Snow Buntings

 

One does not get to see Snow Buntings every year. Indeed, when you do see them around the Lake, it is likely to be for a short time in the fall. Even then, they are seen from a distance.

Snow Buntings breed in the high Arctic and seem to spend the winter well to the south of us. That they pass through our region now and then is a delight. The last time I saw them was four years ago. Curiously at that time, they were within metres of where they appeared in the last two days.

Snow Buntings forage on the surface for grass and seeds.

They do not forage alone, but in groups.

They foray in flocks of a dozen or more and frequently fly to check adjacent locations.

Not only do they forage in groups, they fly in groups. 

Here they go again. We may see them again in a few years.

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Fall to winter

 

Today, winter swept to the valley bottom. It seems that fall is not yet ready to concede defeat.

Snow blankets the mountainside, but western larches proclaim its arrival is premature.

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Pacific Loon

 

Following upon the first observation of a Gray-crowned Rosy Finch at Kokanee Creek Provincial Park, I saw a Pacific Loon at the same location. Well, truth in advertising, I only saw it because Paul Prappas alerted me to its presence. Yet, his observation ranks as a first for the Park.

There is more than one species of loon. We normally see the Common Loon, but today’s sighting was of a species of loon rarely seen in British Columbia outside of Pacific Coastal waters.

A Pacific Loon (still in breeding plumage) graces the waters of Kokanee Creek Provincial Park.

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Gray-crowned Rosy Finches

 

Grey: In Canada, the spelling should be Grey-crowned Rosy Finch. It is named for the colour, grey, not a person named Gray.

This was an unusual observation: A flock of about six dozen Gray-crowned Rosy Finches flew around Kokanee Creek Provincial Park. Ebird.org records no earlier observations of these birds at the Park and says that the last time they were observed anywhere along the West Arm of Kootenay Lake was four years ago in Nelson.

Gray-crowned Rosy Finches summer to our north and winter to our south, but they are rarely seen passing through the area around the Lake. It was fun to see them in the Park two days ago.

This is a portion of the flock of Gray-crowned Rosy Finches.

The birds did not alight, so the only pictures managed were of them flying. 

These finches have a delightful flying style called flap-bounding flight. (See, flap-bounding redpolls.) Here three birds are bounding, that is, they are coasting with folded wings. 

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Muskrat vs mallard

 

A muskrat is primarily a vegetarian, but occasionally it will eat other small mammals: snails, mussels, crustaceans, and small birds. But, would it tackle a large bird? The literature is unclear.

There is a pond where a few of us have watched interesting wildlife: turtles, various species of water birds, and, of course, muskrats. A few days ago, Shirley Smith sent me comments and pictures about a muskrat doing something rather odd there: It was harassing a mallard.

Two days later, I stopped by the pond and watched. Both animals were still at it. The muskrat would swim after the mallard. As the muskrat could swim slightly faster, it would close in on the mallard. When within a metre, the muskrat dived towards the mallard. Simultaneously, the mallard took to the air, flew perhaps a half-dozen metres and then alighted on the pond again. At this point the muskrat would start after the mallard again. Over and over the sequence repeated, and did so for as long as I was willing to watch.

Why was the muskrat doing this? Time and time again, it proved unable to catch the mallard. And why did the mallard always alight nearby and so invite another bothersome attack?

There is silliness to these behaviours.

Typically, a muskrat tries for a mouthful of salad (25 October 1916). But not this week.

A muskrat swam towards a male mallard. When close, the muskrat dived towards it and the mallard flew, but the mallard alighted nearby. At this point, the muskrat started after it again.

This time the muskrat is chasing the mallard towards the shore.

When within a metre, the muskrat again dived (the splash on the left) towards the mallard. Once more, the mallard took to the air. At first, I was confused by why the muskrat would dive upon approaching the mallard. Then it struck me. The speed of travelling over a water surface is effectively limited by what is known as the hull speed, a consequence of the waves the swimmer creates. However, the constraints of the hull speed do not apply underwater where an animal can travel much faster. So, by diving, the muskrat is doing the equivalent of a land-based predator that lunges towards its prey. The dive is thus evidence of the muskrat’s intent to attack. The mallard, knowing that the dive was the attacking lunge, took to the air to escape.

