Archive for February, 2022

Friday, February 11th, 2022

silvaris:

Groot by Benjamin Grimm

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675907075212263425.

lies:We hold these things to be true Like a flock of sparrows…

Friday, February 11th, 2022

lies:

We hold these things to be true
Like a flock of sparrows flying over you

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675876877701988352.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

lichenaday:

Calogaya decipiens

Orange firedot lichen

This crustose lichen has long, radiating lobes that form irregular or roundish rosettes. The upper surface is yellow to orange in coloration and inner, older lobes often lighten, desiccate and disintegrate. The surface is dusted with pale pruina, and lobe tips produce granular soredia. It has lecanorine apothecia with a flat, orange disc. C. decipiens grows on rock, walls, tombstones, and tile, and has been found throughout North America and Europe.

images: source | source

info: source | source | source

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675854229678833664.

Tumblr: Based on your likes

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

Tumblr: Based on your likes
Me: orly?

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675852835122970624.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

spocksie:

you’re either a dishes girl or a laundry girl and i’m a dishes girl i will do the dishes for every single one of my housemates before i lift a singular sock off my bedroom floor

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675836280569020417.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

hiimlesphotos:

Mass Takeoff

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675835353070993408.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

alrobertsphotography:

Cann Woods UK

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675816476764192768.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

fthgurdy:

Baltic Sea gulls? Guessing Herring Gulls for the relatively big, chonky, light-mantled ones.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675812937561260032.

Thursday, February 10th, 2022

anonsally:

lies:

anonsally:

lies:

anonsally:

sorry folks, this is turning into a birdwatching blog…

Yesterday I had to go to San Francisco, so I took advantage of the opportunity to squeeze in an hour and a half of birdwatching in Salesforce Park. 

Keep reading

Sooty fox sparrows absolutely make it as far south as you. They make it as far south as me! Second while I check the NatGeo field guide. I don’t like its illustrations as much as Sibley’s, and so I only rarely consult it, but it is hands down the best at laying out geographic boundaries of subspecies, which Sibley treats only vaguely.

Okay. Here you go:

So the breeding ranges are separate, but you’ve definitely got Sooties in winter. And yeah, what you describe certainly sounds good for fox sparrow.

I’m so glad you’re enjoying the new binoculars! And while I can’t speak for the rest of your followers, I’m a big fan of your birdwatching content.

Well, this Tumblr is definitely becoming not just a birdwatching blog but an ask-@lies-about-the-bird blog! So I’m glad you’re enjoying it! 

Those maps are good, much more helpful than anything I found in my various bird books. It sounds like fox sparrow is very likely, especially since they’ve been seen there recently by other people. I’ll edit my list. If it’s correct, that means I saw two new (to me) sparrows in one outing!

Neat! Yeah, I didn’t talk about the White-throated Sparrow you mentioned, but that’s a bird I’m always excited to see. They’re pretty common in the eastern part of the US, but out west they’re few and far between. They’re one of the species I read about in eastern-oriented field guides and natural history books as I was growing up that I never got to see myself, so when I do see one it feels like a celebrity sighting.

One of the cool things I’ve learned about them lately is that they occur in tan-striped and white-striped versions, where the morphs are not sex- or age-specific; they’re born as one or the other. But… pairs of them tend to be mixed-morph (tan-striped birds tend to mate with white-striped birds). Which seems really interesting, and I’m curious what it means.

Here’s a tan-striped bird I saw in 2020 at Aliso Park in northeast Santa Barbara county:

image

Here’s a white-striped bird I saw in 2021 in Carpinteria (on the right, with an immature White-crowned Sparrow on the left):

image

Ooh! I knew about the two morphs, but I didn’t know that they tended to pair up in opposite morphs! The one I saw was white-striped, but there was another bird I didn’t see well enough to identify that could’ve been a tan-striped one. Do pairs stick together in the winter?

I don’t think the pairs necessarily stick together in winter. According to Birds of the World they form loose flocks in the winter, then pair up in the spring. On the other hand, the only time I ever saw two together (on the Franklin Trail above Carpinteria on December 21, 2019) it was a tan-striped and a white-striped individual, which made me wonder the same thing.

There have been a bunch of studies of the genetics and behavior of the two morphs. An excerpt from the Birds of the World article:

In general, WS males are more conspicuous, sing more, are more aggressive, and provide less care to their young than do TS males, WS females, and TS females. They occasionally attempt polygyny and are more active than TS males in seeking extra-pair copulations (EPCs)). TS males spend more time mate-guarding than WS males and invest heavily in parental care. Thus WS and TS males exhibit alternative reproductive strategies (Knapton and Falls 1983, Tuttle 1993, Tuttle 2003). TS females are the least likely to exhibit territorial behavior, and provide the most care to their young. Unlike TS females, WS females sing and contribute to territory defense before incubation begins. Territorial and parental performance of WS females and TS males is similar, intermediate to that of WS males and TS females (Kopachena and Falls 1993a).

So if you think of territoriality and aggression as “male” characteristics, and caring for young as a “female” characteristic, it sounds like White-throated Sparrows form pairs of two different types: “extra” pairs where the WS male is relatively aggressive and the TS female is relatively nurturing, and “mellow” pairs where the TS male and the WS female are closer together in terms of those traits. But apparently both arrangements work okay.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675777177409798144.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

skadario:

A Quiet Sunset

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675763630102495232.

