This juvenile owl...

is really going to enjoy the water sprayer I’ve configured in the trees today, having watched it hopping around in the sprinkler yesterday like a little kid, wings spread wide. It was 100° F with similar temperatures forecast for today and tomorrow, and what youngster wouldn’t enjoy the water?

Juvenile Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus) in the direct morning light, patiently waiting to play in the sprinkler.

Now nearly noon with rapidly warming temperatures, this youngster took refuge in a deeply shaded corner of my shed roof, wondering what time the pool opens.

Success! Happy owls enjoying a cool shower. They’ve both lingered within the spray for several hours throughout the hot afternoon.

Washed, dried and fluffed at the end of another hot day.

My marmot friends...

are increasingly habituated to my morning visits and are consequently pretty relaxed, this one clearly enjoying basking in the early sun despite my close proximity.

Yellow-bellied marmot (Marmota flaviventris).

Mid-day bonus: A pair of well-camouflaged owls, an adult (L) and a juvenile (R), lurking in the ponderosas near the birdbath on a hot afternoon.

Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus).

Fifty-three years ago today...

humans first landed on the Moon, with Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin being the first men to walk on another body in the solar system. It was only 66 years from Kitty Hawk to Tranquility Base, and now, sadly, 50 years since man last walked on the Moon with Apollo 17.

Apollo 11 Hasselblad photo AS11-40-5875 showing astronaut Buzz Aldrin at Tranquility Base.

Time to pump up...

the stand-up paddleboard and hit the lakes as temperatures rise.

Calm conditions on Fish Lake in the early evening.

An extraordinary life...

was celebrated yesterday, in memory of William Bond, who passed away in December 2021 in Spokane. Family and friends gathered at Luna restaurant in a festive remembrance of his remarkable life, summarized in this obituary written by his grandchildren.

William Charles Bond, 1940 - 2021, RIP.

William called the Dean of the College of Science at Eastern Washington University in the summer of 1998 asking to meet and have lunch with a member of the geology faculty to satisfy his interest and curiosity in earth science. He subsequently enrolled in a number of geology classes and various week-long regional field trips, and we became close friends ever since. I shall miss this fellow and feel richer for having known him.

I brake for turtles...

crossing the trail, even providing them some assistance getting to their destination. What a remarkably different environment this is in eastern Washington compared to where I was just days ago on the Colorado Plateau.

Western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii) taking its sweet time crossing the Fish Lake trail.

A view of the verdant wetlands south of Cheney, Washington.

Duking it out...

with a dinosaur at the Bull Canyon Overlook and therapod track site high in the La Sal Mountains.

Local rock art guru Rory Tyler vs. Tyrannosaurus Rex.