Nearby Hearst Castle, there's a beach. You can't swim on it, though. Not unless you weigh 2 or more tons and you are a pinniped, at least. The whole beach is reserved for elephant seals! If you are ever out near Hearst Castle, you definitely want to check it out! Here are a bunch of really super cool photos that my mother took of them!
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Friday, February 8, 2013
The Zebras of Hearst Castle
William Randolph Hearst was a man who, long story short, had a ton of money. Tours of his house near San Luis Obispo in California are simply fantastic, but it makes your own home feel enormously small. Unless of course, you have a mansion, in which case you're probably all right!
Anyways, Hearst even had a zoo on his grounds! Most of the animals that he used to have there are dead or have been given to other zoos, but some remain, like a small group of zebras! Here are some pictures that I took of them. Unfortunately they were really far away, but you can still tell what they are!
Anyways, Hearst even had a zoo on his grounds! Most of the animals that he used to have there are dead or have been given to other zoos, but some remain, like a small group of zebras! Here are some pictures that I took of them. Unfortunately they were really far away, but you can still tell what they are!
Pier 39
In San Francisco, California, one major attraction is the sea lions of Pier 39. Every day, hundreds of these pinnipeds will haul themselves out onto the docks to sun themselves and relax. They have been quite the local attraction, and people get a huge thrill out of seeing them!
Photo credit for all of these pictures goes to Julie Neher.
Photo credit for all of these pictures goes to Julie Neher.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Bears in the Campground!
One morning at around five o'clock in the morning in Yosemite, we heard a bunch of people yelling and banging pots and pans and stuff. We were all pretty irritated: were they drunk, teenagers, or just plain obnoxious? Well, as it turns out, it was none of the above: they were trying to scare a black bear away from a nearby tent cabin across the way!
My mom only got a few pictures, but I will remember it forever, it was super, super cool!
| Black bear in the tent cabin village in Yosemite. Photo Credit Julie Neher |
| Black bear in the tent cabin village in Yosemite. A pretty fuzzy photo, but you can see the black bear trying to eat some of the food out of the food lockers! Photo Credit Julie Neher |
| The tent cabin village in Yosemite. Those giant green bins that you can see next to each cabin are where you had to put everything that had any sort of smell to keep bears from eating it! Photo Credit Julie Neher |
Bears and Bikes in Lake Tahoe
We stopped for a few nights in Lake Tahoe on our California driving trip in 2010 which, by the way was awesome (both the trip and Lake Tahoe!) I would definitely love to go back there sometime! The one part that I didn't really enjoy was the bike riding, I'm just not the bikes biggest fan, I don't know why. However, I am certainly very glad that we went, as if we hadn't, we wouldn't have seen....the bears!
We saw someone looking through the trees, and when they saw us approaching, they motioned for us to stop. We stopped, followed their line of sight, and saw an adult female black bear being followed by two cubs! It was really cool, and they were super cute!
| Black bear cub! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear cub! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| Black bear! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Skunk in the Showers!
On our California driving trip in 2010, my family and I stayed a few nights in a cute little campsite on the coast, sort of near Monterey in Santa Cruz. We had heard that you could see whales there sometimes, but unfortunately we saw none. However, on one fine morning, my mother and sister did see a skunk! It was just kind of chilling over in the outdoor showers, and looked deceptively cuddly! Here are some pictures!
On the same trip, our family was camping in Big Sur, and my dad and I were outside of our tent reading, when I noticed movement out of the corner of my eye. I looked, and there was a skunk, so close to me that I could have easily reached out to touch it! Fortunately I didn't startle it or anything, as it moved off without spraying us. The next morning (I remember this, but strangely enough, no one else in my family does), we also saw a mother skunk cross our dirt driveway with three or four baby skunks in tow!
| The skunk in the shower! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| The skunk in the shower! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| The skunk in the shower! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| The skunk in the shower! Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Harry Potter Names: Remus Lupin
Remus Lupin is one of my favorite protagonists from the Harry Potter series. Despite the fact that he is a werewolf, he nevertheless is an exemplary wizard and a fantastic teacher. The origins of his name are also quite interesting!
The surname, Remus, originates from the myth of Rome's foundation. One of two main characters in the story, Remus's brother Romulus is the other central character. There are many different forms of the myth, but here is how most of them seem to go. The mother of Remus and Romulus has the two young boys float down in the river to protect them from the Gods, in the hopes that someone else will raise them. They end up being raised by a female wolf. Later on, they are adopted by humans, and eventually build a large city. Both brothers want to be king, however, so the pair quarrel, and Remus is killed.
