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| Coyote Lounging In The Sun, Pioneer Meadow |
My wife checked her weather app this morning to help her decide whether to bike to work or take the car. The app said it was unlikely to rain until tonight, so she took the bike. When I left on my walk later on, I didn't give the rain any thought all. It was only 44 degrees, putting the temperature front and center on my mind.
It was cold but manageable with little wind. As I descended into Forest Hill, I spotted a spotted mushroom -- maybe a panther amanita, my first sighting of the species in the city. By the time I reached West Portal's commercial district, the horizon to the west looked suspiciously dark, and sure enough a brief sprinkle soon forced me to duck under an awning for cover. The darkest clouds were north of me, so I figured they were past me since rain usually comes up from the south.
Usually, but not this morning. Thankfully I was able to duck under a bus shelter when the real rain came. Just a sprinkle at first, but it soon grew into a full-on shower that would have soaked me had I been caught in the open. When it finally let up, I was eager to check up on the nesting hummingbird I first encounterd on Feb. 11. She was still there, still sitting on her nest with no apparent hatchlings.
The rain didn't start again until about one minute after I got home. I downloaded the morning's pictures and waited for the rain to stop so I could head out on my bike. But the rain kept coming, and maybe an hour later I decided to make lunch and give up on the bike. Then the sun came out, and off I went.
Near the Bison Paddock I watched a Townsend's warbler and a pygmy nuthatch eagerly feeding in the branches of a couple of pine trees, no doubt making up for lost time during the rain. I checked out the barn owl -- still snoozing peacefully.
Up near Blue Heron Lake I saw a guy who appeared to be staring at something. I followed his stare and saw a lump near a log, too far away to make out any details. I was just about to get moving again when the lump finally raised its head.
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| Roadside Amanita |
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| Winter Crow |
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| Tree-trimmers |
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| This hummingbird is one tough cookie, keeping her eggs warm through days of cold and stormy weather. At least the crows were gone from the pine across the street. |
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| Townsend's Warbler & Camellias |
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| Cedar Waxwing, West Portal |
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| Cedar Waxwing, Golden Gate Heights |
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| Townie in the Sun |
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| This pygmy nuthatch looked like it just got out of the bath. |
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| The coyote was in no hurry to run away when it realized it was being watched. |
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| I moved around a bit to try to get a better angle. |
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| Oops, she didn't like the next angle. |
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| She got up and put some distance between herself and her admirers, stopping to scratch, stretch, and yawn. |
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| Then she finally loped off to find a more secret place to rest in the warm sun while it lasts. |
Coyote Video
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| I noticed the pied-billed grebe was off her nest at Blue Heron Lake, with no eggs in sight. I figure the storm was too much to deal with. While I was there, this downy woodpecker flew into the willow. |
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| Yosemite on 2/14/26 |
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| Yosemite This Morning |
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