Crested Barbet (Trachyphonus vaillantii)
Procreate
Fairfield Osborn Preserve: Field Biology
April 25, 2019
Fairfield Osborn Preserve, Sonoma County, California
1300 – 1545, sunny
This year, I took Field Biology up to the preserve a bit later in the semester, and we did see a slightly different set of organisms, mostly because, unlike last year, we were actually able to get into Copeland Creek to look for the amphibians that live there. Again this semester, I had a couple of preserve naturalists in class, who are permitted to handled some of the listed species onsite, which turned out to be very handy.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve: Field Biology”Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Science 120
February 23, 2019
1200 – 1330; sunny
Field data collection trip for a Watershed Year. I spent most of the day supervising a group of students collecting water quality data in the little creek near the parking lot. I did manage to find a few critters to show the students, including a Pacific Chorus Frog, California Sulphur-winged Grasshopper, California Slender Salamander, and a Jerusalem Cricket. While flipping rocks, I also found a gorgeous juvenile Western Skink, with the most beautiful blue tail. (One of my photos of this individual is still the wallpaper on my iPad). I also found a dead Western Fence Lizard, although it was in excellent condition otherwise, and had no obvious injuries, so I surmise that it must have only just died right before I found it.
I also saw a Black-tailed Jackrabbit, Red-tailed Hawk, Spotted Towhee, and possibly Bewick’s Wren. A Turkey Vulture and American Kestrel were seen while driving on Lichau Road.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Science 120”Field Biology BioBlitz at Sonoma State
May 10, 2018
1:30 to 3:00 p.m.
Instead of a final exam, I assessed my Field Biology students’ naturalist knowledge by hosting a BioBlitz on the Sonoma State campus. For 90 minutes, we all tried to observe and identify as many species as possible on campus. I worked solo, while they worked in teams, and we were all competing against one another. I think there was one team who found more species than I did. (Of course, this still means I win, since I can take credit for having taught them about local natural history hahahaha).
Continue reading “Field Biology BioBlitz at Sonoma State”Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Field Biology
March 15, 2018
The day of our Field Biology trip to the Osborn Preserve was rainy and a bit cold (but at least it didn’t snow on us, as it had when we were at Sonoma Mountain Ranch). We were undaunted by the weather, though, as I had a cohort of extremely motivated (and knowledgeable) students, including some folks who had gone through the university’s Naturalist Training Program. We were ostensibly here to survey the coverboards on the property (which we did), but we spent a lot of time making more general observations. We were only there for a few hours, and it drizzled on us most of the time, but we saw loads of great stuff, across a wide variety of taxonomic groups.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Field Biology”Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Science 120
February 24, 2018
1100 – 1330
This was a Watershed Year (Science 120) field trip, to practice collecting various types of environmental data. I didn’t see a lot of wildlife, but I did get some nice pictures of flora.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Science 120”June, 2003 ~ Spotted Jelly, Mastiglas papua. Monterey Bay Aquarium.
Spotted Jelly by Wendy A. St. John is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
March, 2017 ~ Copeland Creek, on the Sonoma State University campus. Lots of water in this ephemeral creek right now after the recent rains. I love the sound it makes as the water rushes over the rocks.
Birding
I’ve loved birds as long as I can remember, and the first specific bird I remember seeing in the wild was pretty impressive – a Great Horned Owl, which flew down onto the neighbor’s lawn in front of me while I was out trick-or-treating one Halloween when I was about five years old. Later, I had additional experience with birds because of my mother. She owned an African gray parrot, and was also in the habit of picking up baby birds which had fallen from their nests, and raising them in the house. So, we had house finches and scrub jays as family members at various times during my childhood. Later, as a volunteer at the Los Angeles Zoo in the mid-1980s I got to have hands-on experience with birds (and other animals) when I helped give educational talks to the public. My favorite was Ty, a barn owl.
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Eudyptula minor
April 20, 2005: Kangaroo Island, South Australia
First thing in the morning on our first day on Kangaroo Island, I’d gone for a solo walk along the beach near our hotel. I was happily snapping pictures of birds when I heard something scuttling around in the rocky cliff near where I was walking, and a few minutes later, I realized that something was growling at me from within the rocks. More scuffling and growling helped me to find the location of this activity: a smallish hole between a few of the rocks that formed a small cliff between me and the street above. Really curious now, I took a closer look, and saw movement in the burrow. I snapped a few pictures, but wasn’t able to figure out just what it was . . . a mammal of some sort, I assumed. Not wanting to disturb it by staring at its home all day, I moved along down the beach.
Continue reading “Little/Fairy Penguin”Copeland Creek Wildlife Cameras
November 16, 2016
Thanks to the generosity of Tony Nelson from the Sonoma Land Trust, my Restoration Ecology class was able to set up four wildlife cameras along the creek, to begin to investigate the diversity of animals – particularly mammals – on campus. Not only did Tony loan us the cameras, but he came on campus to teach us how to install them. The cameras were set up for only 4 days – November 11 through 15 – so we didn’t document many species, but we did get some great photos. And for a first outing, I’d say it was successful. I’m looking forward to longer sampling periods in the future.
Continue reading “Copeland Creek Wildlife Cameras”Fairfield Osborn Preserve
February 20, 2015
0800 – 1300, sunny
Field trip to the Fairfield Osborn Preserve, with A Watershed Year freshman experience class. I hiked up to Kelly Pond with a group of students so they could collect field data for a research project. It’s quite a hike up to the pond, which is near the northern end of the preserve. Covered with Azolla Water Fern, the pond is a peaceful and lovely place to visit. The pond is also surrounded by Bulrush (maybe California), Coast Live Oak and California Bay. I also saw Spreading Rush and Dendroalsia Moss at this location.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve”Ziplining Through the Redwoods
Guess who went on an adventure today? (If you guessed, “Wendy,” you would be CORRECT :D).
Continue reading “Ziplining Through the Redwoods”Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus)
Procreate, new iteration of this unfinished watercolor painting.
Muir Woods
October 28, 2012
Visited Muir Woods yesterday, and took some photos with my iPhone; I was too lazy to bring my SLR, a decision I sort of regret. Although carrying the huge camera with me on the hike we ended up doing wouldn’t have made me happy, so it was probably for the best, and the photos I did take are all right, after a bit of editing.
Continue reading “Muir Woods”Northern Leopard Frog
Lithobates pipiens
August 12, 2012: University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Saw this frog on the UBC campus.
Continue reading “Northern Leopard Frog”Petrified Forest, Calistoga, CA
June 25, 2012
On the way up to the field site, Eclipse and I thought we’d stop at this place that we’d driven by so many times without stopping. It was a nice, if small, park – quiet and peaceful, and the petrified trees are interesting.
Continue reading “Petrified Forest, Calistoga, CA”Boggs Lake Ecological Reserve
June 2 to July 3, 2012
These are wildlife sightings made during my Western Pond Turtle field season
Continue reading “Boggs Lake Ecological Reserve”Boggs Lake Ecological Reserve
May 6, 2012
Nicole and I went on a field trip today with the local California Native Plant Society chapter, although the site we visited was already very familiar to me – it’s our Western Pond Turtle field site in Lake County, California! It was different being up there and not looking for turtles. I learned some things about plants (which is good; I’m ridiculously ignorant about plants), saw and heard a bunch of great birds (including Pileated Woodpecker and MOUNTAIN QUAIL! Only the second time in my whole life I’ve ever seen Mountain Quail).
Continue reading “Boggs Lake Ecological Reserve”Brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis)
This is one of my earlier attempts at artwork on my iPad. I think I painted this in Procreate.
Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Biology 122
April 3 and 4, 2012
Overcast and drizzly
This week, I took two sections of introductory biology majors up to the Preserve to make some wildlife observations. Our primary goal was to survey some trees for Sudden Oak Death, but I never go to the Preserve without the supplemental goal of making wildlife observations, especially since there are always at least a few students who tell me that this trip is the first time they’ve ever gone hiking in some sort of “natural” or wilderness area.
Continue reading “Fairfield Osborn Preserve with Biology 122”Sonoma County, California
March 31, 2012
Late evening
Nicole and I had the opportunity to go on this California Red-legged Frog survey as part of a workshop on local endangered and threatened species offered by the Laguna de Santa Rosa. I’ll just let the pictures speak for themselves. (In the photos with three frogs, the one in the center is an American Bullfrog).
Continue reading “Sonoma County, California”