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Backyard Wildlife
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Deadwood Dutch
Re: Backyard Wildlife
Thanks for the photo and the information. I knew that there was a decline in the honey bee population but I have seen more here in south central Pennsylvania in the last year than I have in the past. But nothing like I had seen years ago.
Re: Backyard Wildlife
The close-up of your honeybee is exceptionally sweet, CT.CT_Shooter wrote:I've tried for four years to keep a honeybee hive, but I finally gave up. Mine is what's known as a Topbar hive, one of the most natural of hive types and used worldwide; I built it myself using well established plans and materials. Each year the bees go into the winter with the hive full of honeycombs and brood and each year they're all dead in the spring. Once, they all died in late November inside of a single week. I've never taken more than a taste of their honey, leaving it for them to survive the winter. I also feed them sugar in the late fall. When I bring them to the hive in spring, they build ten to fifteen combs in just a few weeks, then begin to fill them with honey, pollen, and brood. I've read everything there is to know about caring for them, but each year more than 50% of all honeybee hives in the U.S. die. It breaks my heart that mine is among that sad statistic. Pesticides, especially systemic types that are in genetically modified crops, are a part of the problem. There are mites that can also destroy hives, but that's mostly controllable. There's nothing one can do about pesticides that end up in the pollen and honey. I may try again, but I'm leaving the hive empty for now, hoping a swarm will find it and move in.
honeybee_on_clover.jpg
Beautiful details and especially beautiful colors!
And thanks also for your efforts to maintain the bee population. We who buy their products in the store surely take it for granted at times. So hopefully a swarm of new residents will move in, and you can become a "hive landlord" once again.
~Пока~
- CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
Just outside of our laundry room window, only three or four feet away, is a Robin Nest with four little, rapidly growing baby birds. I set up the trail cam to get some pics. This one is representative. I think I'll leave them alone from now on.
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Whaler
Re: Backyard Wildlife
Here are a couple from last summer in our backyard.
A Western Toad

Pacific Blacktail Young Buck

Pacific Blacktail Mom & Kids

Another Pacific Blacktail

Another Pacific Blacktail Mom & Fawn

A Western Toad

Pacific Blacktail Young Buck

Pacific Blacktail Mom & Kids

Another Pacific Blacktail

Another Pacific Blacktail Mom & Fawn

- RanchRoper
- Forum Ambassador
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- Location: Land of Shining Mountains, Alberta

Re: Backyard Wildlife
Great photos. Colors are so rich in them. Thks.
Pedersoli Frontier Flintlock .50
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Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
- CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
One bright morning in the backyard. We've only seen Pheasants occasionally, but Mourning Doves live here year round.
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Deadwood Dutch
Re: Backyard Wildlife
That is a nice photo of the pheasant. The native pheasants have been gone from this area for years but the state game commission stocks them from the pheasant farms for hunting on the state game lands. Doves are everywhere here, in the bird bath and cooing up on the roof and in the pine trees.
- CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
Wish we had a "thumbs up" available with all the other smilies....photos like this dragonfly deserve at the least three thumbs up!!
Very nice. Keep 'em coming.
Very nice. Keep 'em coming.
~Пока~
- daytime dave
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
Keep wishing lol, I know that isn't in the cards.
I agree with you though, that is a great dragon fly photograph.
I agree with you though, that is a great dragon fly photograph.
Some days I'm Andy, most days I'm Barney........
Eaglescout, NRA Life Endowment member, BCCI Life Member
Eaglescout, NRA Life Endowment member, BCCI Life Member
- RanchRoper
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
Awesome! Thks.
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- Sir Henry
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
Not in my backyard unless you consider Mount Rainier National Park my backyard. This is a rare Northern Spotted Owl taken two weeks ago. I posted it once before.
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Hi, my name is Gene and I'm a Henryholic from Wisconsin.
Range Reporter: Henry Repeater
Range Reporter: Henry Repeater
- daytime dave
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
This bird came by alone. One of the cats alerted on it. I think it would give even our largest tabby more than it could handle.


Some days I'm Andy, most days I'm Barney........
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- CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
The only turkey we've ever seen in our backyard came in alone, too; walking really fast across the yard and across a street to the woods. Never even got near the camera.daytime dave wrote:This bird came by alone. One of the cats alerted on it. I think it would give even our largest tabby more than it could handle.![]()
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- CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife
This is a great wildlife photo, Sir Henry; actually taken in the "wild" and of a bird rarely seen. Awesome.Sir Henry wrote:Not in my backyard unless you consider Mount Rainier National Park my backyard. This is a rare Northern Spotted Owl taken two weeks ago. I posted it once before.
H006M BBB .357 - H001 Classic .22LR - Uberti/Taylors & Co. SmokeWagon .357 5.5" - Uberti/Taylors & Co. RanchHand .22LR 5.5" - Colt King Cobra Carry 2" - Colt Official Police 38spl 4"