Saturday, May 30, 2020

Urban Wildlife

Current News from Canadian Wildlife

questions Kerry Banks:

How Do You Study an Animal You Can't Track?


The May/June issue (all photos in colour) is my favourite magazine!

The grey whiskered facial cat face on the cover ~ I'd adopt any day ~

until I realized this was no tabby ~ it was a lynx!

Lovingly, he looked at me ~ his green eyes peering into my 'blues'.


Although 'forest felines,' they are graceful, ferocious and

notoriously hard to study.'

Lynx are unusually well-suited to the boreal winter
while being oddly dependent on a single species of prey.

Even the most experienced hunters rarely encounter one in the wild. The lynx's secretive nature...and a fur coat that changes with the seasons from a dapppled yellowish brown in summer to a silvery grey in winter allow it to blend seamlessly into its environment,” wrote Kerry Banks.


B.C. Photographer Sam Ellis discovered first-hand how difficult it is to photograph the ghost cat
when he was assigned the task of getting winter film footage of a Canada lynx in the southwest Yukon for a Canadian wildlife documentary in 2017. He and his assistant initially tried to follow lynx tracks from the backs of snowmobiles...but the animals kept doubling back over the machine tracks to obscure their trail. Ellis was then given telemetry gear by local biologists so he could track a lynx named Mad Max that was wearing a radio collar. “ Although the readings indicated that he was close by, we couldn't see him. It was incredibly frustrating,”says Ellis who would persist with his efforts and eventually establish a relationship with Mad Max over a span of 76 days to obtain the rare footage he sought.


About double the size of a domestic house cat, the lynz's physiology is distinctive thick fur with a stubby, black-tipped tail...powerful jackrabbit-like hind legs...ruffed face marked with ragged patches of fur that grow like a beard down its cheeks...large-tufted, triangular ears...enormous fur paws that allow it to chase down the fleetest prey even in the deep snow.
The oversized paws and the cat's dense insulating fur

make lynx ideally suited to thrive in winter conditions that hamper competing predators
such as wolves, foxes and coyotes, all of which struggle in the deep snow.

The cold-loving carnivore is also blessed with highly sensitive hearing
and super-sharp vision that enables it to spot summertime prey
as small as a vole or mouse at 75 metres.

Much of their hunting is conducted at twilight or at night.
During waking hours, they spend hours resting in the snow, creating ice-encrusted depressions where they digest their recent kills...and scan the surroundings for the next.


Lynx are found in all the Canadian provinces except Prince Edward Island and mainland Nova Scotia...with the highest concentration in The Yukon, British Columbia and Alberta.

So elusive are they...their true numbers are unknown.

Aside from their highly adapted physiques, the most remarkable thing
about lynx is their diet.

Most carnivores will eat a wide range of animals and carion.
The lynx's tastes are much more specific:

in winter, lynx rely almost exclusively on one species:

Snowshoe Hares...augmented by the occasional grouse or red squirrel.

Snowshoe Hares are feasted on by by an assortment of predators:

including wolves...coyotes...foxes...bobcats...goshoawks and owls.


At the peak of the lynx cycle, they turn out 2 to 4 litters in a year.

As constant predation induces stress in the hares...they produce fewer offspring:...and when the crash hits, young female lynx no longer bear kittens....and the litters of older females do not survive.


In the past, researchers would spend long hours tramping after lynx in snowshoes,.

By the recent introduction of cutting-edge-technology the 'tracking process'

opened an intimate view of the lynx's life cycle.

Each year, lynx are captured in box traps that have been baited with meat and shiny objects such as tinfoil or Cds that are suspended on fishing lines so that they spin in the wind. Glittering and irresistible, they lure the curious cats in for a closer look. Sometimes the objects are dabbed with scents like peppermint to enhance their appeal. Once captured, the animals are sedated and have a collar attached that functions almost like a Fitbit. These devices have satellite GPS for tracking movement and habitat selection...accelerometers for identifying activity patterns...and acoustic recorders for capturing interactions with prey and other predators. The activity monitor gives us an idea whether the lynx is walking...resting...eating...or grooming itself.

Biologists are able to listen in as a lynx chases down a snowshoe hare!


On the last day of shooting, Ellis said Goodbye to Max
and flew west for his next assignment in Anchorage, Alaska.

By an eerie coincidence, Max left the area the next day and vanished
from his radio collar's tracking range.

