Tuesday, August 25, 2015

August in the Sacramento Mountains

Upper Rio Penasco Road is always a treat to drive, always full of surprises with birds and butters and wild flowers. The abundance of rainfall this year has increased the number of springs and puddles along the way. Again I located a Vivid Dancer puddling along with numerous little blue b'flies



I first called this one a Question Mark, but my camera showed it to be a Hoary Comma instead. 



Much of the area has been overrun by the invasive species of thistle


and the insects truly love it. I don't know what these little green bees are but the colors are magnificent. 

Bluff Spring as usual was overrun with visitors, but these two Red Admirals


one worn and tattered


and one freshly hatched made the stop worthwhile. 

These two larger bees were enjoying another type of thistle, this one native


One never knows what will turn up next. As I started out for an early morning walk around the park, I was stopped in my tracks by a rare morning rainbow. 


It continued to increase


until it became a complete double arch


my puny photos just don't do it justice, but the memory is locked inside my heart.

Sunspot has always been a favorite location. The astronomer that lives inside thrills at the scale model solar system that stretches from the observatory to  Cloudcroft. 



This is the sun model


What a cool place!




This small solar telescope actually spent some time in Antarctica



The largest scope on the property actually has twice as much underground as it does above. 



This was the first scope constructed back in 1950. 


The view of the Tularosa Basin is magnificent even on a hazy day, which are more and more common. 



 the sidewalk was hot, hot, hot...


or this young bluebird jumped to catch his bug 

Apache Point is another observatory about a mile away is operated mostly by New Mexico State University and has conducted the Sloan Digital Sky Survey


I chased this Milbert's Tortoiseshell until he finally relented and let me get a few good shots.  


Another excellent Hoary Comma, slightly different color variation


A late evening drive of Curtis Canyon produced a gorgeous cloud formation


and a herd of 35 elk





I know this is fuzzy, but 


IT'S A POORWILL!

Must have been 6 or 7 on the road. We also saw bats flying, no photos of those, of course,
 and  LBJ's,  little brown jobs, along the sides of the road. 

We finished off the evening with a spectacular crescent moon


On the bucket list before our time in NM was done was Steep Hill Road from Hwy 82 to Fresnal Canyon Road. 


What a view! The dry side of the mountain has a special beauty.

Another bucket list item was the trestle trail from the depot replica in Cloudcroft. 

The Devil's Elbow was a section that was dynamited through solid rock


The light was all wrong, but this was my only chance


The "S" trestle was the only one of its kind, two 30° curves on a single trestle 



338 feet long and 60 feet high


A bench on the abutment provides a welcome place to catch your breath. 


Walking along the old rail bed has a magical feeling. I could almost hear the steam engine chugging along through the pines. 

And so ended another stay in the cool mountains of southern New Mexico. Back to Texas on Monday. 




Thursday, August 6, 2015

These are few of my favorite things

Some random thoughts and photos of July happenings...

July 18 we located a "muddle" of butterflies on Indian Service Road #10 up to the Zinker Canyon trailhead.


Most were 4 Spotted Skipperlings


This is a top view, and yes, there are more than 4 spots on those wings, 
the name comes from the 4 white spots on the under hind wing. 




Both Marine and Reakirt's Blue gathered nutrients from the mud. 



This has been a wonderful summer for lifers, feathered and otherwise. 




This Vivid Dancer was hanging out around 


the spring that runs through Spud Patch Canyon at the north end of Dry Canyon Road. 



The Trestle Recreation area in Cloudcroft is another favorite spot and the location of another life sighting on July 10.



Three-toed Woodpecker


Characteristic bark flaking of the three-toed woodpecker

A herd of elk along Hwy 82 at dusk




Spectacular conjunction of Moon, Venus, and Jupiter on 


one of the few clear nights for the entire month. 

My first Calliope Hummingbird showed up late on July 23


and early next morning I waited near the feeder for the perfect shot.


The Rufous was not so cooperative


but patience paid off


Curtis Canyon Road produced this new butterfly, a Duskywing (Erynnis) 



Even BugGuide.net hasn't given me a positive ID as to species. 

Lesser Goldfinch finally discovered the thistle seed feeder


July 27, the young Swainson's Hawk at Holloman Lake wouldn't follow the parents as they flew away.


Peeps and other small shorebirds are a real headache for me


I had suggestions of Western and Least Sandpiper




and Dunlin

This one is a Stilt Sandpiper


these 2 I'm still working on


A trip down Fresnal Canyon  on July 23 with a stop at trestle abutments from the old railroad 


near the Grandview Trailhead


Thanks to a very informative program at the historical museum we know where to look and how to ID


many railroad locations. 


And so it goes.