Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Duck Mob

 

Babies in a Bunch, Mallard Lake


I encountered a hodgepodge of nature scenes this morning and wasn't sure what to put at the top of the post. Another GBH eating a gopher? Too soon. Wandering tattlers on the move? Maybe. Hummingbirds? Hmmm. A bunch of cute little ducklings? Okay, why not.

As usual, the photos below appear in chronological order.


This possible Yellow Underwing moth (Noctua sp.) flew up from the sidewalk around Noriega St. and 32nd Ave., and glommed onto the wall of a business covered with advertisements and such.


I wondered if this was the same great blue heron I recently saw along the Sunset Parkway -- the one that took a relatively long time to kill and eat the gopher it had caught.


The herons I've watched in Golden Gate Park are so quick to consume the gophers they catch, I can't help wondering if this heron is an adolescent. After snagging the gopher and walking around with it, the heron set it down on the ground, perhaps to see if it was still alive. I detected no movement myself.


Apparently the heron didn't either, as it picked up its quarry once again, and sent it down the hatch.


Even after apparently swallowing the gopher, the heron had second thoughts and coughed it back up.


It swallowed the gopher once again, then coughed it up again.


Is it playing at being a parent?


Once again, the gopher is sliding down the heron's distended throat.


And once again, the gopher is coughed back up!


And swallowed again. For the last time?


Yes, finally. Elapsed time to eat one gopher: 4 minutes, 56 seconds.


I believe the graffiti panels are new since last week. [UPDATE: One week later, 5/6/25, it had already been painted over.] A lot of pigeons hang out at this underpass. In the last few weeks I've seen "crime scenes" of pigeon feathers in a pile nearby, and my prime suspect is that feral black cat I recently photographed walking away with a mouse it had just caught.


Short video clip of the underpass, mostly for the bird sounds.


Lesser Goldfinch on Dried Poison Hemlock


Miner's Lettuce With Two Fallen Seeds


Hummer Catching Some Morning Sun


Blackberry Flowers Being Pollinated By Bumblebees


Ten Ducklings Sticking Close to Mama


Gathering of Cuteness


Shouting it Out


In a show of élan, the defiant Allen's hummingbird lands near the bossy Anna's hummingbird.


Today, the brown pelicans had moved off to the Seal Rock farthest from the coast. A long line of birds, possibly cormorants, is flying south in the background.


At first, the wandering tattlers were gathered, as usual, on top of some boulders below the Cliff House, just hanging out. The tide and surf were high enough that sand would be exposed only briefly, so I was surprised when the tattlers started flying down there, one after another, to try their luck.


The tattlers barely had time to bury one or two probing beaks into the sand before being inundated by the sea.


This one appeared to get a quick drink from a quiet pool.


They spent most of their time running for high ground.


Or flying for high ground when the need arose.


Out beyond Seals Rocks, a pretty cool sailboat (a sloop?) cruised south into the wind.

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Monday, April 28, 2025

The Gopher Eaters

 

Great Blue Heron Catching a Gopher, Golden Gate Park

Pity the poor gopher. So much easier to catch than a fish. I'd just passed Lloyd Lake on my way to the beach when I spotted this heron with a freshly caught gopher in its beak. I moved as quickly as I could, but by the time I could stop my bike and get out my camera, the gopher was down the hatch.

I decided to wait a bit to see if the heron would leave or continue hunting. After evading a few close-walking humans and a dog that strained at its leash, so eager to pounce, it was able to circle back to its hunting ground where it soon caught another gopher.

Later, I stopped at Blue Heron Lake on my way home, arriving just as an adult heron swooped in to feed its eager nestlings high in a pine tree on the little island east of Strawberry Hill. The adult took its time before finally regurgitating a feast for the nestlings, then wasted no time before flying away to catch more gophers.

Down at the beach, meanwhile, it looked like there were zero brown pelicans in their usual place on Seal Rocks. I just read this morning that pelicans have been starving because fish are staying too deep for them to catch, due to relatively warm surface waters. When I got out behind the Cliff House, though, I saw that a group of pelicans had simply moved to the big rock just off Sutro Baths.


Waiting for the Coast to Clear


Heron Escapes the Dog


The heron set up on another gopher almost as soon as it was able to circle back around to its hunting area.






Brown Pelicans at Sutro Rock


Resting Pelicans


Short clip of the preening pelicans.


A snowy egret hunted in the tiny beach area in front of Sutro Baths, but the tide was coming in and making the sandy beach even tinier.


The egret was spending so much time running away from incoming waves that it had little chance to hunt, so when a second egret dropped in, it wasn't in the mood to share its spot and tried to chase off the interloper, but ended up flying around the Cliff House to hunt on the relatively peaceful beach to the south.


Three nestlings are ready for whatever mama brought home for lunch.


Video clips of the adult and nestlings. 


After feeding the nestlings, it was time to head back out to resume the hunt.

