Now you see it:
Now you don't:
That ground squirrel (well that is what I guess it was) was very fast! It was sitting in front of us happy as larry at the elephant seals past Big Sur and then just VOOM! Ah the perils of photographing wildlife. At least it wasn't a tree squirrel - it probably would've run up someone's leg!
Tuesday, 21 April 2009
Monday, 20 April 2009
Bunnies and bonnets
Our local council, Campbell City Council, holds a Bunnies and Bonnets parade every year. We just so happened to be in downtown Campbell and saw a bit of the fun.
There were marching bands (local high school, pic chosen to not show faces!).
Floats.
People on weird recumbent advertising bikes, including this Easter Bunny who had one of the ugliest, scariest faces I've ever seen on something that is meant to be happy and jolly.
Girls dressed in Scottish outfits dancing (have a video but again it is of kids and there seems to be some prohibition against showing kids on blogs without permission of their parents/guardians). Local pollies in porsches. Dancing girls, not doing gaelic jigs. People just wandering along. Old cars.
Americans seem to enjoy parades a lot. We don't have many in Oz. I think they are thought to be dicky and old-fashioned.
Near the end, before the fire trucks, etc, there was a pipe band! I videoed them :-)
Enjoy!
There were marching bands (local high school, pic chosen to not show faces!).
Floats.
People on weird recumbent advertising bikes, including this Easter Bunny who had one of the ugliest, scariest faces I've ever seen on something that is meant to be happy and jolly.
Girls dressed in Scottish outfits dancing (have a video but again it is of kids and there seems to be some prohibition against showing kids on blogs without permission of their parents/guardians). Local pollies in porsches. Dancing girls, not doing gaelic jigs. People just wandering along. Old cars.
Americans seem to enjoy parades a lot. We don't have many in Oz. I think they are thought to be dicky and old-fashioned.
Near the end, before the fire trucks, etc, there was a pipe band! I videoed them :-)
Enjoy!
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
A drive up Mt Hamilton and back again
Two Sundays ago, we went for a drive up Mt Hamilton.
From down in SJ, Mt Hamilton is marked by some white lumps on top of a rather bald mountain to the east. It doesn't look like much from down here and our last attempt to get to the top of the mountain (about 14 months ago) was stymied by snow!
SJ foothills
Anyway, the drive up the mountain is fun. You first have to cross over the foothills, on a pretty narrow and rather windy road, cross a meadow/valley and then wind wind wind up to the top of the mountain itself. I would not recommend this road for anyone who gets carsick but for the rest of us? Woo hoo! It is soooo windy that you can't actually go that fast up it, especially when much of the road is stuck on the side of a rather steep hill - one side is often cutting/cliff and the other is a biiiig drop. And when the wind blows (it is windy as well as windy!) then it can be exciting indeed!
But we were just as enamoured of the spring wildflowers.
Just over the top of the foothills we found these in a sheltered, northfacing cutting;
Dodecatheon hendersonii - shooting stars. I was so excited to see these. We didn't see any last year but we didn't go to the right places. They are fairly common but to me they are the orchids of the primula world and I love to see them.
Californian Buttercups
There were also nemophila and some other things I cannot recognise due to low light and lots of wind blurring the pics.
I am fascinated by the oaks here - they are all twisty and gnarly :-)
One particular sheltered hillside was a riot of all sorts of things.
Delphiniums and dodecatheons dominate this pic. I didn't realise there were so many delphiniums (larkspurs) and so many lived here!
Cynoglossum grande - the flower looks like a very large forget me not. It's in the same family.
(This pic is best seen in a larger size so click on it to see delphiniums, dodecatheons, blue dicks and others. Yes, there is a plant commonly called blue dicks. Ahem!)
I think this is a blue dick (Dichelostemma capitatum). They were pretty hard to get pics of due to the wind and our unwillingness to step into the verge. We have a complete paranoia of poison ivy/oak and also hate squashing plants.
D'oh! Two deer, two (presumed) female deer!
Out of focus lupines and a nice valley.
After winding winding winding our way up the road, we came in sight of our destination
Now with fricken lasers! Really! They now use laser spotters to help line telescopes up. This telescope is over 100 years old and is still in constant use. It was and still is an amazing piece of machinery. It is so delicately balanced it can be lined up by a single person. You can read more about it here and more about the Lick Observatory complex here. (I am very pleased with this handheld shot - it is quite sharp and is limited only by the ISO of the camera rather than me shaking the shot.)
