Backyard critters, great and small

For anything that doesn't fit anywhere above.
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Irrev-Black
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Location: Between pilcrow and interrobang.

Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by Irrev-Black »

Still weeding through pics as I get happy with the new PC, and these popped up.

They record a phenomenon I haven't seen or heard of, before or since.

The male of the butcherbird family who "owned" us, killed a speckled dove, then dragged it to the back stairs to present to me.
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Must have decided he owed me a feed.
Greedy fuckers cannot self-regulate.
Prove me wrong.
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Irrev-Black
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Location: Between pilcrow and interrobang.

Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by Irrev-Black »

I'll take my small good things as they come.

While I had to go through last night's camera footage for Unpleasant Reasons, there was at least this...
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Here's an ancestor I prepared much earlier.
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Greedy fuckers cannot self-regulate.
Prove me wrong.
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Irrev-Black
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Location: Between pilcrow and interrobang.

Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by Irrev-Black »

Irrev-Black wrote: Fri Mar 22, 2024 2:29 pm I'll take my small good things as they come.

While I had to go through last night's camera footage for Unpleasant Reasons, there was at least this...
And I've done a few more nights... little blighter spends more time in that backyard than Dog does!

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More Ancestor Bandy
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And this rando we met while out walking.
Greedy fuckers cannot self-regulate.
Prove me wrong.
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stylofone
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Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by stylofone »

Along with Stripe and Joey X, I now have Big Boi, surely he is the father. What a beast. I just read up on the danger of attack. It's pretty low, they might treat you as a rival male if they are confused for a moment and they think you want to shag a female roo. The advice is, don't fight back, fall on the ground and roll yourself into a ball and they'll go "WTF?!? That's not what I expected in a fight" and lose interest pretty quickly. Females can attack to protect a joey, but it tends to happen in crowded places.
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I can feel it
Image
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Irrev-Black
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Location: Between pilcrow and interrobang.

Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by Irrev-Black »

Dog was agitated about another WRONG down the back near the creek.
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I always treat her warnings as substantiated: today she showed me a Grey Goshawk.
Greedy fuckers cannot self-regulate.
Prove me wrong.
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stylofone
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Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by stylofone »

My backyard visitors this morning. I posted the close-ups to pixelfed. Nice to be in the bush... or very near it.
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https://pixelfed.au/i/web/post/698655161264414138
I can feel it
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two dogs
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Location: Shell Cove

Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by two dogs »

For as long as I've lived in my current abode (circa 2002), I've had a jumping spider (probably Hypoblemum albovittatum) hanging around my kitchen, mostly near my sink, on the Venetian blinds above it, and on the adjacent appliances.

When I see them, I talk to them as I would a pet and try to make sure my actions in the kitchen will not harm them.

Here are some photos I've taken of these adorable tiny critters (3-4 mm in body length) in the past.

Image

Image

Their lifespan is only 2-3 years, so it obviously wouldn't have been the same one for over two decades.

Today, I noticed them on the top of my coffee machine, and I had the pleasure of watching them interact with their reflection in the chromed base of the bean holder for several minutes.

When I first saw them, they were about 2 cm away from their reflection, and then they slowly inched (centimetred? millimetred?) forward.

When they were about 0.5 cm away, they jumped at their image, and then immediately jumped back to a "safe distance".

After a minute or so, another "attack" was mounted on the "intruder" with the same retreat.

Third time lucky! With a slower approach, they found that they could wave their pedipalps at each "other".

Image
The standard you walk past is the standard you accept.

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stylofone
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Re: Backyard critters, great and small

Post by stylofone »

I walked to Quirriga beach in Murramarang National Park yesterday with visiting family, it was a great wildlife day. The mass kangaroo/wallaby sightings on the way are a given, but we were also treated to the sight of a pretty big pod of dolphins spread across the bay. I thought there might have been 20, it was hard to count as they came up for a breath at different times.
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I was also charmed by these slightly goofy looking birds. A bit of web searching indicates they were pied and sooty oystercatchers (2 of each). Many other birds spotted along the way but not photographed - wrens, herons etc.. I've heard from several sources that bird numbers have been much smaller since black summer bushfires of 2019-20, but they are gradually coming back. There are sections on the river where even mangroves with their roots in mud and tidal waters were burned.
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I can feel it
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