Monday, September 23, 2024

Variety Pack

 

Yellow Warbler Dining on Blackberries, North Lake

It's the second day of fall, and it finally feels like summer here in western San Francisco. What little fog there was last night quickly burned off this morning. While out on my bike I snapped a few photos around North Lake and Metson Lake in Golden Gate Park.

The kingfisher and great blue heron were absent from Metson, but I was lured toward some cattails there by the distinctive chitting of a common yellowthroat. The yellowthroat eventually showed itself, but too briefly and too deeply in the cattails to get a shot.


I'm starting to give up trying to identify all these yellow birds.


This one was grooming itself on a sunny branch after having a bath.


Still looking a little damp, but ready to go.


I thought this bird (Merlin ID = hooded oriole) was also going to go after some blackberries...


...but it picked off a little insect instead.


Not too far away from the insectivorous bird (still at North Lake), this orb-weaver was busily doing her thing right out in the open.


I never got a good look at this dragonfly's body (now at Metson Lake), but I'd guess it's a red saddlebags (Tramea onusta). 


This is probably my favorite shot of the day. The one skipper was feeding on nectar while the other one kept flying around it, occasionally landing next to it, and sometimes knocking right into it.


A blue-eyed darner landed just long enough to pose for a picture.


Today was the first time I've noticed a meadowhawk at Metson Lake.


In typical meadowhawk fashion, it wasn't the least bit perturbed by having a camera lens pointed at it.


The backlight was so strong I popped the flash, dialing in one stop of underexposure, which is a pretty cool feature for a point-and-shoot to be able to do.

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Sunday, September 22, 2024

California Ground Squirrel

 

Ground Squirrel, Strybing Arboretum

Waking up to a thick, dripping fog lounging outside the window this morning, I felt kind of ho-hum about making another bird foray to Strybing Arboretum. But then I remembered the ground squirrels and decided to try my luck. 

I think it was down at Piedras Blancas, where I went to watch elephant seals giving birth on the beach, that I saw almost as many ground squirrels as seals. But in all my years of living in San Francisco I'd never seen one in Golden Gate Park until just the other day. I'd love to know how they get here.


On the way to the ground squirrel patch, I couldn't resist trying to photograph another Townsend's warbler that flew into range.


About to Take Flight


Fast Foraging


I caught this tiny bushtit as it took a little break to do some preening.


I was glad the ground squirrel didn't bolt for its burrow as soon as I showed up.


If you look closely, you can see a golden-crowned sparrow in there among the lichen-crusted branches.


At one point I turned around and saw the squirrel dive into its burrow, but I wasn't sure if I had frightened it, or something else. There were three noisy red-shouldered hawks in the area, and a not-too-old coyote scat down by the pond.


Foraging Finches


There were a couple dozen or so finches feeding very near the ground squirrel. They were eating the seeds produced by the purple-flowered plant in the background.


Finch Food, Wild Radish Pods


I couldn't tell what the ground squirrel was eating.


Gorget Flashes


Song Sparrow


I think this is a western flycatcher, poised to fly even deeper into the dark thicket around the pond...


...but eventually coming back out through the cattails.


I hadn't expected to see the ground squirrel again, but I caught him scampering into a different area where gardeners are storing various rocks and whatnot.


It was a good place to keep an eye out, and I'm sure there are plenty of good crevices to escape into if needed.


I expected this woodpecker to have a white patch on its back.


It's like a cross between a downy and a ladder-backed woodpecker. But it might be a Nuttall's woodpecker.


Finch & Aloe


California Towhee


I couldn't resist the hummer with those nasturtium flowers in the background.


I hadn't realized we had an albino form of coast redwood right here in the arboretum.


One last hummer shot, with a ball of sticky resin stuck to its beak. It tried unsuccessfully to wipe it off on the bare branch to its right.

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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Townsend's Warbler

 

Townsend's Warbler, Golden Gate Park

I'd spent around three hours walking through Strybing Arboretum, cruising the woodland around the Bison Paddock, and walking my bike around the west side of North Lake with no luck. At North Lake I saw a brown creeper -- a bird I've been looking forward to seeing again -- and despite getting it in my viewfinder, I could never get a clear shot through all the foliage. A couple of Townsend's warblers showed up and diverted my attention, but they moved on very quickly, and when I looked back for the creeper, it was gone.

It was only after I left North Lake and started riding toward the beach that I spotted a townie approaching like a yellow missile along the north side of the road and landing in a tree very close to me. I got off my bike and gave chase, and finally got the shot above.

Besides the brown creeper, the other cool critter I saw but didn't get to photograph was a ground squirrel (or two) in the Children's Garden at Strybing Arboretum. With the first glimpse I got I knew it was a squirrel (of which there are many in the park), but thought it moved suspiciously like a ground squirrel. Then I got a much better look at what I'm pretty sure was a second one, confirming my suspicion. A sighting near the arboretum entrance was reported to iNaturalist in April 2023. Although I've looked, I haven't seen old Grandview Gus since that first time in July.


Fox Squirrel Sampling Blackberries


A couple of goldfinches were the only birds I photographed in more than an hour in Strybing Arboretum. The Flower Piano thing is still going on, so there's good music all around, but also lots of people.


Japanese Anemone














Floating along with a raft of kelp was this party balloon. The young gull pecked at it but thankfully didn't ingest any of it. Quite a few gulls showed interest in the floating kelp and are hanging around just outside the top of the frame. The current was carrying it north very quickly.


I just love the feather details on this passing gull.


There was a pretty good crowd of pelicans and cormorants on Seal Rocks again, and many gulls resting on Ocean Beach. As I was leaving, yet another photo got away from me as I watched a multitudinous flock of gulls fly over my head, with the Giant Camera in the foreground.


Kingsley was back at Metson Lake...


...as was G. B. Heron.

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Friday, September 20, 2024

Garden Variety

 

Passion Flower, Garden for the Environment

A couple of things I noticed with the new FZ80D that I somehow failed to notice on Wednesday are that the ISO goes to 3200, and the faster SD card still leaves plenty of shutter lag. And I also had to figure out how to make the 1-Area focus square smaller. Thankfully all the info needed to make such adjustments is in the online manual. Another welcome feature on the new model is the USB-C connection. Finally my phone, tablet, and camera all plug in with the same cable.


Angel's Trumpet


Pig's Ear


Borage


This bushtit looks like a pygmy marmoset.


All the previous shots came out of the Garden for the Environment, but this shot of a robin in an Autumn Olive (Elaegnus umbellata) was from Golden Gate Park. 


Busy Bush


The robins were skittish and too fast for me, even with the ISO cranked up to 3200 as it is here. I never got a clean shot of a robin with one of the berries in its beak. I only learned what the plant was after I got home, but the berries are edible to humans as well as robins (but watch out for the hard seeds).


The Townsend's warblers have been eluding me since they recently started showing up more. I've been unable to get a clean photo. Still, I liked this shot anyway, with a spider snare in a cypress tree (in the park's Oak Woodland area).

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