He materialized weeks later on a farm in Cordova, Alaska....
an amazing 550 kilometres from where Ellis had filmed him in Kluane...
but just 233 kilometres from Anchorage.
Max had killled a goat...and a farmer had cornered him in a chicken coop.
The farmer handed Max over to Alaska Fish and Game officials.

They contacted the Yukon researchers, sending his collar back.

They then put their own collar on Max and let him loose again.


Not long afterward, Ellis learned that Max's collar had stopped recording.

The collar was later found...cut off...and discarded in the woods.

Someone had trapped and shot Mad Max.

It was a sad ending ~ but thanks to the unique relationship
that Ellis developed with the lynx,

Mad Max endures in the stunning footage that Ellis captured.


(With many thanks to trackers on the trail...lynx in motion...and photographer Sam Ellis)


Lynx and the entire predator population of the boreal forest
would be in peril without a healthy hare cycle.


Written by Merle Baird-Kerr...May 26, 2020

Comments Welcome: mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca


Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Enjoy Your Day

You Don't Have Anything Else to Do
(forwarded by one of my faithful readers)

I hope they give us two weeks' notice before sending us
back out into the real world!
I think we all need the time to become ourselves again.
And, by ourselves...I mean 10 pounds...cut our hair...
and get used to not drinking at 9:00 a.m.

New monthly budget: Gas $0
Entertainment: $0
Groceries: $2,799

Breaking News
Wearing a mask inside your home is now highly recommended.
Not so much to stop COVID-19...but to stop eating.

Low maintenance chicks are having their moment right now.
We don't have nails to file and paint... roots to dye...eyelashes to remink...
and are thrilled not to have to get dressed every day.
I have been training for this moment my entire life.

When this quarantine is over, let's not tell some people.

I stepped on my scale this morning.
It said:
Please practise social distancing.
Only one person at a time on scale.

Not to brag, but I haven't been late to anything over 6 weeks.

It may take a village to raise a child,
but I swear it's going to take a vineyard to 'home school' one.

I wanted zombies and anarchy. Instead we got 'working from home'
and' toilet paper shortages.' Worst Apocalypse Ever!

You know those car commercials
where there is only one vehicle on the road ~
doesn't seem so unrealistic these days.

They can open things up next month...
I'm staying in until July to see what happens to you first.

The spread of Covid-19 is based on two things:
How dense the population is...
and 2: How dense the population is!

Appropriate Analogy:The curve is flattening so we can start lifting restrictions now:
The parachute has slowed our rate of descent,
so we can take it off now.

People keep on asking:
Is coronavirus REALLY all that serious?
Listen y'all: the churches and casinos are closed.
When heaven and hell agree on the same thing,
it's probably very serious!

Never, in a million years could I have imagined
I would go up to a teller wearing a mask and ask for money.

Home School Day 1:
I'm trying to figure out how I can get this kid
transferred out of my class.

Putting a drink in each room of my house today
and calling it a
pub crawl.

Okay, the schools are closed.
So, do we drop the kids off at the teacher's house
or what?

For the second part of this quarantine,
do we have to stay with the same family
or will they relocate us?
Asking for myself.......

Coronavirus has turned us all into dogs.
We wander around the house looking for food.
We get told,
No...if we get too close to strangers
and we get really excited
about going for walks and car rides.

The dumbest thing I ever bought was a 2020 planner!

Enjoy your day: You don't have anything else to do!

I trust you appreciate the foregoing author's current dilemma now facing us!

Merle Baird-Kerr...written May 25, 2020
To respond: mairdkerr@cogeco.ca

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Cartoonist Roles in Society Today

They play a significant role in forming public opinion and can help to promote peace ~ and is shaping society today.

Artist, Caricaturist, Cartoonist and Digital Artist, Malicy Boaz stated:
I started drawing when I was young. During my school days, whenever a teacher was in class....and the subject required drawing, I would always volunteer to go and draw on the board. For 5 years now, I've worked as a professional artist. Basically, I do caricature...cartoon...realistic.. and painting.

Here, in Africa,
going beyond borders can open many successful doors.for us ~
so long as we are given that opportunity ~ and we as artists work hard
to compete in the international market.
Only those who are recognized get well-paid.
A cartoon conveys a lot of information in very few words...therefore, the emotions behind the political cartoons (also known as political cartoons) contain commentary relating to current events or personalities ~ and some just serve a useful purpose.
I smiled with Charlie Brown when he stated:
All you really need is love ~ but a little chocolate now and then ~ doesn't hurt.

