in the wetlands this morning, where a ~25-strong flotilla collectively harvest a bountiful breakfast. The early bird easily gets the fish and nobody is going hungry. Magnificent and fun!
Mule deer buck in velvet...
bedded down right behind my house.
Cool and refreshing rain...
returns to the Inland Northwest, rejuvenating the forest critters and me alike.
It's been hot and smoky...
and I’ve been slow and pokey.
The Channeled Scablands...
of eastern Washington were carved by enormous catastrophic floods escaping glacial Lake Missoula in Montana about 10 to 12,000 years ago, plucking and scouring the basalt bedrock creating numerous lake basins and wetlands. Fish Lake, seen below this beautifully calm morning, is such a lake and is sustained through the hot, dry summers by groundwater recharge.
Canada Geese...
watching the hazy sunset.
Activity in the wetlands...
this evening was terrifically entertaining as a variety of creatures came alive in the cooler twilight.
Hanging out...
at the bottom of the bat house on a warm afternoon.
Bats need friends! Here’s a free on-line booklet (.pdf) with plans to build bat houses and it explains how to locate them properly so that bats will find and occupy their new summer home.
It's not easy being green...
or so I’ve been led to believe by a certain popular amphibious puppet-philosopher. However, I strongly disagree as I present the Forest Green RadRover 5 “Limited Edition” that is now my ride in the Pacific Northwest. The green color is certainly apropos to this region, just as my orange-trimmed version is suited for red rock canyon country. (Yeah, I like these bikes and they are enormously fun to ride.)
Fire near Fish Lake...
broke out just as I pedaled along the bike trail there late this afternoon, with fire fighting crews responding quickly because of the early reports called in by observers on the lake. This small fire was either ignited by a railroad-caused spark or a careless smoker sitting on a bench along the trail. It is very fortunate that it did not grow into anything larger, thanks to the fire crews on continuous standby right now. Kudos to the crews!
Under the stars...
in the backyard observatory this warm evening. Wonderful.
Chattering House Wrens...
make quite the racket and are busy tending to their family nesting in the back wall of my cedar-sided home.
My stealthy buddy...
that hangs out near the birdbath, especially on hot days.
Milky Way over Amber Lake...
in the Channeled Scablands of eastern Washington.
The Lance Hill Observatory...
is opening for business soon, but requires some cleaning and calibration before serious use this summer season. My father helped me erect this roll-off roof observatory to house my Meade LX-200 Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope on a permanent mount in the late 1990s.
Bat lives matter...
because these tiny nocturnal mammals consume enormous quantities of insects, pollinate a variety of plants and widely disperse seeds among other beneficial ecological contributions. Sadly, this little one fell from a bat house and roasted quickly in the sun before I could return it to the box.
Unfortunately, superstition and Hollywood have given bats a bad name. Learn more about the wonderful world of bats at Bat Conservation International.
Bats need friends! Here’s a free on-line booklet (.pdf) with plans to build bat houses and it explains how to locate them properly so that bats will find and occupy their new summer home. (My late wife, bat biologist Donna Hensley, compiled the first editions of this handbook, and now has disappeared from the credits. Shame on Merlin Tuttle and BCI. Very unprofessional.)
Happy Independence Day...
Juvenile Western Osprey...
takes flight above Fish Lake mid-morning. I had been watching this bird working the lake a little earlier from my SUP, and when it settled down I made my closest approach and captured these mediocre shots.
Colorful aquatic flowers...
on the lake early this morning. Once again, the early SUP-er gets to experience the calm and quiet and color on the water in blissful solitude. Priceless.
The early paddle boarder...
gets the lake all to themselves. Wonderful.