Twistflower Ranch & Environs, Crockett County, Texas's Journal

November 23, 2018

Like a Rock Garden

On top of the mesa at Twistflower there is a limestone cap right under the soil, and near the cliffs there is little soil, just moss, fern and juniper growing from fissures in the rock. And a profusion of lechuguilla and cactus. Different varieties of cactus growing right next to each other like a rock garden.. But the whole ranch grows a profusion of cactus including the bottom lands. We went for the birds, but what was easiest to observe were the cacti and other plants. The birds were there, calling, off in the brush and mostly unseen right after the rains that soaked the area and diminshed the attraction of the oasis. Except for the vultures and zone-tailed hawks, that would ride air currents up to the mesa and seemingly coming within touching distance of us on the porches of the bunkhouses.

Posted on November 23, 2018 09:06 AM by thebark thebark | 0 comments | Leave a comment

September 19, 2018

Passing the Baton

I (and likely Amzapp) am about through with my photo observations. Time to pass the baton to you guys out there; your turn; wander around Twistflower, observe, take pictures, post them as observations on iNaturalist.

I used 4 cameras including my cell phone on Twistflower, and during a 2-day stay took 4690 photos. Most were taken with the Nikon D3100 with 70-300mm lens and 2X converter and with the Coolpix P510. (If the pic has a date-stamp and GPS data embedded, it was the P510.) A few group people pictures were taken with the Olympus Stylus, and about 150 more photos on the cell phone, mostly scenics and people-pics but some genuine observations.

What was NOT on photos? We saw deer. Doe & fawn, a couple more deer the next day. A probable fox outside our cabins [looked white in the pre-dawn dark; an albino fox? Was the apparent color due to the sodium light?]. There were many bird that got away unphotographed. They tantalized us with their calls. From the truck Amzapp ID'd a Savannah Sparrow that I did not see. There was a lizard that moved like a streak of light. Road kill on the paved road running through Twistflower [thought I saw a dead coyote pup on the way in].

Within an hour after arriving I explored the cliff edges of the mesa where the buildings are, and while sitting quietly on the limestone overlook amid lechuguilla, cactus, moss and fern, heard a repeated gutteral gronking a little like the honking of a goose coming from below on the cliff face. Some kind of bird surely, but I never found out what it was. The ornithologist who arrived later suggested a roadrunner, but I don't think so. Could it have been a frog at a spring down on the cliff? Most lokely a bird.

The cry of Zone-tailed Hawks was common along that cliff.

In twilight mist and rain I joined ornithologist Dr. Ben Skipper and field biologist Drew Harvey trying to locate the aerie of the Zone-tailed Hawks. Saw the general location and a Zone-tail wheeling about but it was all I could do to keep up with the much younger men.

Some of our (my!) IDs will change. I do not think it was a flight of whistling ducks that passed overhead (what, then? Herons? Cannot remember what Dr. Skipper said). A number of my plant IDs are flat-out guesses.

These observations DO NOT reflect relative numbers of species. I and others tend to make fewer observations of the commonplace and boring and may overlook the most common species all together. HOWEVER, because of my interest in cactus, I tried to photograph every non-opuntia non-cholla I came across. So the ratios of Scarlett Hedgehog, Strawberry Hedgehog, Little Nipple, Turk's Head, Horse Crippler, and so on In my observations may somewhat reflect the relative numbers of these species on the Twistflower.

Posted on September 19, 2018 02:45 PM by thebark thebark | 1 comment | Leave a comment

Ferns

Did we expect ferns going to Twistflower? I sure didn't. Mike McCloskey said a botanist had found 5 species of fern up on the mesa. We photographed at least 3 of those. Two don't look like typical ferns.

The mosses I am less sure about. Is there more than one species? Don't know if we can tell from our photos.

Posted on September 19, 2018 12:50 AM by thebark thebark | 0 comments | Leave a comment

September 16, 2018

Please specify "OPEN" not obscured or private as to geolocation

If the location is specified as PRIVATE or OBSCURED, your Twistflower observation will not load into this project. The setting needs to be OPEN. I have not found a way to input observations into the project any other way.

Posted on September 16, 2018 12:54 PM by thebark thebark | 0 comments | Leave a comment

September 15, 2018

Welcome!

This project came about when a group of South Plains Master Naturalists and friends from the Lubbock area spent close to 48 hrs on the Twistflower, Sept 7-9. Probably a thousand plus photos were taken, some that were specific animal or plant observations suitable for uploading to iNaturalist. Speaking for myself, this was my first look at flora and fauna of the Edwards Plateau region of Texas. Saw several birds new to my lifelist, and many plants. The variety of cacti was especially impressive. The archaeology tours also. Had a fun time.

The Twistflower is private property open to guests only by advance arrangement with ranch management. For information, see http://twistflowerranch.com/

I and the other South Plains Master Naturalists invite everybody to participate and comment here about observations on the Twistflower Ranch and the general area.

Posted on September 15, 2018 08:33 PM by thebark thebark | 0 comments | Leave a comment

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