Graeme MacKay is The Hamilton Spectator's resident editorial cartoonist twho daily draws with captions. These I observe and read with interest...often with a smile. For 2 decades now, he has drawn local politicians...celebraties...electoral candidates....prime ministers...presidents... and just about anyone to grace the local headlines. This born-and--raised Hamiltonian has just released a book:You Might be From Hamilton....a collection of cartoons that poke fun
at the weird and wonderful minutiae of our city.
The book includes cartoons causing Hamiltonians from Flamborough to Stoney Creek dairy
and a depiction of the love/hate relationship Hamiltonians have with Toronto expatriates
flocking to the Hammer!
Growing up in Dundas, he wanted the book to to go beyond the usual Hamilton stereotypes.
The idea for his book came while McKay was in Cuba at a cartoonist convention.
While at University, he freelanced his cartoons to newspapers across North America.

Blaine McDonald was one of The Spectator's most colourful and well known personalities...had retired in 1993 due to poor health after heart surgery and a stroke. He was born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Well respected by the populace, he had a black belt in karate...played guitar and sang...liked many country hits and jewellery...drove motorcycles and drove a Corvette Stingray monogrammed with a butterfly on its head. Driving around the city..he was well recognized.
For his editorial cartooning, Blaine received National Newspaper Awards...
a Reuben Award...and a Salon of Cartoons Grand Prize.
Greatly, he and his work were admired by Jimmy Carter.
Said he: I was just a nerd ~ who liked to watch the news.

Worrying won't stop the bad stuff from happening,stated Linus;it just stops you from enjoying the good,

The Foregoing compiled by Merle Baird-Kerr...May 4, 2020
Your comments most welcome: mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca

Monday, May 11, 2020

Predicaments We May Face

can be difficulties, plights, scrapes, messes or crises
 which daily we may confront.
Conversing on the Golf Course: 
 Two older guys were playing a round of golf 
on a sunny summer day. Suddenly, one man told the other: My Word!
 There seems to be something stuck in your ear.
Surprised, the other man reached up and pulled a 'supposatory from his ear lobe.
How on earth did that end up there? asked the first man.
I'm not sure... came the reply
.But I'm almost certain I know where I put my hearing aid now!

On a newly opened golf course, several years ago in Mount Hope,
my husband and I played at a reduced cost.
Mid-way, through the 18 holes, we sat on a bench to wait for a couple men

 ahead of us to play.
As could be expected, one of them had to search for his golf ball 

which landed in the nearby woods.
Patiently awaiting their move to the following tee, I asked over the distance:

 Did you guys lose your balls?
My husband was totally shocked at my address to them!

Painting The White House: President Trump asked for quotes to do the job.
The Indian got the contract!
The European guy quoted 7 million dollars...
(3 million for paint, 2 million for labour and 2 million profit.)
The Chinese guy offered 3 million: one million for the paint...1 million for labour
and one million for profit.
The Indian guy replied: 4 million for you...3 million for me...
and we will give 3 million to the Chinese guy...

and ask him to paint it
For these political negotiations, thanks to one of my faithful readers.

Interesting Facts About Money (Unknown Author)
How interesting! Money is very funny.
I never thought Money had different names!!!
In temple or church, it's called a donation.
In school, it's a
fee.
In marriage, it's called
dowry 
.In divorce it's alimony.
 When you owe someone, it's debt.
When you pay the government, it's
tax.
 In court, it's fines.

Civil servant retirees, it's pension .Employer to workers, it's salary.
Master to subordinates, it's wages.To children, it's allowance.
 When you borrow from the bank, it's loan.
 When you offer a good service, it's tips.
 To kidnappers, it's ransom .Illegally received in the name of service, it's bribe.

The question is: When a husband gives to his wife, what do we call it?
Answer: Money given to your wife, is called DUTY....
and every man has to do his Duty because wives are not Duty Free!!

Are Animals Way Smarter Than Us?
 For humans, disguise and impersonation are good fun.
For animals, it could mean the difference between life and death.
Through evolution, different types of animals learned to mimic other creatures ~
either to help them catch prey ~ or to avoid would-be-predators.
The
Atlas Moth has protrusions at the tips of its wings
that resemble a snake's head posed to attack!

