Rabbits are drawn to the sweet crimson clover that blossoms during the spring and they sometimes forget how exposed they are while munching on the beautiful flowers. |
A leucistic Northern Harrier snags a mole for his lunch. |
A Red-Shouldered Hawk waits patiently as it scans the field for signs of movement indicating a tasty morsel is about to make a fatal error. |
Five weeks ago, I decided to deploy my game cameras around the property so I could catch a glimpse into their nightly activities. The results have been more rewarding than what I could have hoped for.
These stealthy, beautiful creatures of the night help control our voles, moles, snakes, mice, free-roaming cats, ground hogs (which can quickly become a nuisance and very destructive to pond banks in Missouri), and many other animals here. Yes, they eat the quail, turkey and our other desirables too, but I can accept a native predator doing its thing in order to survive.
I always get excited when I see the late night and early morning timestamps on the cards, because I know I'm about to see a visitor that I would have never known about, without the use of these cameras.
I find it very interesting that some of our 4-legged predators like to travel the same paths around our property which we have carved with our 4-wheelers. In the first video below, a coyote walks across the trail, moving away from one of the brush piles that has a deep hole burrowed out beneath it. I would love to know what is or what was living under there at one time and if the coyote caught whatever it was.
Interestingly, on the same night within 15 minutes, on the north trail, a fox can be seen sniffing around. Ironically, I have another video of Nikki and Bob walking this same trail the next day and Nikki's hackles on her back are standing up. She knew that he / she had been there the night before - she always seems to know.
And what looks to be the same fox comes through again the next night.
Today, it is 18 degrees with snow flurries and it is supposed to get colder this week. I've cleared the cards and made sure the batteries are good on the game cameras. I'll check them again in a few days to see what our friends have been up to. Yeah, we're digging life here on Gobbler's Knob, bringing the Wild Kingdom right up to our back door steps.
Beautiful pictures, Kathy! I love the one of the rabbit and crimson clover. And that you have caught a fox on camera at night is amazing! I keep hoping to catch a glimpse of a fox on my property!
ReplyDeleteI am also happy to learn the name of your private paradise: Gobbler's Knob!
Thank you, Aya! I was so thrilled to see the fox in the video, not once, but twice and I'm replaying the videos to try to verify whether it is the same fox or if there are actually 2! In fact, I'm also wondering if the hole under the brush pile farther south (where the coyote crossed) is actually the fox's den. So much to discover out there!
ReplyDeleteOur paradise has had a couple of names now, but this one is the one that seems to 'stick', so it will forever more be so.