Recorded about 50ft from the tree they were in. Ambient noise includes traffic from I-95 and a neighbor playing loud music for the first time ever.
Continuing-Mr.Cangoos warning the other pair to keep their distance!! These two were right at my feet, & they have never threatened me or the dog.
12!!---Visitors beware...turkey calling cards are present everywhere....
What can I say.......
Continuing... Who says Unicorns are extinct....
I see you peeking around that chair leg!!
Brilliant colors on this one.
3 of 3 observed in the yard
Well there goes the tidy deck....
Post is for the 29 (!!) RedWings... (also a Dove and a couple of Grackles...)
Continuing- Mr. Cangoos, Here's looking at you, kid'....
Единичные экземпляры
2024/03/15
This is the sound of a captured and terrified starling. It is sound one would make if being carried off by a predator. When other forms of spooking fail, playing this usually works very well, but not always and overuse can lead to it being useless. Starling's perception of sound is very frequency-specific and their mimicry can be very precise, if scratchy. They don't seem to take long to catch on that it's the same sound each time and can't be the same starling in the grasp of a predator repeatedly. I like to keep it short, so they hear less. They usually fly over to inspect, which is an opportunity to be scary again. Grackles and other birds usually around do not have much of any reaction to it, but I try not to use it when crows are near. They probably know it and are weary of me enough as is it is.
This starling had gotten food enough to become hard to spook and therefore making it very difficult to feed natives without risking inviting many more starlings to crash the party, disaster. This was recorded about 15 seconds into the alarm. The starling had flight feathers clipped, was set free and seen several times nearby for the weeks until near autumn molt.
Showing off our new 'puffy' coat!
Coast is clear...go git 'em....
Location is approximate.
Would this be a leucistic Black-capped Chickadee?
An owl couple can be heard amidst the spring peepers
Continuing- this is the same owl, she was just so beautiful I just wanted to show case the close ups separately. She let me walk right up to almost touching her, before silently winging across the yard over to the pine trees, closely followed by the 'Blue Brigade' who perched in another pine & shouted their disapproval.for the next 1/2 hour,until she obviously decided to move back further into the woods,
These Owls have the most beautiful soft looking eyes...sooo unpredator looking!
Oh my...grouse on the war path...look out!!
It’s not quiet because it’s distant; it’s just quietly going through its repertoire. Practicing?
predation on North Island Kaka
"Pet" cat killed a gray squirrel. Bad kitty!
Likely somebody's pet...eating somebody else's pet (this is "horse country" and a lot of people have chickens, goats, horses and little farms). Another chicken victim nearby https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9556838
Feral cat killing a yellow warbler in the urban area of San Cristobal
Observed hunting and eating Columbian Ground Squirrels and Yellow-pine Chipmunks. 4 feral cats observed on the property.
Feral cat hunting sparrows in the overgrown park edge.
Cat hunting least weasel
Feral cat predating American Robin (Turdus migratorius). I found a ruffled loose robin feather in the exact vicinity this afternoon, likely from the same incident: http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/180042313
With Brush Rabbit prey (duplicated observation).
Scavenging on cougar kill
Evening song. A flock of White throated sparrows in a planted bamboo stand
The chorus got a lot louder as the sun set. Decodon pond
I believe this is the correct identification. There are also Spring Peepers calling along with this recording. Maybe, this is a second call (trill) of Spring Peeper?
I thought I heard a kitten and went to look for it. A coworker assisted me in searching, and she saw a frog attempting to escape a southern black racer in a nearby oak tree. We had to leave the fellow to his fate, unfortunately. The last picture was enhanced by AI and sharpened for clarity.
Video of the encounter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crYMNk3usOo&ab_channel=EldritchSleuth
This Red maple was uprooted and leaning against another tree. It was making a lot of creaking sounds as it rubbed against the supporting tree.
Cones crackling overhead as they open up in the heatwave
A Sassafras rubbing against a large sweetgum, producing these loud screeching sounds.
A fallen Black locust rubbing against the American sweetgum and creaking in the wind.
The sound file is not water or traffic. It's the sound of wind in a longleaf pine forest, which not many people get to hear any more.