Several jumping spiders have developed a leaner body to be able to pass as ants.
They will even mimic the movement patterns of ants
 and use their forelimbs to mimic antennae.
Predators have learned to avoid ants out of fear reprisal.

Surprise! Surprise! 
 Once, several years ago, my son and I visited a nature park reserve near Barrie.
Wandering around, as he is prone to do, exclaimed,
 
Here, Mom! Come and See these Baby Rattles!
He knows I have an abhorence and fear of snakes, so I hesitated.
Convincingly, he assured me the wooden cage, about 4 feet tall,
would be safe for me to view.
Cautiously,  walking toward him...and with smile upon his face, I trusted him.
Leading me to this bin, reluctantly I looked inside:
It was a cluster of colourful rattles...ribbon-tied
with which a baby or small child would play!

The foregoing assembled by Merle Baird-Kerr...May 4, 2020
To comment;
mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca

Thursday, May 7, 2020

New Favourite Places to Travel

is emblazzened on the front cover of CAA's current magazine.
Inside its front cover is a magnificent colour photo
headed by
“A Rocky Mountaineer rail journey through the Canadian Rockies.
This life changing experience provides unparalleled vantage points
to some of the world's most breath-taking scenery.
You'll never experience travel auite like this!”

The photo inspired me to pick up the telephone
and board the train for this majestic tour!

Although I've traveled Canada a few times in intervals from Cape Breton on the east coast
to B.C.'s Rocky Mountains, our country offers unparalleled experiences ~ beyond one's imagination!
From the current magazine, I share points of interest which you may not have read.

The CAA Magazine is 'home to more than 200 different nationalities.'
Toronto is a melting pot of cultures and cuisine.
A weekend here is like a world-win-trip around the globe.
(according to the editor's introductory comment).

In a River Cruising advertisement ~ it is stated and illustrated:Experience the Very Best of of Canada's St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers.The beautiful 1,000 Islands...the remarkable International Seaway...
historic attractions...and world-class cities.
(That WE should be so fortunate with great proximity to these attractions!)

What...When...Where...may Address your Interests
About Eye Health,
Madeleine tells her story of how 'Blue Berry' has impacted her quality of life.
And helped her enjoy her favourtite hobby: painting landscapes. She stated,
“When I went to my
optometrist, he diagnosed me as having age-related macular dgeneration.” This, unfortunately gets worse with time. In a magazine I read about a supplement called 'Blue Berry' and about a man
who had maintained his eye health. I bought a box and started the same day.
Taking Blue Berry for almost a year, I am very happy with the product.
I am back to painting ~ and my mood has been lifted.

Something BLUE : The 2020 Dulux Colour of theYear: My long-time favourite colour,blue I adore in clothing...artifacts...and in house decor. We associate it with sky and sea ~
making us feel confident...calm...and restored.
Colour therapy is not new: Egyptians believed in the healing properties
of different hues...and
blue is a popular antidote to our fast-paced digital era.

Get Inspired: In recent weeks, I've noticed TV promotional ads feature cars, cars, cars...and more cars!Even the back page of this CAA Magazine features a full colour ad to sell a G.O.O.A.T ~ supposedly
the
Greatest Outback of All Time! The olive green vehicle, parked on a rugged terrain...with snow-peaked mountains in the background...and layers of blue sky...it also seems to me, the company utilizes  a wild white goat 'to sell the ad'...with two captions in the sky: 
 Born in the Wild (above the goat) and Born to be Wild (above the car) .
 From this ad, the only 'selling point' to me is the dramatic scenery!

Safe Travels: For 117 years, CAA South Central Ontario
has been helping to make this province 's roads safe for drivers, cyclists and pedestrians..
If you travel on a street, road or highway ~ in need of attention ~ CAA's campaign (in its 17th year)
has been instrumental in pushing muicipal governments to fix long-neglected roads.
As a driver of many years' experience, I would not do so without my CAA automobile coverage.

Cannabis Food Guide recommends products such as gummies and chocolates are now legal in Canada..
However, a warning prevails:
Don't get Behind the Wheel after you've consumed Canabis
or
any other substance that affects your ability to drive!
Path to Wellness Invites Us:to dip in a hot spring pool;
to enjoy a bowl of cool watermelon gaz pacho;
to stroll through a wild-flower garden;
to enjoy of regional wine in a local boutique hotel or spa.
Togther with friends, we create shared memories of new destinations
and exotic cuisine and fascinating cultures.
GET INSPIRED with FUN forAll
and ALL for FUN!

