Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Hazelnut

 

Backyard Hazelnut

My novice effort to pollinate the backyard hazel tree netted one (count 'em!) decent nut. I just noticed it yesterday and decided today that I wanted to photograph it. I'd forgotten how beautiful the bracts surrounding the nut could be. The leaf in the background is also from the hazel. Quite a few were blowing off the tree as I sat beneath it in the winds of the gathering storm.

I also noticed a spider in its web as I was coming up the stairs, so I went back to photograph it after the hazelnut. When I got there and put my lens on it at a 1:1 reproduction ratio, it appeared to be an ex-spider (as they used to say on Monty Python's Flying Circus). I wondered if it waited and waited in its web without ever snaring any prey, and finally just succumbed when its metabolism could no longer sustain itself.








There were some beautiful lenticular clouds billowing off Mt. Shasta this morning.

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Tuesday, November 11, 2025

All-Is-One Day

 

Fallen Leaf, Mallard Lake

I've recently been meditating in the back yard for a little while after wrapping up my walk and bike ride. I even burn a little copal incense that I bought in Chicago, and which I found a little too heavy for indoor use (it set off our living room air filter to run at its maximum level). It's better out back anyway. I enjoy watching its tendril of smoke rise and drift in the breeze.

A friend used to say that 11:11 was his favorite time of day, since "all is one." I've always appreciated the humor in that, but despite being a veteran myself, I'd forgotten that Veterans Day originated as Armistice Day to commemorate the end of the First World War on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918. It was renamed as Veterans Day after a second world war and the Korean War. 

Lots of people were in the park and at the beach today. I didn't get Veterans Day off before I retired, so I wondered why it so busy out there. Almost like a weekend. Then I remembered it was a holiday for a lot of folks. It's been a beautiful day to be outdoors. I hope you got some.


Our Neighborhood Red-shouldered Hawk


Ruby-crowned Kinglet


Mallard Lake Reflections


Fall Color at Mallard Lake


Great Egret, Elk Glen Lake

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Monday, November 10, 2025

Rolling Out of the Day

 

Watching the Earth Roll Out of the Day

The sun wasn't going down. We were all spinning backwards into the night. Pretty soon we'll be upside-down, seeing stars.

I saw a couple of great horned owls this morning, snoozing in a tree. It reminded me that it might be interesting to start poking around Golden Gate Park toward day's end, when the night owls come out. Unfortunately, if they wait until dark I won't be able to photograph anything.


I wondered how they managed to fly through such a tangle of branches.


Farallons at Sunset





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Saturday, November 8, 2025

Woodsy

 

Lactarius & Mycena

I went looking for mushrooms this morning along a trail that I'd planned to hike on my last visit. Back then I'd changed my mind due to a forestry crew operating chainsaws along my route. All was quiet today, being a Saturday, but I kept thinking, "Wow!" as I hiked out through the newly thinned forest. The whole feel of the place is very different from anything I've experienced in around thirty years of hiking up there. I'm not complaining, mind you. Just saying. I'm actually looking forward to seeing how the forest floor develops over the next few years. Will all that new biomass create a fungal bonanza? I wondered if any of the mycology folks from SF State are studying the before-and-after of it all.


Amanitas and Friends Along the Simmons Trail


Slippery Jack Cap


Beneath the Cap


Puffball and Friends


Radiating with Mycena


With all the room available on the forest floor, these guys fight for space....


Wavy Gills


Twins


Acorn Pantry #1


Acorn Pantry #2


Acorn Woodpecker


Some of these fruitbodies were fairly fresh, while others on the log had already dried out. Not sure if this is a Fomitopsis sp. or what.


Moss & Lichen


I believe this is a variegated meadowhawk. It would rise up and hover as it nibbled on gnat-like insects that formed loose clouds in the sunshine just above the giant chain ferns in the wet draw near Cataract Creek where leopard lilies bloom in the summer.

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Thursday, November 6, 2025

New Routes

 

Nuttall's Woodpecker, S.F. Botanic Garden

I was pleasantly surprised when Google Maps gave me an unexpected return route from the Cosumnes River Preserve. Instead of directing me onto I-5 it sent me back out West Walnut Grove Road (which is also the way to the crane-viewing areas along Staten Island Road). That was a beautiful drive, and I had the road almost all to myself. I looked foward to more of the same as I turned onto Isleton Road, but it wasn't long before I got stuck in a chain of maybe 25 cars backed up behind a slow-poke driving a commercial van well below the speed limit. Oh well. It was a great route while it lasted.

After the rainy portion of the storm had mostly moved east yesterday morning, I  could have done my usual walk to the beach via Ortega Street and back via Noriega, but I decided to find a new route that would put me in the park. I needed to have a more varied nature experience than I would have found in the Outer Sunset. I ended up walking down two sets of mosaic stairways to reach the park at Blue Heron Lake, where I walked the spiral trail to the top of Strawberry Hill, then over to the Botanic Garden and back up the hill to home. 