More birdwatching!

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

anonsally:

lies:

anonsally:

sorry folks, this is turning into a birdwatching blog…

Yesterday I had to go to San Francisco, so I took advantage of the opportunity to squeeze in an hour and a half of birdwatching in Salesforce Park. 

Keep reading

Sooty fox sparrows absolutely make it as far south as you. They make it as far south as me! Second while I check the NatGeo field guide. I don’t like its illustrations as much as Sibley’s, and so I only rarely consult it, but it is hands down the best at laying out geographic boundaries of subspecies, which Sibley treats only vaguely.

Okay. Here you go:

So the breeding ranges are separate, but you’ve definitely got Sooties in winter. And yeah, what you describe certainly sounds good for fox sparrow.

I’m so glad you’re enjoying the new binoculars! And while I can’t speak for the rest of your followers, I’m a big fan of your birdwatching content.

Well, this Tumblr is definitely becoming not just a birdwatching blog but an ask-@lies-about-the-bird blog! So I’m glad you’re enjoying it! 

Those maps are good, much more helpful than anything I found in my various bird books. It sounds like fox sparrow is very likely, especially since they’ve been seen there recently by other people. I’ll edit my list. If it’s correct, that means I saw two new (to me) sparrows in one outing!

Neat! Yeah, I didn’t talk about the White-throated Sparrow you mentioned, but that’s a bird I’m always excited to see. They’re pretty common in the eastern part of the US, but out west they’re few and far between. They’re one of the species I read about in eastern-oriented field guides and natural history books as I was growing up that I never got to see myself, so when I do see one it feels like a celebrity sighting.

One of the cool things I’ve learned about them lately is that they occur in tan-striped and white-striped versions, where the morphs are not sex- or age-specific; they’re born as one or the other. But… pairs of them tend to be mixed-morph (tan-striped birds tend to mate with white-striped birds). Which seems really interesting, and I’m curious what it means.

Here’s a tan-striped bird I saw in 2020 at Aliso Park in northeast Santa Barbara county:

image

Here’s a white-striped bird I saw in 2021 in Carpinteria (on the right, with an immature White-crowned Sparrow on the left):

image

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675757158112067584.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

dkt5d:

First Beach La Push, Washington. Looking south from out in front of our cabin at Quileute Resort. This was a great spot to stay on our vacation, the sunsets were amazing.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675744760223465472.

hi! so i saw your post about how youre the oldest person here and i want to ask you what’s your earliest memory?

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

Noting for the record that after jokingly going on for a time about being the oldest person on tumblr I subsequently found several who are older. The oldest I’ve ever come across is @fvfarm, who has not posted in a few years, but who was still going strong at the age of 94 the last time I had an update.

@dduane is active, and according to Wikipedia is 69, with a birthday coming up in May, which makes her just a few months less than 10 whole years older than me.

But that aside…

My earliest memory is of being driven by my mom past a preschool that she told me I would begin attending in a few days. I would have been 3 or 4 at the time, which would put it somewhere around 1965 or 1966.

Thanks for asking! What’s your earliest memory?

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675727916474269696.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

prideandprejudice:

Oh, Lizzy! I’m so happy! It is too much! It is too much! Why can’t everyone be as happy as I am? 

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE (1995) | requested by anonymous

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675725880924979200.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

anonsally:

sorry folks, this is turning into a birdwatching blog…

Yesterday I had to go to San Francisco, so I took advantage of the opportunity to squeeze in an hour and a half of birdwatching in Salesforce Park. 

Keep reading

Sooty fox sparrows absolutely make it as far south as you. They make it as far south as me! Second while I check the NatGeo field guide. I don’t like its illustrations as much as Sibley’s, and so I only rarely consult it, but it is hands down the best at laying out geographic boundaries of subspecies, which Sibley treats only vaguely.

Okay. Here you go:

So the breeding ranges are separate, but you’ve definitely got Sooties in winter. And yeah, what you describe certainly sounds good for fox sparrow.

I’m so glad you’re enjoying the new binoculars! And while I can’t speak for the rest of your followers, I’m a big fan of your birdwatching content.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675725600811597824.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

http://excessant.com/HI/fiction/jems_bird/missing_valet/missing_valet_01.htm

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675722884603314176.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2022

https://ift.tt/ks6PwWy

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675722781034446848.

Tuesday, February 8th, 2022

thiscountry:

gold finch on lavender

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675673046393176064.

Tuesday, February 8th, 2022

uroko:

Denis Budkov

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675654165489467392.

Tuesday, February 8th, 2022

fthgurdy:

Dad: Be careful, there is a storm on the Baltic.

Me: Yes but I am on land.

Mum: You are on the coast!

Me: Still on land and not even near the water.

Dad: Well, be careful.

Me: I will be cautious of the sea storm from my land-based hotel room.

In my mental map you are adjacent to @seeseagulls​, who also is near the Baltic. You should hang out! 😜

Which is probably like saying I’m adjacent to Oprah, since I birdwatched along the trail that runs past her estate a few months ago. I should have stopped in for a chat!

Doesn’t look too bad at the moment? Maybe you can put to sea after all:

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/675641594563657728.