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Sunday, April 27, 2025

Skyline Spring

 

Tidy Tips, Goldfields, and Baby Blue Eyes on Skyline Boulevard

I could hardly believe my eyes when I spotted a wildflower patch along Skyline Boulevard next to Lake Merced. It wasn't a big patch -- maybe 15 yards long by 2 feet wide -- but it goes to show what's possible here. On the other hand, if it were any bigger, and wasn't situated next to a stream of fast-moving cars, it would probably have been flattened by people taking selfies while lying down in the middle of it.


I biked out to Lake Merced in the hope of seeing Clark's Grebes running across the water in their mating display, following up on a tip from the local birding email group. It was cold and windy this morning, though, and not a grebe in sight. From the North Lake Bridge I managed to snap one frame of a singing marsh wren while watching a dragon boat race.


Boulevard Bouquet


Reaching For The Sun On An Overcast Day


A few groups of whimbrels were foraging along the tide line at Ocean Beach. Before going down there with my camera, I waited for a small group of humans to pass because they were letting their dogs chase the shorebirds away as they went. I figured they would soon chase off the birds up the beach, and that those birds might circle back to where I was. Unfortunately, the group turned around before they reached those birds. I remarked to the group that they were doing a good job of scouring the beach of wildlife with their dogs, to which the only guy who responded to me said, "Good, that's what we're trying to do."


Whimbrel Snags a Mole Crab


Short video clips of foraging whimbrels.


Graffiti canvas at the new Sunset Dunes Park. The coolest art work I saw today was at Lawton Street. A giant rock had been placed on an axis that allowed even a little girl to twirl it around.


I stopped to check out a great blue heron that appeared to be ready to snag a gopher, and indeed it did so very soon, only to snag a second nearby gopher 35 seconds later (according to the timestamps on my photos).


The robin swooped down there just as the heron was heading toward its second gopher. 


The first gopher was caught at 11:35:01, and the second at 11:35:36. 


The one with the bloody beak puts a little distance between itself and a passing human.


And puts a lot more distance between itself and humans with a dog.


These two Nuttall's woodpeckers flew onto a tree right behind the heron, so I moved to get closer and scared the heron away. The woodpeckers soon absconded as well.


The red-shouldered hawk swooped out of the woods around South Lake and glided over MLK Drive into a tree, then soon continued across Lincoln Way to hunt in the Outer Sunset's back yards.


The eagle chicks were hunkered down in a light snow storm yesterday, with the temperature at the time a balmy 31 degrees, not including wind chill.


They came through just fine.

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Saturday, April 26, 2025

Coyote Sunset

 

Friday's Sunset from Grandview Park

As I biked over to Grandview Park to catch the sunset I noticed a red-shouldered hawk on its usual perch atop a nearby streetlight (I know I've put its photo on the blog before, but I can't find it). I was tempted to stop, but I didn't want to risk missing the sunset and continued on.

When I reached 14th Avenue, another critter presented itself -- a coyote! I guess I should get out more in the evening. The coyote scampered away from me when I stopped to photograph it, and for a while I figured it was long gone. Wrong! A few minutes later I spotted it trotting down the road next to Grandview Park and set out after it, finally catching up to it on the east-facing slope. I wondered if it was G-Dog, who I haven't seen in such a long time.

Oh yeah, and the sunset was kinda nice too.















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Friday, April 25, 2025

Cooper's Hawk

 

Juvenile Cooper's Hawk, National AIDS Memorial Grove

I'd just come through the Oak Woodlands with no especially interesting sightings and passed by Lily Lake with no sign of the green heron. Crossing the street, I figured Whiskey Hill would be my next chance to see something. But as I walked around the edge of the National AIDS Memorial Grove I heard the distinctive call of a cooper's hawk and decided to check it out.

The call was likely made by the juvenile in excited anticipation of getting a furry, warm mouse to eat from one of its parents.

Later on, there was some action in the great blue heron nesting trees in front of the boathouse. I arrived just in time to see one heron chase another one through the air. Later on I happened to be shooting some video (see below) when the two had some sort of ruckus in the tree.


Cooper's Hawk Feeding on a Redwood Branch


Even with my max setting of ISO 3200, I could only get a 1/60th sec. shutter speed in that dark woodland, so I popped the on-camera flash to hopefully get at least one sharp image.


The youngster flew down to the forest floor after polishing off its mouse, only to soon think better of being down there with a human present. It flew back up onto a very high redwood branch to wait for another meal to be delivered via air mail.


Two wandering tattlers were still hanging out below the Cliff House. Seals Rocks had a good number of pelicans and cormorants on it once again.


Video clips of the wandering tattlers showing a little of their tail-dipping.


There are three large youngsters in the nest in the background.


Great Blue Heron Nest Activity


I was surprised to see this nesting Canada Goose in such an open area. I also saw what I believe were three eggs in the pied-billed grebe nest today. The hen got back on top of them too soon to get a better look.

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