Showing posts with label Canada geese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada geese. Show all posts

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Today's walk report: 051618, The Japanese Garden

Nestled in the not so lovely city of Van Nuys, CA The Japanese Garden is a 6.5 acres public Japanese garden located on the grounds of the Tillman Water Reclamation Plant adjacent to Woodley Park, in the Sepulveda Basin Recreation Area of the central San Fernando Valley. With a general admission price of $5, or $3 for seniors (62+) and children, it's a wonderful local escape. A slight downside are the hours 11 A.M. to 4 P.M., at least they were for us with the sun high for picture taking from slightly after 11 until about 12:25. Nevertheless it was good fun, quiet and relaxing.

This is a 4 shot panorama taken at 70mm. Please click on the images to see the larger version.


Several Canada geese were mostly resting comfortably in white clover.


This device was feeding water from a small stream behind it. The top bamboo piece would slowly dribble water into the lower one until it was heavy and then that would pour the water onto the ground before returning upward. Transcendental?







Water lilies.



I'll assume the fish are Koi but they all seemed to be a rather drab gray.


The Egyptian goose, native to Africa south of the Sahara and the Nile Valley. Egyptian geese were considered sacred by the Ancient Egyptians.




Mallard ducks, a male and a female. The new Eric and Docken ducks?


Egrets were the most entertaining of the birds we saw.






I waited patiently for the Double-crested cormorant out on the rock to take flight but alas he decided not to cooperate.


 This green heron was a really slow and methodical fisher, contemplating mosquito fish and then shooting his head forward to catch one.




A penny for a wish, seems pretty cheap.



Waterfall, nothing can harm me at all,
My worries seem so very small
With my waterfall.


Day lilies, on the way out.





Thanks for tagging along!



Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Today's walk report: 010515, the holidays

I'm just shy of a month since my last post, I think that might be a record gap but hey, there was end of year stuff, then New Year's celebration and to be honest photo ops along the usual trek weren't so super. Despite the 30 some odd photos I'm about to post you will see there's a lot of "same subject" shots. To top things off it got cold here in SoCal end of 2014 and into the 1st few days of the year. Nothing earth shattering especially when compared to the rest of the county and probably most of the northern hemisphere but we're trying to grow wildflowers now and frost advisories aren't welcomed. The worst of it was New Year's eve into New Year's morning with over 7 hours of freezing temperatures and an observed low of 26.7º. 28º seems to be a feared number where the cold begins to cause extensive cellular damage to plants over several hours. We had about 3 hours of that. I don't know the full extent of the damage yet and hope that there was "safety in numbers." See, there were some 4,000,000 seeds that started this process. Throw some seeds on the ground, plant a garden and watch how interested you become in your weather.


Walks below include a stroll though my sister's garden the weekend before Christmas on invitation for a wonderful smörgåsbord lunch.

121414...

A yellow rumped warbler enjoys an apple. How did it get 12' up into a palo verde tree? At 1st I suspected a squirrel but on reflection, that would have been some feat. Considering this is on a college campus let's assume some jerk student threw it up there. The critters will take care of it though.


This is a young male Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna), apparently the 1st of the season. Last year I didn't have a photo record of these birds until early February so a modest shift there.





End of the day we took the car to a hilltop and watched the sunset.


121914... 
Another walk to Corbin Canyon. This was a physical struggle from 1/4 mile in. I think this was mainly due to two simple mistakes--not eating or hydrating properly before the walk. The total trek was only about 5.5 miles but it was mentally challenging to keep going. There was a really bright and magical moment though. We altered our path and walked in front of an elementary school. We hear but do not see dozens of children singing It's a Wonderful World. So we stopped and listened. I don't mean to sound pretentious but it really felt like they were singing for us. Love is magical.


121914... 
Once again our young Calypte anna is hanging out in his newly established territory. This time on the Calliandra californica, aka, Baja fairy duster.


122114... The visit to my sister's and her lovely garden.

Pentas lanceolata (I think).
Osteospermum.
Arctotis.
Osteospermum.
Leptospermum scoparium 'Pink Pearl.'
Osteospermum.
Another pentas.
122314... 
Is it beginning to feel a lot like Christmas? Not with a high of 81º.

Clouded Sulphur (Colias philodice).
Agave spires.
The famous ducks, enjoying their winter residence.

Quack!
Double quack!!
A lot more tiny flowers on this than there were here but I didn't feel like crawling on the ground for pictures this time.


African daisy.
122514, Christmas day... 
A late afternoon walk and wonderful indeed. There wasn't much picture taking but I did catch this. This is three snow geese in a plumb of Canada geese. According to Wikipedia a group of geese on the ground is a gaggle; when in flight, they are called a skein, a team or a wedge; when flying close together, they are called a plump. After a mere 20 minutes research I determined that snow geese joining Canada geese is not a common event. The oddest coincidence I find in this is that on Christmas day last year I witnessed the same occurrence however with only one snow goose in the skein.


122714...
Some really dark purple iris already in bloom.
A curious scrub jay was watching me take pictures of a hummingbird.
And here's the hummingbird. This is a young female Calypte anna, I wonder if she's met the guy above?


A wink and a chirp.
The same bird on Salvia leucantha, aka, Mexican bush sage.
010115, Happy New Year!
This was my 1st close-up opportunity with this bird although I have had a few other sightings. This is a male Northern Flicker, Colaptes auratus. In the west the variety is also called a Red-shafted Flicker in eastern and northern parts of the country they take a different form and are known as the Yellow-shafted Flicker. It's a handsome woodpecker, I hope to see more. The berries it's eating are from some type of palm tree.




Still quacking.
This was interesting even if to only marvel at my confusion. I often see groups of circa WWII planes flying in formation. When I saw these pelicans they were accompanied by a couple of small aircraft off to the northwest. I heard the noise and saw these birds way off in the distance flying northeast. I thought I had put two and two together. It wasn't until I looked through the lens at 300mm that I realized these were birds, not planes. I've never seen pelicans in or around this valley before.



010514...
Our young male Calypte anna in his usual location. He's losing some more of his baby feathers and it was good to see him again before he fully transformed into adulthood so I could note the changes. It's fun to follow a bird throughout the season but there will be more annas and it will getting harder to distinguish one from another.



Meanwhile our friendly female mallard looks for another photo op.


That's all... Thanks for coming along and happy New Year whoever you are. Please feel free to leave comments and I'm especially not adverse to corrections on flora and fauna.