So we have the wolf connection: Remus and Romulus were cared for by a wolf, and Remus Lupin is a werewolf. Another connection is that, in the seventh book, Remus Lupin is a guest on Potterwatch, and goes by the code name "Romulus." Some sources even cite that J. K. Rowling's intentions were to represent the conflict within Remus Lupin (between his human side and his werewolf side) by having the names of the two brothers both apply to Remus Lupin.
We have one more connection, courtesy of Aniruddh Prakash: the letters in the name "Remus Lupin" can be rearranged to the words "Primus lune," which means full moon. Coincidence? I think not! Clearly, Rowling put a great deal of thought into this name!
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Zoo Spotlight: The Living Desert
So at least a few times now, I have used pictures from a zoo we went to in Palm Desert called "The Living Desert." An awesome zoo, this place (clearly) focuses a lot more on the desert animals of the world, and introduces you to a number of animals that you immediately recognize, and a number of animals that you might not otherwise be able to see at another zoo. I thought I could share some of the pictures that I took at this exciting place, and recommend it to one and all as an exciting place to visit if you ever pass by that area!
Let's start off with some of the animals that you might not be able to see at most other zoos. As regular readers know, I am a pretty big fan of cats, and The Living Desert definitely had its fair share! For example, the "Near Threatened" sand cat (Felis margarita), the only cat that is found primarily in the desert. One of my favorite small wild cats, the sand cat is found in the deserts of Africa and the Middle East.
Besides the sand cat, The Living Desert also has a few other small cats, including the Arabian wild cat, one of the many sub species of the wild cat, Felis silvestris. Unfortunately, this little guy was asleep so I didn't get any pictures, but I did get pictures of two of the other smaller felines: the serval, and the bobcat, each of which we have done an Animal Spotlight on. The serval is native to Africa, while the bobcat lives all over North America, in both forests and deserts.
Other, larger cats can be found at The Living Desert, as well, including the jaguar and the mountain lion (both of which I got no pictures of), as well as the cheetah. We saw two or three cheetahs, but they were all doing what cats do best: sleeping!
Another very interesting thing about the zoo is the vegetation. Many people simply pass over it: but if you do stop to take a look at it, you might notice something interesting: a whole bunch of the plants, both in and out of the exhibits, are very prickly! This is because the people at The Living Desert have done their best to make the vegetation in their exhibits as accurate as possible. Pay special attention to the trees once you reach the large exhibit with both giraffes and kudu, a type of African antelope. These incredibly spiky trees are called acacia trees, and these trees are one of the reasons why the giraffe has such an incredibly long tongue. I've been able to see this tongue first hand on numerous occasion at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, including the last time I went with my friend Masaki Kleinkopf, as you can see in this incredible video. The giraffe has been forced to evolve its incredibly long, prehensile in order to circumnavigate through and around these spiny branches in order to reach the leaves.
Another one of my favorite things at The Living Desert was the Miriam U. Hoover Discovery Center. Indoor and air-conditioned (which, trust me, was very refreshing after being in a desert for a while!), the Discovery Center had a number of things for younger kids to do, but it was definitely worth stopping in, because they had an exhibit talking about the Pleistocene (2.5 MYA - 12,000 years ago) residents of California! Here are what some of the coolest fossils were.
A full skeleton of the eight-foot-tall giant ground sloth. The relationship between extinct South American ground sloths and the extant tree sloths was one of the most important things that influenced Charles Darwin into his Theory of Evolution, more so than the case of the Galápagos finches that most textbooks cite. During the Great American Interchange, at a time when many South American species were going extinct due to competition from animals coming down the Isthmus of Panama from North America (like Thylacosmilus), the giant ground sloths were actually able to move the other way, with remains being found even as far north as Alaska.
A skull of the North American lion (Panthera atrox), as well as a skull from Smilodon, colloquially known as the "saber-toothed cat."
Skulls of Camelops (a type of camel); a dire wolf (Canis dirus), a significantly larger relative of the extant gray wolf; and the Teratorn, one of the members of the family Teratornithidae, a group of birds of prey that lived in North and South America, and includes the largest flying bird known, Argentavis. Finally, there was a life-sized picture of a mammoth on the wall with a fossil tusk sticking out which was pretty cool as well!
Now, back to the living! Here are some more pictures of some of the really cool animals that we saw!
