eat. And it is important to know, true birders have manners, we all "puddle-stomped" to wash the mud off of our shoes from our day's adventures. Teresa Shumaker photo. 

Friday, October 10, 2014

When Murphy's Law attacks

So I have not mentioned this on my blog before because, well, I haven't had much time to think about my blog this year.

But back in May, I discovered I was pregnant. A big surprise. Especially since Matt and I had just discussed waiting to have children until I was finished with school.

And to top it off, I found out while I was on the cruise in the Caribbean, which is why I still haven't shared many of those photos — they still make me nauseous to look at.
Being trapped on a boat full of buffets when you can't stand the sight of food is not fun. 

Things happening when it is least convenient has been the theme for this year, which in retrospect has been comical in a ironic sort of way.

I spent the end of May and all of June incredibly nauseous, and wrestling with our healthcare system to see a doctor.

July saw an end to nausea and a rise of the most evil heartburn. I had never had heartburn before, so I just assumed I was dying.
Thankfully, Matt did not abandon all reason — as I apparently had — and was able to diagnose it and bought me Tums. (Which only mildly helped. Eventually a complete diet change was the only thing that did ease the caustic beast in my belly.)

Or the smell. Thankfully, my friend had a travel febreeze.
Also in July, my summer classes started. Yep, I was finally heading back to college to finish my degree. I decided to end my six-year sabbatical with pre-cal in the summer, while trying to work part-time, and being pregnant. Honestly, I don't plan to task overload myself, it just always seems to happen.

Surprisingly, I maintained a wobbly A/B through the whole class, despite my panic attacks.
Matt, again, rescued me.

There was one horrid night with difficult homework, I was dealing with exhaustion and heartburn, all I could do was cry over my textbook. I had relegated myself to the ranks of failures and was ready to withdraw from school and society in one fell swoop.

Matt, with all his sage wisdom, soothed me and said, "Well you don't have to quit everything tonight. Why don't we just take one problem at a time."

I did, and at a snails pace I conquered my 15+ weekly homework assignments and managed to not drop out of school.

But, I feel like Murphy has his attention pinned to my life lately and just as finals approached, the killer bees returned, this time inside my house. In August, I woke up from a nap one afternoon, and as I opened my eyes, I watched in shock as two bees made themselves comfy on the other side of my pillow. Several were tucking themselves in the blankets and I swear, four of them were doing a victory dance on the blinds.
The next day I was finding bees all over the house, some alive and some dead. And looking out the back window, hundreds were bouncing off the house seeking a way in. That was the final nail in the coffin; it was time to move.

Now we spent seven months battling nature and a neglected home in what could appear to an outsider as a homage to Sisyphus. Other times we were reliving the 1986 movie "Money Pit," starring Tom Hanks and Shelly Long, thankfully without owning the place.

We stuck it out so long because if this place had the right landlord, it would be gorgeous. We clung to the hope like little orphaned monkeys on stuffed animals, surely if we got over THIS problem everything would be better. The views, the location, the house itself was wonderful. However, that day never came.
The 2-inch gaps under the doors let everything saunter in, without having to duck. We lived without AC in the 90 degree Spring and lived with a marsh under the AC (from the condensation and poor drainage) once it was finally fixed. A frog actually moved in. He would sing the song of his people during the night, and unlike other frogs, this one had no musical talent. We lived without a reliable internet connection, without a kitchen, then without a stove for a time, all of it because we loved the place. We endured construction workers in the house, and there were even days I spent all the daylight hours with two cats, a dog, and myself sitting on the front porch as the kitchen was gutted.

But the time had come; we had to plan for the baby. And we thought perhaps a place where scorpions are as common as dust bunnies isn't the best place for a newborn. Within a week, Matt had come to the rescue again. I was stretched to my limits of stress and ability to cope. I have been in challenging situations before, but it is amazing how little one can handle emotionally when also pregnant.

I remember one drive home from seeing a place Matt liked and I did not, I cried half the way there, and a third of the way back. During that trip, we finally made a decision, then I threw up for the remainder of the way home.

By the time September rolled in, I finally got to see what it was like to just be pregnant. We had moved, school ended, our home life became more simple — although it was still rife with craziness and catastrophes. Our first week in the new place the garage flooded. By week two, the fridge died, then the garbage disposal sprang a leak! Next was the dishwasher. But, that was OK because life had given me a great wealth of experience to compare it too, and at least I wasn't nauseous, fighting killer bees at my head and scorpions at my feet.

Which has become our new motto. Any time we are faced with a challenge or I don't feel well, the conversation always ends with, "at least I'm not nauseous."

Now at six months of pregnancy, I have acid reflux, days of insurmountable exhaustion and sometimes I get stuck on furniture making me look like an upside down turtle. But, hey, at least I'm not nauseous!!! :)





Friday, September 5, 2014

Pied-billed grebe

Pied-billed grebe. ©Teresa Shumaker. 
I am playing a little bit of catch up now. Here is a pied-billed grebe in breeding plumage taken in late March. It was my first time seeing one all decked out. I love the stripe on the beak. The grebe on the other hand did not appreciate my passing by, apparently wanting the wetland all to itself that day. But it gave me some great take off shots.

Pied-billed grebe. ©Teresa Shumaker. 

Pied-billed grebe. ©Teresa Shumaker.