@dandelion@dresden.network
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dandelion

@dandelion@dresden.network

IT Professional by day, biologist at heart. Staff to cats.

Interested in interactions and patterns wherever they are found. Will stop for flowers at the roadside. Also love speculative fiction.

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jaybaeta, to movies
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I had the privilege yesterday of handling various snakes, including a ground boa (shown below) and slug-eating snake. This was after several spitting species from around Indonesia, which were being sunbathed (and were very unhappy about it).

I should have the footage up soon, but am still deciding if I should go back and get more before publishing.

Close-up of a spitting cobra, facing slightly to the right of the camera.
Screenshot of a spitting cobra in the process of spraying venom at a shoe. It's a close-up and we see the back of the hood.

dandelion,
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@jaybaeta I grew up in an area with only one species venomous snake, and even where I live now there are only a few, easy to recognize species you'd have to go searching for to meet them. It's so much easier not to grow up afraid of snakes under those circumstances. In your situation the danger is much more real - respect!

dandelion, to climate
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Now that our lake has completely dried up, the beaver family living here had to move on... They leave a large den with multiple entrances behind and a network of channels worn into the lakebed.

View across the dried up lakebed - to get are still moister depressions and channels following the paths the beavers used to take.

dandelion, to Birds
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Yelling or yawning?

dandelion, to random
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Where there's marsh, there's turtles!

dandelion,
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Where there's marsh, there's more turtles!

dandelion, to random
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I used to think it was a strange kind of cicada or grasshopper - but it turned out the relatively high-pitched and steady trills we hear in late spring are the mating calls of American Toads (Anaxyrus americanus).

The same two roads after I disturbed them. The larger one on the left is facing the camera. Its face is lighter brown than the rest of its body, and the throat white and spotless. The right toad shows its warty, dark upper side

dandelion, to random
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One of the easiest plants to spot on the prairie - Butterfly Milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa). This showy plant is native to open and dry grasslands of much of North America, but is now popular in flower gardens worldwide. Like other members of its genus - and true to its common name - it is an insect favorite.

The same clump of Butterfly Milkweed from further away - a bright orange spot between the prairie green.

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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More Sandhill Cranes...

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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The first native herald of spring - Virginia Springbeauty (Claytonia virginica).

Another cluster of buds and one small white open flower against a dark first floor

dandelion, to random
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Little stalked puffballs auditioning for a cameo in a Studio Ghibli movie

The same puffball from a lower angle, a second one in the background.

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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The Autumn Olive (Elaeagnus umbellata) is a butterfly magnet in spring. It was introduced from Asia to North America and used to prevent soil erosion but unfortunately turned into an invasive species.

Small cream or pale yellow flowers hanging in dense clusters from a branch like tiny witches hats with four-pointed brims.
Closeup of the just opening flowers of an Autumn Olive branch.

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to Birds
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A rare moment: Tree Swallow at rest.

dandelion, to climate
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A lone goose is holding out hope... The water should be 2-3 feet deep where it is sitting. But we're facing a third year of extreme drought, and this oxbow lake will remain a dustbowl 😔

Closeup of the Canada Goose from the previous photo. It is sitting amongst dead plants - those grew last year, when the drying up lake exposed some shallows as islands

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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This wood duck seems pretty annoyed by the constant nattering and honking of the geese (which, admittedly, could be heard from a quarter mile away).

dandelion, to random
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dandelion, to random
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Moss hedgehog

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