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Mallard Lake, Golden Gate Park |
Weird morning. It started out cold and sunny, but a wind came out of the east and pushed a mass of fog out my way. Suddenly it was cold and foggy, and I could better appreciate the dire straits of the sick coyote I'd run into near home. All the rough weather -- the cold, the wind, the rain -- that we've been enduring seemed sadly evident in that one pitiable animal -- which I can only hope wasn't G-dog.
Later in my walk I stopped to check out the decaying carcass of a raccoon I've been keeping an eye on for a few weeks, but a mower had gone over it. Any thoughts of eventually collecting the skull had been zapped into oblivion.
A little farther along I encountered a senate gallery of pigeons looking down upon a lone member of their tribe standing in the road below. The lone pigeon was either sick or wounded, and the gallery was there to bear witness. It was only a matter of time before a car would come along and put an end to its suffering.
Next up was a great blue heron that swooped in to hunt gophers. It eventually caught one, and the poor creature struggled in the heron's beak until the heron was able to stab it for the kill.
There was so much of Nature in her brutal aspect today. But then the fog finally blew out and the sun shone warm and bright. Pied billed grebes floated lazily on pretty Mallard Lake. Robins snapped up red cotoneaster berries. A hairy woodpecker worked its way up a tall pine, occasionally whistling while it worked. Near the beach, the Say's phoebe was still in her place, as was the yellow-rumped warbler. Surf scoters dove beneath the surf. Gulls rested on sun-warmed sand.
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Looking east at sunset last night. |
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The waning moon heading for the western horizon this morning. |
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Coyote in Need of a New Coat |
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As the coyote shivered from its cold and windswept perch on the Rocky Outcrop, I wished I could help in some way. I wasn't prepared to call Animal Control, or whatever we have here in San Francisco. I didn't think I could keep track of it until they would arrive, and I was also worried that my presence was keeping it from moving on to a warmer spot somewhere else. |
This short clip of the sick coyote shows it was basically staying put, perhaps waiting for me to leave.
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The last time I photographed pigeons arrayed like this, other groups of pigeons were doing the same thing in several of the other arches beneath the bridge. This time, only this group was staring down, with a lone pigeon, either sick or injured, waiting for death on the road below. |
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I'd never seen a pigeon suffer in this way. When it tried to walk, its gait was very wobbly, and then it tipped forward onto its heavy, muscular breast and couldn't recover. As the next pulse of vehicle traffic approached, I turned and slowly continued my walk, listening for the inevitable, which was provided by the very last car in the line. |
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More Honey Mushrooms! |
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The heron first landed on the south side of MLK Drive, then strode into the deeper grass toward a sound it might have heard. Nothing panned out, though, so it lifted off and flapped over to the other side of the road. |
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It very quickly appeared to be zeroing in on a likely suspect. |
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The heron got a mouthful of dried grass stalks along with its prey. |
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Since it caught the gopher by clamping down on it, the gopher was not immediately killed and struggled to free itself. The heron set the gopher back down a couple of times to spear it... |
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...and finally succeeded. |
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Only when the gopher was dead did it go down the hatch. |
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A pied billed grebe floats in the reflections at Mallard Lake. |
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Underwater Foliage |
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Robin Gets A Berry |
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The Singapore-flagged Ever Mega (left, heading to Oakland) meets the Liberian-flagged Ever Fast (heading to Busan, Korea) off Ocean Beach. Interesting that ships owned by the same company (Evergreen Marine Corporation with 200+ vessels) fly their "flags of convenience" in a variety of countries. |
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