This was the most photogenic of the three mourning doves that were hunkered down at the bottom of Grandview Park to escape the fierce winds that continued even after the bulk of the rain had passed.


Two sets of mosaic stairs, looking down then up. That's the Moraga Steps on the left and the Hidden Garden Steps on the right.


It's not an animal and it's not a plant. It's not even a fungus. It's Fuligo septica, and this spongy mass is its spore-bearing aethalium -- the largest of any slime mold. Being both common, large, and brightly colored, the scrambled-egg slime is probably our most frequently seen slime mold. 


A shy hermit thrush landed on the flowering branch of a nearby pokeweed plant, but it really wanted one of the ripe berries growing on another nearby branch. It hopped over and finally snagged one, then darted back into cover.


This purple bromeliad fly (thanks to iNaturalist for the ID) was much bigger than your average house fly. 


I'd checked the red-legged frog pond in the Children's Garden, but there was no sign of either frog or pollywog. Someone had been pulling out a lot of the aquatic plants in the pond, and I hoped no frogs were harmed in the effort. As I was leaving the area I was surprised to see a red-shouldered hawk on a low branch, and surprised again when it stayed put as I pointed my camera for a photo. I took a couple of quick shots and moved on, not wanting to disturb it into flight.


The Nuttall's woodpecker checked out several different trees and shrubs in the California Garden, including this still-standing but 99-percent dead manzanita (that I suspect will be replaced soon).


It was briefly in the big buckeye, but I couldn't get an angle on it in there. The lichen-crusted manzanita was still a pretty good perch though.


The California Garden's sacred datura plants are done flowering, and their thornapple fruits are earning their name.


Several lesser goldfinches were eating evening primrose seeds in the California Garden.


Lesser goldfinch at its lunch spot.


This little guy was crossing a sidewalk in Forest Hill. I'm hoping someone at iNaturalist will come through with an ID, but it seems like many caterpillars are difficult to name.

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Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Sandhill Cranes

 

Sandhill Cranes at Cosumnes River Preserve


Sunrise is a gift that opens very slowly, and the anticipation itself is part of the gift.

It was still pitch dark when I arrived this morning at Woodbridge Ecological Reserve near Lodi. I got out of the car expecting to hear the familiar croaking of the cranes, but they were silent. The dominant natural noise was delivered instead by countless coyotes. I couldn't see any of them of course, but I'd love to have been able to see the one particular coyote whose howling rose above the din of all the others. Was it calling in its kin to a kill? Showing its strength? Or maybe just feeling jazzed after a great night of being a coyote.


Only one or two cranes vocalized in the darkness, so I didn't know what to expect. Maybe there were only going to be one or two cranes out there. Thankfully, the vocalizing did start to pick up as it got light out, but the nearest cranes were pretty far away. As the morning got brighter, what few cranes there were, soon peeled off in twos and threes and flew away.


It was just barely bright enough to get this shot at f/16. Moments later, all but a couple of the cranes had lifted off and winged south.


Mt. Diablo with Sandhill Crane


Crane Flexing its Wings


In the distance I watched sparse flocks of geese and cranes fly out to their morning feeding areas.


Cranes on the Wing


These were the only two cranes that flew anywhere near me.


A flock of red-winged blackbirds was busy in the same field as a few cranes. A farmer running a disk harrow was off-camera to the right.


Sometimes the cranes are frisky with each other, but this was the only display-tussle I saw all day.


Blackbirds would sometimes circle the cranes before landing.


This was another roadside feeding area with a flooded stubble field, also along Woodbridge Road.


I couldn't see what they were picking up out there, but apparently they pluck out fallen grains from the harvest.


A flock of shorebirds flies past white-fronted geese.


This great egret was lounging atop some grape vines.


I drove the short distance to Staten Island Road, where I found a few cranes in a field more colorful than the plowed ones at Woodbridge Road.


A young sandhill crane forages with its possible family group. There was another adult off-camera.


There were lots of pintails out at Cosumnes Preserve. The secondary parking area was closed for some reason, but the birding was very good up Desmond Road (where Franklin Boulevard ends due to construction).


There were lots of white-fronted geese cackling and humming (yes, humming; I think it was a warning to other geese to keep their distance) in the flooded fields.


This flock of geese raised up for unknown reasons. The sound of their wings as they first lifted off was incredible, and I didn't recognize it right away. There was no vocalization at all, just a rushing sound of wind. The honking came in after they got well into the air.


After circling around, a few of the geese floated down to land next to a small group of cranes.


This was the closest any cranes came to the road all morning.


Such a beautiful bird.


I hadn't used the video on my full-frame camera in so long, I didn't realize I was only capturing sound when I thought I was recording video of the cranes. I still didn't have the exposure quite right when I was recording the geese later on, but at least it's not completely dark.


This is a screen grab of Mt. Shasta from yesterday. Today it's just gray and rainy, like it will probably be around here tomorrow.


Looking for something else, I came across this panorama from 15 years ago, November 4, 2010.


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