Milling about on the lawn were both common phases of the Eastern gray squirrel.
Archive for November, 2015
Some gray and not-so-gray squirrels
Posted in wildlife, tagged black squirrel, Eastern gray squirrel, gray squirrel, grey squirrel, melanistic gray squirrel on November 30, 2015| 3 Comments »
Seasonably appropriate
Posted in birds, tagged Eastern wild turkey, wild turkey on November 25, 2015| 3 Comments »
In most of the US, this is Thanksgiving week, but here in West Virginia, it’s deer season. I’ve seen only one deer in two days. I’m that bad a hunter, but I’ve seen more than a few turkeys.
Which is a more seasonably appropriate animal.
But this is deer season.
Name the tool and its use
Posted in Absolute Piffle, Uncategorized on November 22, 2015| 5 Comments »
Bobcats don’t hang out where coyotes have been
Posted in Carnivorans, wildlife, tagged bobcat, Lynx rufus on November 22, 2015| 1 Comment »
Beautiful coyote
Posted in Carnivorans, wild dogs, wildlife, tagged Eastern coyote on November 22, 2015|
Pissed off coyote
Posted in Carnivorans, wild dogs, tagged coyote on November 22, 2015| 2 Comments »
Coyote scent-marking
Posted in Carnivorans, wild dogs, tagged coyote on November 22, 2015| 2 Comments »
I got a lot of footage from this single coyote bitch from Friday night. This is the video of her initial approach.
She comes in uphill from the scent marks, which gives her a view of any potential rivals or threats. She is also approaching from downwind, so she can smell if there is a human with a gun waiting for her or just a impudent young coyote that needs a good thrashing.
The scent-marking behavior is something I’ve only seen in domestic dogs in male dogs when a bitch is in heat. Both coyotes and dogs have scent glands on their feet, and when they urinate and kick up like that, they are leaving plenty of chemical communication.
I’ve been trying to get extended coyote behavior on camera for quite some time now. This isn’t the LA suburbs, where coyotes go out walking in the middle of the day. This is West Virginia, where everyone is armed and nearly everyone wants to kill a coyote
So you have to have a pretty quiet trail camera that doesn’t have obnoxious flashing lights, and you have to have some decent attractant. All it took was a brand of coyote urine that is normally used to cover up the scent on an electronic caller.
As nice as it is to get bobcats and gray foxes on the camera, the coyotes top them all. You can really see in the behavior this animal how it is so much like a domestic dog. 99.3 percent of their DNA is shared, and although they rarely cross in the wild, they are pretty close to each other. One is a creature that lives by being part of man’s society and using its wits to ingratiate itself with us, while the other lives under the constant worry of our violence. And both are doing very well.
Another video of the coyote from last night
Posted in Carnivorans, Uncategorized, wild dogs, tagged coyotes, Eastern coyote on November 21, 2015| 1 Comment »
She looks at the camera, which allows us to see that her skull is relatively broad. When she turns in profile, you can see the “stop.”
She also has some lovely black markings on her pasterns. All of these feature probably come from the Great Lakes wolf genes that have worked their way into the Eastern coyote population.
She’s not very big. I estimate her to be a 30-pounder.
But last night I got more coyote footage than I’ve been able to get in nearly two years of doing this.
The best coyote video yet!
Posted in Carnivorans, wild dogs, tagged coyote on November 21, 2015|
I put out some Tink’s Coyote Mist, and that did the trick. I finally got a video of an Eastern coyote bitch, who did some marking.
The Story of Fallow Deer
Posted in wildlife, tagged deer, fallow deer on November 18, 2015|
This is a fascinating story of how humans spread the fallow deer from the Eastern Mediterranean through Western Europe. It’s not a native species to Britain, but this is the story of the researchers who are looking into how it was introduced (and it was introduced to Britain at least twice).
Check out The Fallow Deer Project for more information.