early this morning at the feeding stations, but Sharpie flew off unfulfilled on this visit.
A puffed up, winter-jacketed Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus).
early this morning at the feeding stations, but Sharpie flew off unfulfilled on this visit.
A puffed up, winter-jacketed Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus).
but very little precipitation fell in the valley nor in the high country, a bit of a disappointment. The snow water equivalent at the Lasal Mountain SNOTEL is indicated at 113% of the median.
of Bugs Buddy this morning confirms this long-lived wild rabbit is still in residence and is always a welcome visitor at the feeding stations.
Desert cottontail (Sylvilagus audubonii).
punctuated the mid-morning calm below Parriott Mesa, delighting friends and neighbors of all ages. No flying reindeer were harmed in this exercise and all safety guidelines of the National Association of Rocketry were stringently followed.
Patriot heading to a 444 foot apogee (~135 meters) on a “C” engine.
Nike Smoke whooshing to a 423 foot apogee (~129 meters) on a “C” engine.
I launched my first model rocket as a gray-haired adult on Christmas day last year, and these launches bring the year’s total to 103 liftoffs with only two failures (a CATO and a lawn dart). Bigger rockets. Neater gadgets. Huge fun.
it might be this grumpy-faced yet colorful member of the blackbird family. Perhaps not getting its fair share at the feeding stations on this Christmas Eve day?
Frowny-faced Western Meadowlark (Sturnella neglecta).
Here’s a list of birds seen at the feeding stations around the house in Castle Valley this Christmas season:
House Sparrow
House Finch
White Crowned Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Spotted Towhee
Common Raven
Inca Dove
Collared Dove
American Goldfinch
Pine Siskin
Western Meadowlark
Magpie
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Scrub Jay
Western Bluebird
Northern Flicker
and another spectacular winter day on tap, I took advantage of the continued mild weather and headed out to Moab Brands for a terrific afternoon bike ride. Few others are out and the trails are in perfect condition. Here’s a self portrait.
in Castle Valley National Park was absolutely spectacular and quite a few people in the community were out walking the trails.
Click on image to embiggenate.
is the colorful highlight at the end of the shortest day of the year, though sunrise won’t occur earlier in the morning until 2 January 2025. Still 12 days away.
is coming along nicely in Castle Valley at Placer Creek. What folly.
Any one of these lower cost and more environmentally friendly low-water crossing designs would have worked just fine at this small and usually dry stream crossing: Chapter 5 - Low-Water Crossing Types.
comes to a close in three days on the winter solstice and the extended forecast is for continued dry conditions with moderate temperatures. The Old Farmer’s Almanac is predicting that “precipitation and snowfall will be average or above average throughout the Intermountain Region. The snowiest periods will fall in mid-November, early and late January, and mid-March.” We shall see.
Another vibrant sunrise this morning above the La Sal Mountains. It’s good to be a morning person.
The snow water equivalent in the snowpack has flatlined since late-November, now just 121% of median.
can be found below Deadman’s Curve on the old highway grade west of Arches National Park. This Upper Pennsylvanian-age (~300 Ma) carbonate unit crops out as a cliff former in very few places in the Moab area, seen in the image below as the grayer strata beneath the paved bike trail across the canyon, captured from a high vantage point on the Rusty Spur mountain bike trail.
that strongly silhouettes the Priest and the Nuns on the eastern skyline tonight.
Jupiter is the bright object above and to the right of Castleton Tower. Other bright stars in constellations Auriga and Taurus are also seen in this twilight image.
where the Arreaux model rocket soared to an apogee of 2,402 feet (732 meters) on a “G” engine at a remote launch site on the state line. I’m aiming higher.
Also, these launches push me over the century mark, now having sent more than 100 model rockets skyward this year. Huge fun.
The Book Cliffs serve as a backdrop as the Arreaux zooms off the pad.
The Nike Smoke Pro under chute after achieving an apogee of 695 feet (212 meters).
Pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) wondering what all the commotion was about out on the range this morning.
from the Moab Brands mountain bike trail system. That’s South Window Arch in The Windows Section of the park, about seven miles (11 km) distant. It was an absolutely magnificent afternoon for a ride.
man last walked on the Moon in Taurus-Littrow valley. Here’s tonight’s waxing gibbous Moon, three days from full, with the Apollo 17 landing site indicated by the orange x where astronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt (a geologist) performed three days of exploration in 1972.
Taurus–Littrow valley is located on the southeastern edge of Mare Serenitatis, the landing site of Apollo 17, indicated by the tiny orange x.
nor by my active presence on the back deck, Sharpie is becoming a dependable daily visitor to the feeding stations. Good hunting.
Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus).
develop and are sustained in deeply shaded areas, seen here nucleating on blades of grass. It’s a frigid microscopic crystalline wonderland.
Click on image to enlarginate.
is being excavated at the Placer Creek dry stream crossing. Methinks this is a grossly overengineered and expensive solution to an erosion problem that no longer exists, but that’s just 40+ years of experience as a fluvial geomorphologist talking.
Meanwhile, elsewhere in the community, the drainage ditches that are choked with sediment from summer flooding go largely unattended. Pure negligence.
for the right opportunity and fast off the mark, this tiny hawk is quite tolerant of my presence nearby while it hunts around the house for unsuspecting prey. One of these days I’ll capture the actual strike on its target.
Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus).
Click on image to embiggen.
setting above Porcupine Rim this evening. Seventeen days to go until the winter solstice.