Showing posts with label mosquitoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mosquitoes. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Deer in the headlights

I took the highway north tonight, getting beyond the light pollution from the city and from industry along the coast, looking for the Northern Lights. Up near Keta Lake, I found them, almost invisible above the rain and fog: a hint of green, waxing and waning, sometimes a flash of red. Disappointing. Maybe another day.

But on the way, a deer browsing beside the road stood to watch me, caught in my high beams.

Worth the drive. 9:23 PM. Sunset was at 7:40.

At Keta Lake, I got out of the car to scan the sky, smelled rotten fish, and scrambled back inside. Could have been a bear, but more likely a raccoon. Or even an eagle. Or a vulture. It was too dark to see anything, even a couple of feet away. After a while, the scent faded, and I got out again. And this time, the mosquitoes found me. Worse than bears!

The perils of a wilderness wanderer.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Unwelcome visitor

I found this big mosquito resting on my plastic cutting board, drying behind the kitchen sink.

Male Culex pipiens, the Northern House mosquito.

Close-up of the head, antennae, and palps. The female doesn't carry all this gear.

The males don't bite. The females do. And BugGuide warns,
This is the most important vector of West Nile Virus and Eastern Equine Encaphalitis in the Northern United States and Southern Canada.
Yikes! I'm wearing Off to bed from now on until summer's over.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Greendale afternoon

We were in Greendale for a family wedding at my daughter's wedding chapel. I kept myself busy between events, taking photos of the kids. Laurie wandered about, checking out the garden, watching the sun set. These are a few of his photos.

Crocosomia, shedding petals

A tangle of daisies

Hydrangea and rail fence

Busy napping

Sparrow on a wire

Light fading on the neighbour's farmhouse, pink on the clouds and mountain peaks.

More warm light

Mountains southeast of Chilliwack

Darkening clouds over the chapel bell tower.

And one of mine:

Cousins, collecting tiny flowers to refill the flower girl's basket. (After the ceremony.)

The bride was beautiful, the groom beaming, the parents proud. The weather behaved itself; not too hot, not too damp, not raining; we were able to eat dinner in the chapel gardens. But the mosquitoes -- ahh! the mosquitoes! -- they were plentiful, and bloodthirsty! It's been a bad year for them at that end of the Fraser Valley. And by the time I found the Off, both bottles were empty.


Friday, August 13, 2010

Passing the buck

I blame it on the mosquitoes. And the midges and horseflies.

I should have dawdled more on the road to Bella Coola. I should have taken more time examining the vegetation. I should have taken repeat photos, in case of fuzz. I should have collected a few samples. Now I'm stuck with iffy photos of plants that I can't quite identify.

If only the bugs hadn't been quite so hungry!

I saw this blue/pink/purple bush by the side of the road all through the Chilcotin. It looks like a legume, but what kind? The leaves are palmate, like a lupin's; the flowers have two petals above, fused, two below, I think. The colour varies. The plant itself is about a metre tall, shrubby.  We can't find it in any of our books.


On dry soil, Tatla Lake.


Another, on wetter ground by the river. Tatla Lake.

Near Heckman Pass, in a forest recovering from an old burn, I took a couple of quick shots at some ferny leaves. I didn't even see the old flower heads:


Some kind of lousewort, Pedicularis sp.


The old flower stalks, blown up. It seems that the flowers were pinkish.

At least I recognize these:


Dwarf lupins, pine seedling, and burnt logs.

And this is a salsify, gone to seed:


Also called "oyster plant". Tragopogon dubius. On the Coquihalla Highway.
"... the flowers ... close up at midday or in cloudy weather, a habit that makes them often hard to find and earns them the name 'Jack-go-to-bed-at-noon'."
(From Plants of Coastal British Columbia, Pojar & MacKinnon.)
Smoke has the same effect as clouds; all the flowers were closed:


Yellow flowers are hidden in this closed umbrella shape. Near Alexis Creek.


Tiny lichen, on caked soil.


Top view.

And a horsehair lichen:


Speckled horsehair, Bryoria fuscescens, probably. I like the way it has woven itself into a rope.

Next time, I'm wearing a bee-keeper's outfit.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Cougar Creek Scramble

When we have only time or energy for a quick walk, we go to Cougar Creek Park and look at ducks. But once or twice a year, we get ambitious and visit the canyon, just a few blocks downstream. This last Sunday, we were ambitious.

Cougar Creek is a small, shallow creek, running about 5 or 6 miles from its headwaters to its outlet into the Fraser River. By now, the upper part is practically paved over; it runs under several malls and ever-expanding housing developments. It is, however, still home to several species of fish, including trout and salmon, both wild and hatchery.

Local residents have taken on the responsibility of preserving what remains; among other projects, they've cleaned up the canyon, and it has almost recovered its original character. There is a trail, narrow, rugged at times, muddy in the dips, sometimes treacherous. Otherwise, and except for the odd stray shopping cart (how do they manage to get down there?), it belongs to the wild things.


Cougar Creek, terrain map.

The Canyon is the area between the two tree icons. My Google map has more detail.

We entered the ravine this time from the downstream end, just before the creek turns to go into Burns Bog. We took the trail for a while, as far as "Big Tree",


Big Tree, about 4 metres in diameter.

then turned off to walk, instead, on the dry stones of the creek bed. At first, it was fairly easy going, and we dawdled, examining the pools for fish and insects (more on these, later).


As the ravine narrows, things get a bit rougher. We had to cross the stream bed repeatedly, from one bank to the other, as the stream meandered. The rocks we crossed on are loose; a couple of years ago, one threw me into a pool. Not this time, though. We both came home with dry feet, even.

Dry feet and scratched legs. And a couple of slivers. All along the creek, trees have come down, some recently, some decades hence. We had to climb over many, duck under others.



Duck under this one.



And this one, stopping to look at the huge fungus on the bottom.

We were confined to the banks. The bush here is like I remember it from my childhood up north, thick, tangled and scratchy.



Impenetrable

There were a few plants of Devil's Club, pretending to be harmless thimbleberry; careful what you grab onto for support crossing a log!



Checking out the Devil's Club



This tree was easy; we went around the roots, on the flat.

The Canyon is about a mile long. By the time we got to the narrow end, where it turns sharply upward and the only way out is on hands and knees*, it was late, so I cut across to the trail to save time on the return.

Partway down the trail, I learned why Laurie had opted for the creek bed; the mosquitoes were out in force along the trail. And they were hungry! Every time I stopped to look at a tree, or take a photo, or watch a bird, they attacked. They bit me through my clothes, they bit my arms and neck, they bored into my bare legs. No buzzing or whining, either. No time for that. Not with supper "on the hoof"!

I haven't run from a mosquito for years. I did on Sunday. I raced down the trail, with a cloud of savage beasts behind me all the way back to the road. Laurie came along after a bit, asking what was the matter. The monsters hadn't bothered with him; one victim at a time.

But we saw things I'd only read about. And got some good photos. And laughed at crows and watched a hummingbird. No pain, no gain.

Next post: mating water striders and a horde of caddis flies.

*A couple of times we have climbed down the upper end of the ravine. It is so steep that kids have strung a rope from top to bottom. We hung onto it most of the way.

.
Powered By Blogger