Search This Blog

...a glimpse into life on Vancouver Island, needle felting, photography, food, gardening, etcetera...etcetera
"Happiness always looks small when you hold it in your hands, but let it go, and at once you learn how big and precious it is."
Maxim Gorky

Showing posts with label bats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bats. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Visitors of all shapes and sizes....

We've had some interesting visitors at our place lately.
The first has become a regular who you may have read about before...
Georgia has befriended a few young deer, these being the smallest...
They are equally curious of one another...(not the best photos...taken with my iphone)
And here she's sharing a bowl of water we put out for the deer because of the drought and heat...
Then the other evening I was looking for something in the grass when I spotted this little creature...
 She/he is a  Northwestern Alligator Lizard, here's a few facts about them...

                                                     Scientific name: Elgaria coerulea principis                                   

The Northwestern Alligator Lizard is a short-legged, long-bodied lizard, with a triangular head (bearing little resemblance to an actual alligator!).  Growing to a maximum of 20 cm in total length, their size and colouration make them quite cryptic.  Adults usually are brown in colour with a pale belly.   Occasionally they sport dark blotches or a broad bronzy stripe down the centre of the back.  Upon close examination, you might see a fold of skin running down each side.  This allows the body to expand when the lizard is breathing, full of food, or in the case of females, full of eggs.  Juveniles often are more metallic looking, with black sides and a bronze back.

Alligator Lizards are very secretive; their first defence is to flee and hide.   If caught, a lizard may release a smelly mix of feces and musk, bite, or even ‘release’ (autotomize) its tail.  The dropped tail acts as a decoy, distracting the potential predator.  Over time, the lizard will regenerate a shorter, fatter tail.   As the tail is an important fat reserve, tail autotomy usually is a tactic of last resort.   As evidenced by the number of lizards with regenerated tails, however, it also is a successful tactic.

I took these photos while it just sat there sunning itself in the evening light...
 I love their little mouth and their head looks like a snake.
I noticed afterward while looking at my photos that it was missing a toe!
...there's that tail that can break off... 
 I've written about visits from them before here and here.
Our other recent visitor is this guy...
It took a few attempts but I finally got a pretty good picture of him.
He's a Long Eared brown bat.
Can't you tell where they get their name?
Look at those ears!!
We found him while we were working up in the loft of our barn.
They feed on moths and have a pretty decent set of teeth from other photos I found on the web.

So there you go...a few of our furry friends that live around here.
All creatures great and small.

Monday, August 13, 2012

2 visitors...1 lucky, 1 not so lucky

Yesterday morning I went out onto the deck and found a little brown bat who was dead.
My curiosity always gets the better of me in such manners
and so after making sure it was truly dead, I grabbed
a pair of good gloves and my camera (of course).
"The unexamined life is not worth living"
So says Socrates.
I couldn't agree more. To be able to have a close look at one of the
worlds most fascinating and stealth little creatures is a gift.
Look at it's little nose...almost looks like a dog nose...
We have them around here all summer but it's only for a fleeting moment that we see them
take off from their house and then in the twilight, they're gone.
See the tiny hook-like claw they have for climbing and crawling?
Like a little finger...
The German word for bat is 'fledermaus'...like flying mouse.
Something I never knew before is that they actually have another claw where a tail would be.
I imagine this is for hanging upside down purposes...
...look at those tiny wee feet!...
I gently spread her out on a blanket, knowing how powerful, yet delicate
their wings are...even in death, those little hooks clung to the blanket...
 how amazing is the fact that something so paper thin can fly for hours upon hours every night...
Don't forget that bats are one of the most valuable controllers
of mosquito's and eat something like 3,000 of them in a single night!
So as odd and as bad a reputation as they have remember
BATS ARE OUR FRIENDS!
So #1 unlucky visitor but then in the late afternoon, while I was in the kitchen getting dinner ready
I saw something scurry across the floor.
It was one of our native lizards.
We used to see them all the time around here but I hadn't seen one in a few years.
So I called Tom to come and catch it so I could take photos (of course!).
You have to be careful when trying to catch these guys because they
are extremely fast and in defence their tale will break off so
they can escape. The remaining broken off piece will continue to twitch,
distracting the predator
while the lizard escapes and eventually regrows a new piece of tail.
Isn't nature extraordinary?!
Tom was quick and gentle and we put him/her down on the ground
to let it go.
Technically they are called Northern Alligator Lizards and are found only in South Western B.C.
Harmless little things...
It took one last look before scurrying off.
#2 visitor...lucky.
Still unclear of how it happened to be in the house but lucky I found it before the cat did!



Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Stealth...

These are not the most detailed photos I've taken but...
they tell a story just as much as the fine tuned pictures.
Every year, up in the peak of the roof we are hosts to a maternity ward of sorts.
For bats.
They come and set up at the same time every year.
We can hear them with their high pitched murmers as the sun goes down and then...
out they go...foraging for insects to feed the new babies.
You can pretty much set your clock to the time when they begin to fly out.
As soon as the moths and mosquitoes come out.
It starts at between 9:10 and 9:15 and lasts for about 5 minutes until you can't keep track of them anymore.
Stealth.
Flutters in the corner of your eye.
Gone out into the night before you barely see them.
This is one of the more difficult subjects I've photographed. 
Like trying to catch someone blinking an eye.
Although steeped in stories of horror and myth...
they are fascinating animals who do us a world of good.
They eat 1/3 of their body weight in insects every night.
Imagine the world without them.