at the Round Mountain Missile Test Range, taking advantage of a weather window with calm winds. Flying model rockets is fun beyond description, but maybe it’s a guy thing.
Blue-headed beauties invade the feeders...
in greater numbers as they migrate through the area. Here are a couple of more snapshots of this very attractive springtime visitor. They’re both voracious and defensive little bullies while feeding.
More about the Lazuli Bunting.
More lapis lazuli loveliness...
in the eponymously named bird, with now more than a dozen individuals pecking around the feeding stations. Gorgeous but tiny birds in the Cardinal family.
Link to the mineral lapis lazuli.
Note to self: These images would be better if I cleaned the windows.
UPDATE 2 May 2024: Here’s an image, caught in direct sunlight, through clean windows.
Whipple’s fishhook cactus...
is in full vivid fuchsia mode and doing its thing attracting pollinators.
The most colorful bird at the feeders...
has arrived for spring, ranks high on my favorite’s list, and is named after a lovely and intensely blue mineral. It’s a furtive fellow and consequently somewhat difficult to photograph.
The "Tip o' the Mesa" geocache...
on the high and pointy prow of Adobe Mesa was established by yours truly 10 years ago this month, and it was logged for only the third time just two days ago by an intrepid adventurer. It takes determined effort and the better part of a day to make it out to the end of the mesa from the Castleton-Gateway Road. The logged comment was terse: “Stunning view.” Yep.
Fun activity: GEOCACHING.
April showers...
bring out rainbows.
Mostly a glorified campground...
with minimal paleontological interpretation, future visitors to Utahraptor State Park are likely to be somewhat disappointed. The local chapter of the Utah Friends of Paleontology hosted a presentation delivered by park manager Joshua Hansen this evening where he provided some details on the new park being developed north of Moab.
Vibrant red wildflowers...
are now igniting the high desert with hot spots of brilliant color.
High power rockets soared today...
above Ray’s Mesa in a remote corner of the Grand Valley in Colorado, just west of Grand Junction near the state line, organized and coordinated by the local Warp Core rocketry club. About a dozen men of all ages participated in the event and huge fun was had by all.
Catching a noontime nap...
in a secluded and shaded spot beneath rabbitbrush, Bugs Buddy catches up on some Z’s.
A reliable early bloomer...
is bursting forth in Castle Valley.
The point of legal diversion...
of Castle Creek where most of the streamflow is routed into a sluice which then enters a 1.8 mile-long (2.9 km) pipe and is ultimately delivered to a farm’s irrigation headworks lower in the valley. The natural river channel is mostly dry for the next two miles until the point where excess water is returned to the creek.
Two observations: 1) It’s not exactly a healthy riparian system, and 2) blue tarps have limitless applications.
Castleton Tower casts a sharp shadow...
on the face of Adobe Mesa at sunset during this time of year. The shadow will slowly creep further westward (to the right) over the next two months when it will nearly align with the prominent prow on the summer solstice. The Tower is nature’s sundial, a natural time-keeping gnomon.
More senseless closures...
of long existing roads in Castle Valley by the tools at the Bureau of Land Management. This one will make vehicular-assisted evacuations in case of search and rescue at Castleton Tower a bit more problematic. Real smart.
One of the closure signs recently installed by the BLM elsewhere in Castle Valley and shown in a previous blog post has already been ripped down. Hayduke lives!
The Ken's Lake Proving Ground...
in the southern Spanish Valley is a nice alternative launch site for higher powered rockets. Several were fired off today.
Today's partial solar eclipse...
as captured from Castle Valley, Utah. Peak eclipse occurs here at 12:32 pm MDT and the Sun’s orb will only be 58% obscured by the Moon.
The next total solar eclipse to transit North America will track through central Utah on 12 August 2045. Stay tuned.
My favorite overwintering avian companion...
is enjoying the arrival of spring despite its bloodshot eyes.
Winter is hanging on...
in the high country with the La Sals completely immersed in a huge snow squall.
One week past the historic median peak, based on more than 40 years of record in the La Sal Mountains, the SNOTEL network reports there is 129% of the median snow water equivalent in the snowpack. Most excellent.
Slipping into Arches National Park...
on the loveliest of spring days, my neighbor and I rode our eMTBs on the original entrance road - Willow Springs Road - a 20 mile (32 km) out-and-back from the highway. The nicest day of the year, so far.