Strangely, the mallard would never fly far, but would alight nearby, thus inviting a repeat of the chasing game. Both animals seem remarkably slow learners. Advice to the obsessive-compulsive muskrat: Give it up and have some salad. Advice to slow-witted mallard: Just fly to the next pond; Do you think you can walk on water?

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Bighorny sheep

 

What I have managed to see of this season’s rut of bighorn sheep has not been particularly dramatic. I witnessed no head butting, and only one coupling.

Even during the rutting season, rams often hung out together. Ewes did likewise.

To human eyes, this ram has a particularly sly look about him as he sniffs ewes for pheromones. 

This ram demonstrates his interest in mating by curling back his upper lip (the flehmen response). This gives him an enhanced detection of the pheromones emitted by ewes in oestrus.

A ewe tries to escape as two rams, each intent on mating with her, chase her up a slope. If anything happened, it was out of view beyond the brow of the hill.

Meanwhile, at the base of the hill another pair does mate.

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Stotting

 

It doesn’t take many encounters with mule deer before one is seen to stot.

Stotting is a rather unusual gait. Most quadrupeds can walk, trot, and gallop. But to these gaits the mule deer adds stotting. It is the only stotting animal around here. (The white-tailed deer, common in the valleys, does not stot.)

This mule deer is walking, a slow gait that involves moving only one leg at a time (30 April 2014).

This mule deer is trotting: a gait that moves diagonally opposite legs together (12 April, 2011).

Last weekend’s mule deer is stotting: it springs into the air with stiff legs, lifting all four feet off the ground simultaneously.

As a stotting deer travels over the ground, it spends most of its time in the air.

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Larch

 

In the fall, my favourite deciduous tree is actually a conifer: the larch.

Although a conifer, the needles of the larch become orange in the fall and are then shed.

Larch trees border a mountain lake.

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Incidental images

 

Outdoors, I often am looking for something specific, maybe a wild orchid, maybe a grizzly bear.

While this approach is often successful, this fall, it has not been. I head out but don’t see many things previous years would prompt me to expect. Certainly, persistence resulted in success with fishing black bears, but, despite many searches, I haven’t photographed a grizzly bear in three months. So, today’s posting shows some recent things seen incidentally while looking for something else.

While failing to find grizzlies in the high country, I ran across a Townsend’s Solitaire. This is a thrush (so a relative of the robin) that hunts in open forests of the West. When seen, it is often perched atop trees as a way to proclaim its territory.

Many medium-sized birds employ an energy-saving method of flight known as flap-glide. Here, the Townsend’s Solitaire is in the glide portion of its flight.

From high in the south Selkirks, one can look across to the Valhallas.

At the bottom of the valley, a katabatic wind that flowed gently down the mountainside has now blown out over the surface of the Lake. As this cold air flowed over the warmer water, a steam fog formed into columns lying along the wind direction. However, when a wind moves at less than 23 cm/s, it does not disturb the water. Consequently, the only evidence of this air movement is the offshore drift of the steam fog. Farther out on the Lake, the wind speed increases and there it is seen to have disturbed the water.

A juvenile Wood Duck is seen wading in a local creek.

Kokanee salmon spawn in local creeks from late August through September. Smaller groups of Kokanee avoid the creeks and spawn along the lakeshore. Shore spawners do not construct a redd for their eggs, but allow eggs to merely fall between the rocks. Now, wave action rather than creek flow maintains the oxygen levels for incubation. 

October is the month to admire mushrooms. These are shaggy manes. 

A red-shafted Norther Flicker flew overhead. 

Finally, a bit of tokenism: this small grizzly was seen three months ago.

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Coyote rests

 

Coyotes obviously have to rest sometime. Yet, before last Saturday, I had not seen one lying. Whether wandering, grubbing, hunting, eating, pooping, or snarling, each previous coyote had been standing. 

A coyote was relaxing in a farmer’s field. When it realized it was being watched, it turned its eyes and both ears towards the camera. Apparently displeased with what it saw, it got up and wandered off to seek solitude elsewhere.

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