The Lick dude himself, well a bust of him. The guided "tour" (we didn't go anywhere, just stayed in the observatory itself) described him in glowing terms but I am not that sure he was a fantastically nice guy.
Me, chilling outside the observatory (which was rather cold!).
Nathan chilling even more in the brisk wind - he forgot to bring a jacket.
A bad pic of us at the observatory.
I call these ouchcones, not pinecones.
The long and winding road.
All of these hills and valleys are caused by the Pacific Plate grinding against the North American plate. They are very scenic when they are green.
Nathan called this a mushroom farm - I can see why!
On the way back down we saw other plants,
like these Indian Paintbrushes (Castilleja foliolosa I think)
Lathyrus vestitus?
Checker blooms in the middle of common fiddleneck (I think!)
Lupines and poppies on the foothills roadside.
From down in SJ, Mt Hamilton is marked by some white lumps on top of a rather bald mountain to the east. It doesn't look like much from down here and our last attempt to get to the top of the mountain (about 14 months ago) was stymied by snow!
SJ foothills
Anyway, the drive up the mountain is fun. You first have to cross over the foothills, on a pretty narrow and rather windy road, cross a meadow/valley and then wind wind wind up to the top of the mountain itself. I would not recommend this road for anyone who gets carsick but for the rest of us? Woo hoo! It is soooo windy that you can't actually go that fast up it, especially when much of the road is stuck on the side of a rather steep hill - one side is often cutting/cliff and the other is a biiiig drop. And when the wind blows (it is windy as well as windy!) then it can be exciting indeed!
But we were just as enamoured of the spring wildflowers.
Just over the top of the foothills we found these in a sheltered, northfacing cutting;
Dodecatheon hendersonii - shooting stars. I was so excited to see these. We didn't see any last year but we didn't go to the right places. They are fairly common but to me they are the orchids of the primula world and I love to see them.
Californian Buttercups
There were also nemophila and some other things I cannot recognise due to low light and lots of wind blurring the pics.
I am fascinated by the oaks here - they are all twisty and gnarly :-)
One particular sheltered hillside was a riot of all sorts of things.
Delphiniums and dodecatheons dominate this pic. I didn't realise there were so many delphiniums (larkspurs) and so many lived here!
Cynoglossum grande - the flower looks like a very large forget me not. It's in the same family.
(This pic is best seen in a larger size so click on it to see delphiniums, dodecatheons, blue dicks and others. Yes, there is a plant commonly called blue dicks. Ahem!)
I think this is a blue dick (Dichelostemma capitatum). They were pretty hard to get pics of due to the wind and our unwillingness to step into the verge. We have a complete paranoia of poison ivy/oak and also hate squashing plants.
D'oh! Two deer, two (presumed) female deer!
Out of focus lupines and a nice valley.
After winding winding winding our way up the road, we came in sight of our destination
Now with fricken lasers! Really! They now use laser spotters to help line telescopes up. This telescope is over 100 years old and is still in constant use. It was and still is an amazing piece of machinery. It is so delicately balanced it can be lined up by a single person. You can read more about it here and more about the Lick Observatory complex here. (I am very pleased with this handheld shot - it is quite sharp and is limited only by the ISO of the camera rather than me shaking the shot.)
The Lick dude himself, well a bust of him. The guided "tour" (we didn't go anywhere, just stayed in the observatory itself) described him in glowing terms but I am not that sure he was a fantastically nice guy.
Me, chilling outside the observatory (which was rather cold!).
Nathan chilling even more in the brisk wind - he forgot to bring a jacket.
A bad pic of us at the observatory.
I call these ouchcones, not pinecones.
The long and winding road.
All of these hills and valleys are caused by the Pacific Plate grinding against the North American plate. They are very scenic when they are green.
Nathan called this a mushroom farm - I can see why!
On the way back down we saw other plants,
like these Indian Paintbrushes (Castilleja foliolosa I think)
Lathyrus vestitus?
Checker blooms in the middle of common fiddleneck (I think!)
Lupines and poppies on the foothills roadside.
Labels:
California,
drives,
Mt Hamilton,
wildflowers,
wildlife
Nom nom!
