Category: Anita’s blog
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Anita’s Blog — Dicliptera Would Make a Good Spy
The ever-changing disguises of dicliptera, Dicliptera sexangularis, make it a great candidate for the dodge and evade of spy work. The Thursday Ramsey volunteer team has displaced cart-loads of dicliptera since March. At first, there were a lot of questions, mostly, “Is this dicliptera?” “Yes,” we’d say. Cloaked in different attire throughout the year, it’s…
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Anita’s Blog — Murder Mystery at Estero
I stumbled onto a murder mystery series the year I joined RGVCTMN and the Arroyo Colorado Audubon Society. The protagonist is Bob White, an avid birder living in Minnesota, who adds spice to his birding adventures by finding dead bodies and then helping police solve the crimes. Jan Dunlap is the author. The series was…
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Anita’s Blog — Interesting Visitor to Zizotes Garden
Greg Storms was the first to point out the giant wasp while we prepped an area prior to planting our cache of zizotes, Asclepias oenotheroides, the milkweed at the new Zizotes Circle garden in Harlingen’s Hugh Ramsey Nature Park. “Tarantula wasp,” he said. We didn’t doubt him for a second — the thing was as…
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Anita’s blog — Zizotes
As the Thursday RGVCTMN crew of Ramsey Park volunteers finished a project, we ended up with a small clearing ready for re-vegetation. Before we could contemplate what to plant, a surprise visitor appeared. We saw him talking with Frank Wiseman, and then he was gone. However, he had kindly offered us some milkweed plants.…
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Anita’s Blog – A Sunning of Cormorants
One of the first birds I was close enough to photograph, after moving to the Valley, was a Neotropic Cormorant, Phalacrocorax brasilianus. I had no idea what it was. Nor had I ever been close to a bird that big and that had such a wicked-looking, er . . . smile. I admit, I was…
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Anita’s Blog – I’ve Not Seen an Alligator in Ramsey Park
It’s rather fun digging in the soil in Ramsey Park. What once was a landfill is now covered with more than 250 species of plants native to the Lower Rio Grande Valley. Sure, there are pockets of dastardly Guinea grass, but that can be dug up easily enough with a garden fork (and a lot…