My headlamp (required for all nighttime outings) caught this critter’s glowing eye.
It was repeatedly licking the roof of my car. Is this a sign that I’m due for maintenance?
My headlamp (required for all nighttime outings) caught this critter’s glowing eye.
It was repeatedly licking the roof of my car. Is this a sign that I’m due for maintenance?
When I first contemplated getting a livestock guardian dog for my flock, I was worried that my quiet rural life would be shattered by incessant barking. Bill and others assured me that LGDs bark more when they’re in a new setting, but once they get a sense of the normal disturbances — squirrels, neighbors, passing cars, odd gusts of wind — they quickly file those as background and only respond to new stimuli. Folks said I’d soon recognize my guardians’ repertoire of barks and know when something was really threatening the flock.
So this morning, when Bravo started barking like there was an imminent danger, I was pretty confused. It was daylight, all the sheep were accounted for, the border collies weren’t behaving any more stupidly than usual, no bears in sight, and yet Bravo was barking like the sky was falling. And then I found the source of his alarm:
In his defense, a mylar balloon with just a bit of helium left in it behaves like some weird terrestrial jellyfish, hovering just over the gound and moving unpredictably. I brought it over to show him it wasn’t a threat, but he wasn’t yet prepared to believe me.
Tagged: barking, border collies, bravo, helium, livestock guardian dogs, maremma, Mylar balloon, pasture, sheep, threat, weird
The farm is rather well-endowed with spiders, so I’ve been pretty attuned to suspended creatures lately. This morning, though, I was taken by surprise when the creature hanging by a thread was a gastropod rather than an arachnid.
I followed the thread (of slime?) up to the leaf from which it had launched.
I had no idea the world produced aerialist slugs, but the whole affair had an intentional feel to it. A quick visit to the Oracle of Mountain View revealed that this is indeed a thing, with some slugs using the hanging tension to express their reproductive organs. I think my fellow was just out for a solo joy ride, but he/she still upended my conception of earthbound slugs.
Tagged: gastropod, hanging, slime thread, slug, weird