Trotting while flagging

 

Something struck me as odd about the White-tailed Deer crossing the road. Yet, I couldn’t immediately identify the inconsistency.

The doe had raised its tail as a flag to indicate that a predator had been detected. That imagined predator was undoubtedly a somewhat distant me, someone who merely happened to be travelling along the road, but who had no interest in harming the deer. The deer had registered a false positive.

It wasn’t the expected false positive that was odd about this doe’s behaviour. But, what was it?

I looked back through my previous shots of retreating White-tailed Deer which had raised their tails so as to flag a suspected predator. The pictures were consistent: An agitated, flagging deer consistently chose to gallop away. A gallop is a quadruped’s most rapid means of departure. In the gallop, the basic gait involves all four feet being off the ground for a moment. A much slower gait is the trot, during which one front foot and its opposite hind foot come down at the same time.

Two deer gallop along the beach (15 Feb 2013).

A fawn gallops across a trail (17 Aug 2016). 

Another fawn gallops through some grasslands (9 Aug 2019). 

As gallops go, a winner is this doe leaping over another blocking its path (29 Feb 2012). 

However, the most recent doe chose the more relaxed option of trotting while flagging. Its message is contradictory: It warns with a flagged tail, but has a relaxed departure. I am sure this is a known behaviour, but it was new to me.

 

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March marmots

 

Yellow-bellied Marmots are out of hibernation. I didn’t see any a few weeks ago, but yesterday I saw over a dozen of them on the talus.

The first one spotted lounging on a rock was fairly small, and so was likely a female. Female marmots average about two-thirds the weight of males. 

This is a marmot’s time to mate. Here a male is attempting to mount a female, but she just ran off.

A male basks in the midday sun.

 

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House Finch

 

Some sources claim that we don’t have House Finches here; others allow that we have some. The latter sources are correct. 

The House Finch is an urban junky. It likes to hang out in cities where it mainly eats plants. But while seen in our local city, I have usually seen it in rural settings.

A male (left) and female (right) House Finch were hanging out among sparse housing.

 

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Tundra Swans

 

Who needs yet more images of swans? After all, in my February goulash, I commented that it had been such a good winter for seeing Trumpeter Swans that I was discarding pictures of them.

However, much less common to see are the Tundra Swans. A decade ago, tundras seemed to dominate and it was uncommon to see trumpeters. But, in recent years the much smaller tundra has been a rarity. This winter, a few more tundras have been turning up locally. I don’t know what influences these things. 

Three tundras were seen in a mixed flock. The tundras are not only the smaller of the two species, but don’t have as heavy a bill and frequently have a yellow patch of skin between the eye and bill.

However, the much bigger Trumpeter Swans were also present, and I couldn’t resist getting a shot of one flapping its wings.

 

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Whither spring?

 

What are the present intimations of spring?

This snow-flecked Red Squirrel should be entering its summer moult about now.

The arrival of Dark-eyed Juncos indicates spring is imminent…,

as does the arrival of a Belted Kingfisher (with fish), which will be here through into fall. 

However, robins have arrived for spring only to find it snowing on their crab apples.

The sighting of a Downy Woodpecker merely tells us that it isn’t yet summer. 

 

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Flicker fencing

 

Two male Northern Flickers were fencing.

When seen from a distance, I thought that I was watching a courting couple. But no, both flickers were male. Cornell Lab comments on the flicker:

Early in spring and summer, rivals may face off in a display sometimes called a “fencing duel,” while a prospective mate looks on. Two birds face each other on a branch, bills pointed upward, and bob their heads in time while drawing a loop or figure-eight pattern in the air….

Leaving aside the silly redundancy in the name, these two males were fencing. However, as no prospective mate was seen, they were probably contesting ownership of the adjacent cavity nest. 

As dispute resolution goes, these flickers have handily bested most other species. They discussed the issue calmly while avoiding all injurious contact.

Two male flickers contend a cavity nest using ritual fencing.

 

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February goulash

 

This is a collection of images from this February, none of which has had a posting of its own.

The Rough-legged Hawk is a winter resident that hunts for rodents. 

Our smallest falcon, the kestrel, hunts in open habitats.

I don’t have a bias that favours sighting birds. Yet, notwithstanding the skunk seen earlier, most of the creatures I see are avian. Hiding in the forest is a White-tailed Doe in its winter pelage.

This is one of two Ruffed Grouse that frequent my yard. 

A Bald Eagle added a branch to the pair’s nest. Eagles have a compulsion to add material each year, and sometimes this results in a nest so massive that it topples the tree.

The Song Sparrow is a common bird, but drabness renders it inconspicuous. It deserves to be celebrated now and then.

The robin is also common, yet has a greater cachet and so does not require the same acknowledgment as the Song Sparrow. Here are four robins in a larch.

This has been an really good winter for seeing Trumpeter Swans. Indeed, many pictures I have taken of them have just been discarded. Yet, I rather like this shot taken in the dim light of dawn.

This is a male goldfinch in non-breeding plumage. The black feathers on the finch’s head are a sign of pending spring as it moults into its breeding plumage of a black cap and a yellow body.

And this cutie is a female goldfinch.

 

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Bad-hair skunk

 

Being normally nocturnal, skunks are only rarely seen. Yet, when spotted, they usually seem well coiffured, not the unkempt creature I encountered yesterday.

A skunk stopped by for a visit.

But as it wandered off, it looked as if it were suffering a bad-hair day.

 

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Stuck cat

 

This blog does not usually concern itself with domestic animals, but this seemed special: a stuck cat. It was beside the highway and high on some utility cables about a third of the way between the poles. Presumably it had been chased up a pole.

The cat has now been there for over three hours, during which time, it has moved no more than a couple of centimetres. Below it, the berm to the road is quite narrow, so the cat will be difficult to rescue. Indeed, someone watching the cat got stuck, and now that person needs to be rescued. Then, that person’s rescuer got stuck. The cat continued to sit on the cables watching the cascade of getting stuck.

The story is ongoing.

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Whinging gander

 

The whinging gander was frustrated. He nagged his mate for access, but she was having none of it: “It is not even spring yet, and I am just not in the mood.”

“Oh come on, you know you are ready.”

During five minutes of harassment, she talked back to him only once.

Normally she just looked away.

He chased her across the beach.

And through the water. One could imagine her muttering, “Do other species have to put up with this?” One could also imagine him muttering, “Do other species have to put up with this?”
Oh well, he just has to wait another month.

 

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