There was also a really cool, huge, giant train set! Here are a bunch of pictures of it!
So would I recommend The Living Desert to anyone who is going to be in the area? You bet I would! Not only is it an excellent zoo, it gives the visitor an interesting and often difficult-to-find view of desert life from around the world!
| Sand cat |
Let's start off with some of the animals that you might not be able to see at most other zoos. As regular readers know, I am a pretty big fan of cats, and The Living Desert definitely had its fair share! For example, the "Near Threatened" sand cat (Felis margarita), the only cat that is found primarily in the desert. One of my favorite small wild cats, the sand cat is found in the deserts of Africa and the Middle East.
| Sand cat |
Besides the sand cat, The Living Desert also has a few other small cats, including the Arabian wild cat, one of the many sub species of the wild cat, Felis silvestris. Unfortunately, this little guy was asleep so I didn't get any pictures, but I did get pictures of two of the other smaller felines: the serval, and the bobcat, each of which we have done an Animal Spotlight on. The serval is native to Africa, while the bobcat lives all over North America, in both forests and deserts.
| Sleeping serval |
| Bobcat on the prowl |
| Bobcat....stretch! |
| Sleeping cheetah! |
Another very interesting thing about the zoo is the vegetation. Many people simply pass over it: but if you do stop to take a look at it, you might notice something interesting: a whole bunch of the plants, both in and out of the exhibits, are very prickly! This is because the people at The Living Desert have done their best to make the vegetation in their exhibits as accurate as possible. Pay special attention to the trees once you reach the large exhibit with both giraffes and kudu, a type of African antelope. These incredibly spiky trees are called acacia trees, and these trees are one of the reasons why the giraffe has such an incredibly long tongue. I've been able to see this tongue first hand on numerous occasion at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, including the last time I went with my friend Masaki Kleinkopf, as you can see in this incredible video. The giraffe has been forced to evolve its incredibly long, prehensile in order to circumnavigate through and around these spiny branches in order to reach the leaves.
| Look at those spikes on those acacia trees! |
| A picture of myself feeding the giraffes at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo |
| Grazing kudu |
| Mounted giant ground sloth skeleton |
A full skeleton of the eight-foot-tall giant ground sloth. The relationship between extinct South American ground sloths and the extant tree sloths was one of the most important things that influenced Charles Darwin into his Theory of Evolution, more so than the case of the Galápagos finches that most textbooks cite. During the Great American Interchange, at a time when many South American species were going extinct due to competition from animals coming down the Isthmus of Panama from North America (like Thylacosmilus), the giant ground sloths were actually able to move the other way, with remains being found even as far north as Alaska.
| The skull of Panthera atrox, the North American lion |
A skull of the North American lion (Panthera atrox), as well as a skull from Smilodon, colloquially known as the "saber-toothed cat."
| The skull of Smilodon |
Skulls of Camelops (a type of camel); a dire wolf (Canis dirus), a significantly larger relative of the extant gray wolf; and the Teratorn, one of the members of the family Teratornithidae, a group of birds of prey that lived in North and South America, and includes the largest flying bird known, Argentavis. Finally, there was a life-sized picture of a mammoth on the wall with a fossil tusk sticking out which was pretty cool as well!
| The skull of Camelops |
| The skull of the dire wolf |
| The skull of the Teratorn |
| A size comparison of a mammoth and a human, myself |
| The "Critically Endangered" addax (Addax nasomaculatus), native to the Sahara Desert |
| The "Endangered" African wild dog (Lycaon pictus), native to (you guessed it) Africa |
| American badger |
| Bighorn sheep |
| Burrowing owl |
| Dromedary camel |
| Caracara |
| Sleeping fennec fox |
| Another sleeping fennec fox |
| Giant tortoises eating |
| Mexican wolf |
| Another Mexican wolf. Despite the fact that this wolf looks like it is snarling, it actually wasn't! I don't actually know what was going on! |
| A Mexican wolf running |
| Pronghorn |
| There were also tons of lizards running around all over the place! |
| Incredibly detailed: the Monticello vineyards! |
| Incredibly detailed: Mount Rushmore! |
Labels:
Addax,
Africa,
Asia,
Badger,
Bird of Prey,
California,
Cheetah,
Feline,
Giraffe,
Great American Interchange,
North America,
Pleistocene,
Pronghorn,
Sand Cat,
Serval,
Sloth,
Smilodon,
TLD,
Wild Dog,
ZS
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