The Greatest Country in Which toTravel
Asked mny times about a part of this vast country I like best and would recommend
it would be with a 'teacher friend' one summer ~ Miriam (Mim).
Leaving from Toronto, we 'trained it' to Fort William...over-nighted there
 and next day, boarded a train  to  Vancouver
 with over-night stopovers at a couple places prior to heading to that famous rail trip
through the Rocky Mountains to Vancouver. There we boarded a CN cruise ship destined to follow British Columbia's Pacific Ocean 's coastline ~ northbound to Alaska.
This was the cruise of a lifetime!
Arriving in the then
Queen Charlotte Islands...and due to the tide being out,
we had to circumvent to the rough Pacific Islands until return to the coast...and there
continuing northbound to Alaska...disembarking at Skagway.
The following day, we bus-rode into Carcross, Y:ukon. ~ an aboriginal settlement
situated among mountain streams, lakes and snow peaks.
The native peoples there, clad in colourful tribal clothing, entertained us with dance and music while enjoying a wonderful lunch...and what could be better than such fabulous coastal mountain scenery!
The town's original town name was Carcross representing the Caribou who yearly
trek to their winter home in what they had originally named Caribou Crossing.
What an Experience, Never to Forget!

Surprise! Surprise! And, on this cruise was Ed...from Edmonton, Alberta.
Traveling alone, he sort of 'hung out with us.' An engineer with a month vacation, he always longed to cruise the west coast. Upon return to Vancouver, he headed east for home...while Mim and I spent a few days in Victoria. Before reaching the Alberta border by train, we had a brief stop at Penticton.Train Station. And guess who was there? Ed...from Edmonton. So excited to see us, it was evident of some development between Ed and Mim. At Christmas, he travelled east to renew his friendship with her and family east of Toronto...and again at Eastertime. In June they happily married in her home town....and together they now reside in Edmonton. What a pleasant surprise!

Written by Merle Baird-Kerr...February 17, 2020
Comments most welcome: mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Plant Celebration

April is the cruelest month
breeding lilacs out of the dead land...mixing memory and desire...
stirring dull roots with spring rain.
(stated by T. S. Eliot)

Last week I stored my winter coat
exchanging it for a royal blue light jacket
and red scarf for delightful spring weather.
What better way is there to celebrate the month of May?
Writing this eulogy to Spring, my name is Hi Biscus
I've been indoors all winter!
Now that Spring has arrived ~
I'm yearning to sprout new leaves ~
needing sunshine, raindrops and a breeze
on the balcony

.
Anxious, I am for air so fresh
that Mother Nature will hear my prayer
and inspire my Song to Sing
on the balcony
Voices I heard discussing my demise ~
"Probably late April or early May ~
to the balcony I would emerge."
Mother Nature heard my plea.
The wind-blown leaves and other dusts were swept
and wrought iron furniture rearranged
to create for me a sunny corner
where I'd be located ~ on the balcony.
Yesterday she brought me home ~
in a pink pot of purple petunias ~
She set it on the table
to welcome me to my summer home
on the balcony!
The birds knew ~ as they perched on hydro wires
that my entry to the outside world
was imminent and t'would be my summer home
on the balcony!
'Tis now May when the warm winds will breeze
through my feathers and leaves of green ~
And soon, large coral flowers with yellow stamens will bloom
throughout the summer until fallĂ‚  ~
while on the balcony I happily dwell.
I love the sun ~ I love the rain...also the
the waft of gentle breezes across my balcony home.
My birdie friends daily sing to me
as to and fro we tweet avian concepts.
In his writing The Second Garden, Frances Hodgson said
"Spring is the sun shining on the rain...
and the rain falling on the sunshine...
and things pushing up and working under the earth."
O Sunshine! The most precious gold to be found on Earth!
(declared Roman Payne)
A green vase filled with long-stemmed golden blooms relays this message:
May your day be filled with Sunshine and Flowers.!
Wise Words from Zen Shin:
A flower does not think of competing with the flower next to it.
It Just Blooms!


Writing created by Merle Baird-Kerr..May 1. 2020.
Appreciation acknowledged...mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca