Audubon Starr Ranch - A Lengthy Recollection

Back in May we took our first field trip with the charter homeschool group we are a part of. Fantastic. (I said after reading Jane Eyre that I was going to strike the cheap and fluffy words from my vocabulary and strive for more mature and inspiring words. I'm off to a slow start...fantastic.) Anyway, we will definitely re-visit Starr Ranch as soon as we can. The 4,000 + acres were owned by the Starr family until 20 or so years ago when the last family member died and left the property to the Audubon Society. It is now and wildlife and nature reserve. The first part of our day was a mountain meadow hike. Our guide (the guy in the front of the line carrying the stick to beat off mountain lions, should we encounter them), was an astute (thank you Jane Eyre) birder. Sometimes we would just stop and listen and he would name the birds we were hearing. He also did a wonderful (sorry Jane) job of identifying the flora.
Here is some of the fauna.
That gold stuff (sorry Jane) is called witches hair. It is actually a parasite and does simply look like long strands of golden hair up close.
I wish I had made the post right after our return. This is some sort of thistle, but I do not remember what kind.
I (meaning Mike) do remember the prickly pear cactus. There are people who actually boil and at this stuff, after the needles are removed of course.


Stink bug
You can't quite tell from this picture, the haze kept it from being very crisp, but you are looking at the side of a mountain where the vegetation was different as the land rolled and certain sides faced more of the sun.
Forgot what this was called, but the little yellow flowers functioned kind of like a venus fly trap.
The web of a trap spider. Ms. Neely (our homeschool teacher/advisor) organized the field trip. The kids love her and stuck with her through most of the day. She taught them about the trap spider. They build their webs over holes or cracks and then wait in the dark for something to enter their trap. If you tickle their web with a blade of grass, they will think their dinner has come and pop out. We were able to see it happen a couple of times.
The acorn woodpecker. There were tons (sorry Jane) of them. Fit to their name, they eat acorns. They stuff them in the holes they drill in trees, etc. And they are loud. You only think of one sound when you think of a woodpecker, but they have calls too.
We saw these...
...in here.
Starr ranch has four main animals they track - the mountain lion, the gray fox, the coyote, bobcat. There are many others - deer (below), raccoon, opossum - but those are the ones they really watch out for.

Ms. Neely always had someone's hand.

One of the coolest (aagghh, Jane!!!) things the kids got to do was learn how to read a scent trap. They were taught how to tell the difference between a cat's paw and a dog's paw (do you know?) and how to tell the difference between dog poop (scat) and cat poop (again, do you know?). Just 24 hours before we arrived they set up a fresh scent station (with nasty smelling stuff that the animals love rubbed on a rock placed in the middle of a bunch of chalk dust). We checked four stations and saw evidence of a coyote, bobcat, and gray fox. Bummer, no mountain lion. I think this was the coyote...unless it was the bobcat. I'll have to ask Olivia.

And Greta just served as a model for Starr Ranch.



Finches, male and female
Black Phoebe
Adios Starr Ranch. We WILL see you again.

No comments: