sholio: (Fireweed blossoms)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2021-06-18 12:14 pm

(no subject)

Coyotes woke me up howling last night - well, I say "night", it was around 5 and the sun had been up for hours. They must have been pretty close to be that loud. I got up just on the off chance I could see anything from the window, but they weren't that close. I like listening to them; we had coyotes around where I grew up, so it's familiar, and this is the first year they've really been around here - Orion and I both spotted one along the highway a couple of years ago, but I think we must have had a pack move into the area just recently. Howling wolves are haunting and eerie - we have those too; it's a low, mournful wail that you usually hear at dusk in the winter - but coyotes just sound kind of cheerful and friendly to me with their high-pitched yipping voices.

Perusing wild coyote videos on Youtube (procrastination, thy name is me) I came across this hypnotically soothing video: One year on a game trail in Northern Minnesota. Game camera video footage of a very actively trafficked bear trail - lots of wild critters, very fun to watch!

ETA: From the department of "Nature, why are you like this," I give you ... rockhopper penguins. Especially the last half of the video where they're frantically and on the whole unsuccessfully trying to out-hop waves to reach their nesting grounds.

Anyway. Working now.
sheron: RAF bi-plane doodle (Johns) (Default)

[personal profile] sheron 2021-06-19 02:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Interestingly, we do have some here, though I haven't personally seen them. The lab where I work is north of the city and sometimes we get warnings like 'coyotes spotted on the trails, watch out'. We also get deer, which I have seen, but I don't think we had anything else recently. One of the interesting things about Toronto is because there are wild ravines going through the whole city, you can actually have wild animals living (or visiting?) right in the middle of a very populated area.