Aaron
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> <muskrat swim cropped close.jpg>
> <muskrat chews stick.jpg>
> <muskrat swim (2).jpg>
Thinks, Carole.
Eileen Z
--
David
Sharon
-----Original Message-----
From: fo...@googlegroups.com [mailto:fo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
Carole Berney
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2012 8:31 AM
To: fo...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [fotwr] Muskrat sighted in the Charles
Hi river folks, Just wanted to share photos I took yesterday or a muskrat
friend who had no fear of the photographer. Perhaps he or she was too hungry
to care...Carole
--
Leslie
That sounds like a woodchuck (also known as a groundhog) as it lives
under your shed rather than in the river.
David
Kathy Diamond
24 Hersom Street
Watertown, MA 02472
617-926-6025
fax 866-926-0980
kath...@comcast.net
This life ain’t easy.
…Eileen
Very cool -- thanks, Steve! Thanks also for this detail: “covering its prey with its wings till it killed and secured it before flying away.“ Never knew that.
Picking up on the hawk thread . . . there was a hawk right outside my second story window in an arbor vitae last week, eating an already-dead sparrow. I noticed him initially b/c of some very animated sparrow-de-feathering he was doing. After that he calmly made lunch of the little bird. And THEN, after sitting for a moment or two, he cleaned off his beak and cheeks (which were not visibly bloody or anything) by scraping off his beak on a branch, using the kind of alternating motion you use when sharpening a knife on a stone. At that moment I first thought to photograph him (I’m no Carol Berney!); my iphone was right next to me the whole time. As I lifted it up to get the shot, he (I suspect) perceived my motion and took off. Who knows what would have come next if he hadn’t flown away? Toothpicks, maybe? Floss? Some claw-washing with Purell?
My 2nd floor office window faces out into two very close-up 3-storey arbor vitae, so I have sort of a hunting blind (without the hunting). One of the things I’ve witnessed up here is that when it rains, squirrels sometimes find a bare branch to sit out the rain, and they flip their tails up over their heads so they’re covered. I’ve also seen them catch a little nap that way.
Sharon
From: fo...@googlegroups.com [mailto:fo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stephen O'Reilly
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2012 11:57 AM
To: fo...@googlegroups.com