Category: The Chachalaca

  • iNaturalist and STEC

    iNaturalist and STEC

    For those of you not familiar with iNaturalist (iNat), I offer, here, an abbreviated overview of what it is and what it is all about. Briefly, iNaturalist is a nonprofit social network that enables individuals to record and share observations of living things—across the globe—either from iNat’s website on their laptop / desktop or via…

  • Mediterranean Gecko

    Mediterranean Gecko

    Aah, nothing compares to the soothing, pulsing choirs of frogs, crickets and geckos of an evening! Geckos? Yes, some of those chirps, squeaks and clicks may come from Mediterranean house geckos that hunt along our fences and bricks as they entice mates and defend turf.

  • Proceed with Caution

    Proceed with Caution

    I accumulated a few one-gallon pots of upstart plants from the yard in late spring and stashed them under the arbor in a make-shift nursery. There were no more plant sales slated; several of the plants were naturalized, rather than native, but a mantra goes through my head sometimes, “no plant left behind,” and I…

  • Redtails and Cormorants

    Redtails and Cormorants

    Each of these species spends time in both the Denver metro area and the Rio Grande Valley. This summer we are staying with my daughter in Thornton, a suburban area north of Denver. My daughter’s house is at the entrance to a subdivision overlooking an open space. This space borders a long walking trail that…

  • Schmidt Honored

    Schmidt Honored

    South Texas Border Chapter Texas Master Naturalist (TMN) Robert “Zeke” Schmidt placed second in his age division during the recently concluded Southern Exposures Youth Photo Contest with his entry of a ribbon snake taken at the Edinburg Scenic Wetlands and World Birding Center. The annual contest sponsored by the Valley Land Fund premiers the work…

  • Sea Oats

    Sea Oats

    The forefront of shoreline protection is anchored deeply in the sand. Iconic dune scenes, like those of majestic coppery Sea Oats (Uniola paniculate) seedheads blowing in the wind beckon even the most ardent landlubber to the beach. Sea oats is an extremely valuable plant for coastline and barrier island protection.