Also known more prosaically as January 31st.
And to celebrate, here are some images of Common Zebras.
Enjoy!
Taken in Kenya on our trip in 2015.
🦓 🦓 🦓 🦓 🦓
You can learn more about January 31st, aka International Zebra Day at this link.
Also known more prosaically as January 31st.
And to celebrate, here are some images of Common Zebras.
Enjoy!
Taken in Kenya on our trip in 2015.
🦓 🦓 🦓 🦓 🦓
You can learn more about January 31st, aka International Zebra Day at this link.
A critter native to Northwest Europe which is now found throughout eastern North America, including our yard.
Most of the slugs around here have a mottled brown coloration. So this one really stuck out. Bright orange yellow. So you'd think it would be easy to identify. So did I. You, and I, would not be correct in that assumption. There is a paucity of info for identifying these critters, either online or in print. If you do know a good slug ID resource please let me know.
But now I do not remember what it is is on. And that is really bugging me ...
🐌 🐌 🐌 🐌 🐌
You can find all of the Yard Critter posts listed here.
~~~~~~~~~~~
* I used the Seek app and took a picture of the picture of the slug on my computer screen. And that pointed me in the right direction.
Covid-19 has delayed or canceled pretty much all group activities. And one such casualty was the annual First Day Hike.
A tradition where a group, sometimes large, sometimes not so large (seems to vary with the temperature), gathers for a pleasant (again somewhat temperature dependent) morning stroll.
At the end of the Before Times, just about a year ago, a group of us went to Lake Morey in Fairlee, Vermont. Home of the Lake Morey Resort and its 4.3 mile ice skating trail.
Fortunately it was not breeding season, so we were good to go.
The trail was well marked. For now.
In addition to skating, hiking, and drinking, and of course eating (we always have way too much food!) we went cross country skiing.
Back in August, when we humans had figured out how to safely get together with friends while socially distancing, Patty ...
Some years ago, I forget the actual source (perhaps NPR?), I heard a story about a couple who went for regular walks in a local park. In which there was a section which had become overgrown with weeds and was a magnet for trash. And each time they went by they agreed that someone should do something about this. And kept right on walking.
And then one day it dawned on them, they were somebody. And they cleaned it up.
Patty has decided she is somebody (something I had realized long ago). She decided to clean up our street.
Recall the town had decided to 'enhance' our roads (enhancement not included). As a result of the non-enhancement enhancement, all of the trash which had been hidden was now exposed and chopped up.
Image Courtesy Patty Rehn |
A couple of years ago we visited Rwanda. Where the third Saturday of every month is clean up day. Everyone, from the Prime Minister on down, cleans up the street in front of their home. Rwanda is a very clean country. (We also visited Kenya on that trip, plastic bags everywhere.)
I was more Rwandan than Patty, with my road clean up efforts restricted to our property's frontage.
In the Flat Red Bark Beetle post, you may have noticed the dark webbing where the bark has fallen away and exposed the tree trunk.
This:
Fungi.
Most fungi is like this, webs in soil or wood or other substrate. The fruiting bodies, mushrooms, puffballs, and the like, are a small and transient part of the organism.
But those are also the visible parts. The webs are rarely seen unless one goes looking for them.
Or an infested tree falls in your yard.