Gosh how I love this new word - nom nom! It is even better than birdy num-nums! (Points to whoever knows where that comes from!)(Yes I am a nerdy geeky dork.)
Anyway, the caterpillars have been looking for nom noms. Alas many of them get squashed on the path. Here's one I saved (no I didn't touch it cos I am one of those people who get itchy spots from just looking at a spiny caterpillar).
And its "face"
And nomming away on a wild mustard/brassica
We thought they might be giant leopard moths or something similar but those are not found in California, certainly not in the Bay area. Also they don't have red stripes when they curl up. They just have dull red spots where the spines ("setae") stick out. They are some sort of woolly bear caterpillar, which means they are a moth caterpillar. I assume that they are a good sized moth cos the larvae get to about 3cm long.
So the plot thickens! Wish I knew an entymologist around here. Guess I should look online at the local universities.
ETA 11 April 2009. I think we have an ID thanks to "National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Insects and Spiders of North America" (Arthur E Evans). The caterpillars are Painted Arachnis (Arachnis picta) instars. They are a form of tiger moth. The grubs eat weedy plants, which fits the bill for the mustards we found them on. Yay! Thanks, NWF!
Anyway, the caterpillars have been looking for nom noms. Alas many of them get squashed on the path. Here's one I saved (no I didn't touch it cos I am one of those people who get itchy spots from just looking at a spiny caterpillar).
And its "face"
And nomming away on a wild mustard/brassica
We thought they might be giant leopard moths or something similar but those are not found in California, certainly not in the Bay area. Also they don't have red stripes when they curl up. They just have dull red spots where the spines ("setae") stick out. They are some sort of woolly bear caterpillar, which means they are a moth caterpillar. I assume that they are a good sized moth cos the larvae get to about 3cm long.
So the plot thickens! Wish I knew an entymologist around here. Guess I should look online at the local universities.
ETA 11 April 2009. I think we have an ID thanks to "National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Insects and Spiders of North America" (Arthur E Evans). The caterpillars are Painted Arachnis (Arachnis picta) instars. They are a form of tiger moth. The grubs eat weedy plants, which fits the bill for the mustards we found them on. Yay! Thanks, NWF!
Wednesday, 1 April 2009
A little downtown
The other day I trawled around on the buses visiting a couple of op shops (thrift stores). (I much prefer op shops cos the focus is on lucky finds, hence op for opportunity, rather than being thrifty, which has some negative connotations these days.)
Anyway, after I got peeved with Savers cos they had three registers open and a LOT of customers with a trolley (shopping cart) full of stuff and two registers closed just like that, I decided to call DH up and go into town (San Jose) to have arvo tea with him. I had even remembered to take the phone with me! A miracle!
So I caught the 23 bus in to town. Here's a few pics from the little walk from the bus to DH's work.
The Guadalupe River. Downtown. Looks wild!
A male merganser duck swimming frantically upstream. He actually blends in pretty well!
On the road to nowhere - the bike path on the other side of the river (more a creek) just stops. Waaaah! as you fly off the end of the path. I presume there is a barrier on the other side of the bridge.
Blue-eyed grass, Sisyrinchium
In a bed of presumed native plants (except some things are obviously weeds)
A green avenue. It was all nasty brown sticks two weeks ago.
DH's workplace with its signage being coy and its buildings looking wonky due to the wide angle.
No pic of peppermint tea. mmmmm....
Anyway, after I got peeved with Savers cos they had three registers open and a LOT of customers with a trolley (shopping cart) full of stuff and two registers closed just like that, I decided to call DH up and go into town (San Jose) to have arvo tea with him. I had even remembered to take the phone with me! A miracle!
So I caught the 23 bus in to town. Here's a few pics from the little walk from the bus to DH's work.
The Guadalupe River. Downtown. Looks wild!
A male merganser duck swimming frantically upstream. He actually blends in pretty well!
On the road to nowhere - the bike path on the other side of the river (more a creek) just stops. Waaaah! as you fly off the end of the path. I presume there is a barrier on the other side of the bridge.
Blue-eyed grass, Sisyrinchium
In a bed of presumed native plants (except some things are obviously weeds)
A green avenue. It was all nasty brown sticks two weeks ago.
DH's workplace with its signage being coy and its buildings looking wonky due to the wide angle.
No pic of peppermint tea. mmmmm....
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