summer_jackel: (Default)
summer_jackel ([personal profile] summer_jackel) wrote2011-04-06 01:57 pm

So Many Scorpions!

One vulture floats above;
it is spring, the earth is black and moist
snakes and snails, salamanders, slugs and scorpions
rest under almost every bit of fallen wood
and all the small things seethe with joy and life.


***

Woo, if any day deserved a poem, it was yesterday; they probably chose April as NaPo month for a reason. Kyn and I walked to Badger Hill (so the greater majority of a day) and turned up all sorts of wood and rocks (carefully) looking for wildlife, which we found in great abundance. We found no less than three scorpions, only one of whom was the same individual I found a couple of days ago, as well as a different rubber boa, the same baby gopher snake, and all kinds of salamanders, centipedes, millipedes, wood ants, etc. It was grand.

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Fat little wood scorpion!

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Kyn coaxed the scorpion onto her hand; it did not pinch or sting her. These little guys are quite harmless and hardly seem to deserve a name as flashy as Uroctonus mordax.
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Baby rubber boa! This little guy was so very sweet and new, and looked like he'd just shed. All of the wildlife up there seemed so healthy.
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I am pretty certain that this little fellow is a juvie gopher snake, although I would be interested in alternate opinions if anyone has them.
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awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww...
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A CA slender salamander:
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Another two:
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baby ensatina and slug:
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EDIT: Thank you Kyn for IDing these guys as Harpaphe haydeniana based on bugguide here: http://bugguide.net/node/view/102339/bgpage The flash ruined this pic (but the camera refused to take one without); these guys are very stunning, shiny black with bright yellow spots. My guess is that if I was a bird, I wouldn't want to eat these. (ok, so I don't want to...or even touch it...anyway. Cool beastie, though).
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While we look at wildlife, dogs practice stays. This was a long enough walk (and might have been longer) so we left all of our senior canines at home. Dog age is certainly a bit sad, but it's a necessary part of keeping dogs, and I am comforted by the fact that they all got walks of more comfortable length today.
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When not on a stay, they (especially Rooster) find mud to play in whenever they can. Alas, they were clean before the walk. Not now.
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Rough collies are so pretty (mud notwithstanding).
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Handsome mudpuppy
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sits forever and ever.
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When they aren't zooming.
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Coba being soft, furry and glamorous.
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[identity profile] raveness-d.livejournal.com 2011-04-06 09:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Lovely photos!

Your snakie looks like a Racer juvie to me. Not sure what species are in your area... maybe yellow-bellied?

[identity profile] howl-at-the-sun.livejournal.com 2011-04-07 04:10 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure that there are enough collies in this post, Summer.

[identity profile] eclipsegryph.livejournal.com 2011-04-07 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I always love hearing about yours guys' adventures, even though Kyn is usually dead the next day. :p

[identity profile] ironbadger.livejournal.com 2011-04-07 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Definitely a juvenile racer.

I've had baby gopher snakes- they have all their markings even very young.
(We had millions of little racers and a few hatchling gopher snakes around the family property when I was a kid- The racers were always extremely aggressive too.)
Racers also have a different body conformity. Nearly round or hemispherical, a bit like a garden hose- while the gopher babies cross section is more like a tall arch. Even newly hatched, they are little powerhouses of muscle!
(The most fun is finding one that likes to wind around your wrist and ride around like a bracelet for hours at a time.)

I envy you finding rubber boas!
I've never seen one in the wild.

Wood scorps are cool.
We had them out in Ingot, east of Redding. I never found any closer than 20 miles to the city, but that might have been due to habitat preferences.
Much hotter and drier near Redding.

Kind of the same issue with California newts-
They're everywhere 20 miles from where I lived, but you never see them in the area where I was at.

The real challenge for you now is finding a California long nosed leopard lizard.
I saw only one my entire life in the valley behind the house when I was a kid- never saw another one.

Jim Groat refused to believe me, insisting theres no such thing- but I found the species in a California reptile guide book complete with a map showing I was in the extreme northern end of their range.

Most of the online resources I've looked at say they don't range that far north, but a few say they are found as far north as southern Oregon.

-Badger-