Spooky trail cam

We had a couple spooky pictures come from the trail cam. We’ve seen these strange exposures a few times before. I believe they are taken near dusk or dawn, when the light is too dim for a visible light picture and the camera opts for the IR option.

Spooky squirrel
Spooky cat

Coyotes, squirrels, and fox, oh my!

Hm. I haven’t checked the trail cam in awhile. There were 445 pictures on there, mostly of raccoons, opossums, and cats. There were some squirrel pictures, which is remarkable in that we haven’t seen squirrels on the trail cam before.

Squirrel in the back woods, trail cam picture

And there was one picture of a coyote, and one of a fox. Apparently that only go through our area in the fall, since we haven’t seen them on the trail cam for a year.

Coyote, trail cam picture
Fox, trail cam picture

Massive garden spider

Yellow garden spider (id from iNaturalist)

My eldest found this large spider while she was out in the woods communing with the neighbor’s cats. Based on the size it is a female, and its markings are more white (or green, depending on how you look at it) than last year’s yellow garden spider, which is interesting. It was hanging on a thread of silk above its web, which had the typical zig zag pattern in the middle. Photo credit to my eldest.

Hunters and the hunted

High eyelashed jumping spider
Phidippus mystaceus

I was making ash for the chickens’ dust bath when I saw a cute little jumping spider on the table. I like her scientific name: Phidippus mystaceus (as identified in iNaturalist). My photo doesn’t show her high eye lashes, but you can see them in pictures others have taken of the species. The hardwood ash making process went well. It is amazing how much better the wood burns when it is dry. (Insert eye roll.) I mix the ash with equal parts of dirt and diatomaceous earth and put the mixture in on old tire in the runs. The first batch almost completely disappeared after a day! It is amazing how much dust they can get in their feathers. I have been lax making their dust bath powder with the summer heat and burn bans, then the subsequent downpours. Now that the more pleasant fall weather is nearing, I should be able to get outside more.

Carolina praying mantis

Here is another insectile predator: the praying mantis. This one hanging out on the house isn’t nearly as large as the mantis guarding the water station the other day, but still a nice specimen. He was eye balling a white-dotted prominent moth. The moth also has an amusing scientific name: Nadata gibbosa.

White-dotted prominent moth