"A Sand County Almanac"

"THERE ARE SOME WHO CAN LIVE WITHOUT WILD THINGS AND SOME WHO CANNOT."
"FOR US IN THE MINORITY THE OPPORTUNITY TO SEE GEESE IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN TELEVISION.".....Aldo Leopold




"LOOK DEEP INTO NATURE, AND THEN YOU WILL UNDERSTAND EVERYTHING BETTER".....Albert Einstein


“Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you and the storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves”.....John Muir


Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Changing Seasons On The Farm


What a difference there can be from one autumn day to another.  I am not referring to the changing weather, but rather to the erratic behavior of the deer on the farm.  Many mornings only a doe and her fawns will appear in the alfalfa field…
 
 

The next morning, eight or more does along with bucks may be present…
 
 
 
From now until the end of November, most mornings will find me parked along the lane...
 
 
  I try to be there before the sun is up to watch as the golden morning light chases away the shadows…
 



It is often at this time of day that the sound of migrating geese can be heard as they return from their nesting grounds far to the North…
 
 
 
Geese are intermittent visitors to the farm.  Far more dependable are the chickadees and tufted titmice that can almost always be found…
 
 
 
Pileated woodpeckers fly from one stand of forest to another uttering their raucous calls…
 
 
Their excavations into the standing, yet dead, trees provide shelter for numerous other species…
 
 
While waiting for something wild to appear, I often marvel at the amount and variety of life that is present so close to the edge of town.  The constant hum of traffic on a major highway always provides unwanted background noise to my quiet reflections; yet somehow the more subtle sounds of a squirrel eating his breakfast, or a white-breasted nuthatch tapping on a limb, manages to reach my ears…
 


Although I mainly watch for deer...
 
 




 and turkeys at the farm...
 
 


 
I also enjoy seeing the other wildlife such as groundhogs, like this one that appears to have been flooded from his den…
 
 
Or this one, that thinks it is hidden and I cannot see him…
 

A raccoon paused just long enough for me to take a photo...


I have only seen one wood turtle at the farm…
 
 
Not to be confused with the more common box turtle…
 


Among the birds rearing young were a pair of robins…
 
 
Various sparrows…




At least one pair of brown thrashers…
 
 
Brown-headed cowbirds…
 
 
Grackles by the hundreds…
 
 
Starlings always have a nest in the same tree from year to year…
 
 
 
I watched a pair of Baltimore orioles build and nest and hatch their brood for the second year…
 



On occasion I see a bald eagle cruising high above the fields and the river…
 
 
A number of warblers were present this year, such as this yellow-rumped warbler…
 

Indigo buntings are plentiful along the lane...


I had several opportunities to watch a coopers hawk attempt to catch a squirrel but it was not successful while I was watching…
 
 
One of the reasons I enjoy mornings at the farm is that as the sun rises the light gets better for photography with each passing minute…
 



By contrast, the light diminishes with each minute in the evening…
 




There is still enough light to observe wildlife long after adequate light for photography has been lost. 
Almost every year there is at least one piebald deer in the herd.  This year there is a buck and a fawn…
 


I hope the piebalds escape the sharpshooters, but I am not optimistic about that happening.

Did I mention that I own this farm?  Well, technically I own a 1/318,946,000 interest in the farm.  I feel protective of it; almost as if it were 100% mine. 
I enjoy watching the red fox cross the fields…
 
 
Seeing a coyote is a very special event.  I am willing to wager that not one hundredth of one percent of visitors see a coyote on this property.   I have seen, and photographed, at least eight coyotes over the years.  No doubt there are many more that remain hidden…
 

 

Changing seasons are magical anywhere.  The Worthington Farm, at the Monocacy National Battlefield, is one of the places where seasonal changes are most important to me.  The fact that it is only a short ride from my house is a huge bonus.

Finally, when writing a blog post that contains so many bird names there arises the eternal question “to capitalize or not to capitalize”?  Just so you won’t think that I take the issue lightly I will recommend reading a post found here: http://penelopedia.blogspot.com/2010/12/bird-names-to-capitalize-or-not.html

Thanks for visiting, be well, and visit "my" farm soon.  Maybe I will see you there.

 

1 comment:

  1. What a lovely place and such wonderful pictures. You are blessed to be in such a peaceful surrounding.
    Yes changing seasons are magical.

    ReplyDelete

I sincerely enjoy comments from my visitors. I must ask that those wishing to comment understand that moderation has become necessary due to the nature of some comments left in the past...